Belgium in the Eurovision Song Contest 1981

Eurovision Song Contest 1981
Country Belgium
National selection
Selection processEurosong
Selection date(s)Heats
14 February 1981
21 February 1981
28 February 1981
Final
7 March 1981
Selected entrantEmly Starr
Selected song"Samson"
Selected songwriter(s)
  • Kick Dandy
  • Giuseppe Marchese
  • Penny Els
Finals performance
Final result13th, 40 points
Belgium in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1980 1981 1982►

Belgium was represented by Emly Starr, with the song "Samson", at the 1981 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place in Dublin on 4 April.

Before Eurovision

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Internal Selection

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In 1980, the BRT asked Toots Thielemans to write and accompany a song for the Eurovision Song Contest 1981. The BRT had requested a song in the style of his 1963 hit "Bluesette" and had planned for Sofie Verbruggen to sing the song. However, Thielamans was too busy with studio work and other performances to be able to compose a song. The BRT instead decided to host another edition of Eurosong.[1]

Eurosong

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Format

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Eurosong 1981 consisted of three semi-finals, followed by a final on 7 March 1981. Public voting for the semi-finals opened one day after the third heat, after a show was broadcast featuring one minute of all 36 competing songs. The top ten songs qualified to the final.[1]

All the shows took place at the Amerikaans Theater [nl] in Brussels and were hosted by Luc Appermont. There was no live orchestra and all the music and some of the backing vocals had been pre-recorded. This led to the BRT receiving several complaints after the final, as many people believed that since the singing in the Eurovision Song Contest has to be live this should be reflected in the national final.[1]

Competing Entries

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A jury of people from BRT and SABAM chose 40 songs out of 134 submissions. Four songs were then removed from the competition as they were invalid and did not meet all the rules of Eurosong 1981. Among the chosen songs were future and past Dutch and Belgian representative Stella Maessen (1970, 1977, 1982) and Future Belgian representative Liliane Saint-Pierre (1987).[1]

Artist Song Songwriter(s)
Ann Michel "Ik ben gelukkig" Gilbert Neilburt
Anne-Marie "Twee is teveel" Pol Kessels, Chris Bossers
Bea Cardon "Elke traan" Ronald Driesen
Cindy "Ik ben verliefd" Kick Dandy, Els Van den Abbeele
Claire "Zonder jou" Guido Desimpelaere
De Opera "De opera" Charles Dumolin, Greta Mestdagh
Della Bosiers "Mij kan niets meer gebeuren" Della Bosiers, Jaak Dreesen
Dorina "Het ware geluk" Gerda Chantraine
Emly Starr "Samson en Delilah" Kick Dandy, Els Van den Abbeele
Fancy Free "De wereld is een showtoneel" Roger Op 't Eynde, Hugo Van Diepenbeeck
Gene Summer "Zing het maar" Heinz Bzik
Jacky Lafon "Dag meneer" Paul Quintens, Phil Van Cauwenbergh
Jef Elbers "Gummibal" Jef Elbers
Jennifer "In mijn armen" Chris De Braekeleer, Pol Schoors
Jo Vally "De wereld draait" Luc Smets, Jo De Clercq
Johann Stollz "Hello, Hello" Rijosa, André Jean, Henk André
John Sates "Topconditie" Jan Staes
Johnny White "Op dat kamertje voor ons twee" Theo Scheveneels, Roland Serpierre
Karin Setter "Er was een tijd" Mary Loss, Bobby Setter
Kathy and Nancy "Zaterdagavond" Ghislain Slingeneyer
Lester and Denwood "Bonnie" Charles Dumolin, Roland Vanblaere
Liliane Saint-Pierre "Brussel" Sergio Popovski, Theo Vanhaeren
Lode de Ceuster "Dit wijsje vond ik in jouw ogen" Lode de Ceuster
Mark Manuel "Marianne uit vroeger dagen" Mark Uyttersprot
Mary Helena "Liefde is..." Will Tura, Johan Verminnen
Mary Scott "Ik ga weg van jou" Ghislain Slingeneyer
Mik Deboes "Ik kom terug" Mik Deboes
Nancy Dee "Blij bij je te zijn" Gus Roan, Mark Malyster
Patty Devick "Daar waar liefde is" Antoine Verheyen
Perte Totale "Compagnie verliefd" Wim De Craene
Peter En Zout "Eens was het anders" Luc De Smet, Peter Hens, Walter Buts
Ria Geraerts "Dromen bouwen" Ria Geraerts
Rick Heylen Group "Vanavond en vannacht" Jan Boonen, Frank Dingenen
Ronald "Als men iemand zo bemint" Ronald Driesen
Stella "Veel te veel" Luc Smets, Jo De Clercq
Venus "Talisman" Heidi Czajkowski, Rick Vervecken, Fred Beeckmans

Heats

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Three semi-finals were held with twelve songs in each, from which the top ten songs across the three semi-finals qualified to the final. The songs were not voted on at the time, but on the day after the third semi-final (1 March 1981) a recap of all 36 songs was broadcast and viewers were then invited to vote for ten of the songs. Voting took place by filling out and submitting a lottery-style form which cost 50 francs each. People were allowed to buy as many as they wanted and did not have to prove they had seen the semi-finals. Voters were not asked to vote for their ten favourite songs but the ten songs they believed would qualify. Prizes such as cars, holidays and home entertainment equipment were on offer to those who managed to forecast all ten qualifying songs correctly and out of the 184,052 lottery forms that were submitted, 36 successfully predicted the ten qualifying songs.[1][2]

Semi-finals 1 – 14 February 1981
Draw Artist Song Result
1 Della Bosiers "Mij kan niets meer gebeuren" Eliminated
2 Ronald "Als men iemand zo bemint" Eliminated
3 Jacky Lafon "Dag meneer" Eliminated
4 Jef Elbers "Gummibal" Eliminated
5 Fancy Free "De wereld is een showtoneel" Advanced
6 Jo Vally "De wereld draait" Eliminated
7 Anne-Marie "Twee is teveel" Eliminated
8 John Sates "Topconditie" Eliminated
9 De Opera "De opera" Advanced
10 Gene Summer "Zing het maar" Advanced
11 Perte Totale "Compagnie verliefd" Eliminated
12 Johnny White "Op dat kamertje voor ons twee" Eliminated
Semi-finals 2 – 21 February 1981
Draw Artist Song Result
13 Jennifer "In mijn armen" Eliminated
14 Rick Heylen Group "Vanavond en vannacht" Eliminated
15 Stella "Veel te veel" Advanced
16 Dorina "Het ware geluk" Eliminated
17 Patty Devick "Daar waar liefde is" Eliminated
18 Cindy "Ik ben verliefd" Eliminated
19 Mary Helena "Liefde is..." Eliminated
20 Bea Cardon "Elke traan" Eliminated
21 Peter En Zout "Eens was het anders" Eliminated
22 Ria Geraerts "Dromen bouwen" Eliminated
23 Ann Michel "Ik ben gelukkig" Advanced
24 Claire "Zonder jou" Eliminated
Semi-finals 3 – 28 February 1981
Draw Artist Song Result
25 Johann Stollz "Hello, Hello" Advanced
26 Nancy Dee "Blij bij je te zijn" Eliminated
27 Mary Scott "Ik ga weg van jou" Eliminated
28 Mark Manuel "Marianne uit vroeger dagen" Eliminated
29 Kathy and Nancy "Zaterdagavond" Eliminated
30 Emly Starr "Samson en Delilah" Advanced
31 Lester and Denwood "Bonnie" Advanced
32 Lode de Ceuster "Dit wijsje vond ik in jouw ogen" Eliminated
33 Mik Deboes "Ik kom terug" Eliminated
34 Venus "Talisman" Advanced
35 Liliane Saint-Pierre "Brussel" Advanced
36 Karin Setter "Er was een tijd" Eliminated

Final

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The final was held on 7 March 1981 and before the first song was performed, Jo Van Backlé announced the numbers of the winning lottery forms and announced the prizes. The results were decided by a 7-member jury. The members of the jury were: chairman Nest Van der Eyken, Johnny Steggerda, Jef Van den Berg, Pieter Verlinden, Gaston Nuyts, Claude Blondeel, and Bob Boon. Only the winner was announced, but it was rumoured and later confirmed in an interview in 2020 with one of the jury members, Claude Blondeel, that Liliane Saint-Pierre came second.[1][3]

Final – 7 March 1981
Draw Artist Song Place
1 Fancy Free "De wereld is een showtoneel"
2 De Opera "De opera"
3 Gene Summer "Zing het maar"
4 Stella "Veel te veel"
5 Ann Michel "Ik ben gelukkig"
6 Johann Stollz "Hello, Hello"
7 Emly Starr "Samson en Delilah" 1
8 Lester and Denwood "Bonnie"
9 Venus "Talisman"
10 Liliane Saint-Pierre "Brussel" 2

At Eurovision

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Prior to the contest, the song title was shortened to "Samson". On the night of the final Starr performed 16th in the running order, following Portugal and preceding Greece. At the close of the voting "Samson" had received 40 points (the highest being 8 from Yugoslavia), placing Belgium 13th of the 20 entries.[4] The Belgian jury awarded its 12 points to Denmark.[5]

Voting

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Vermeulen, André (2021). Van Canzonissima tot Eurosong. 65 jaar Belgische preselecties voor het Eurovisiesongfestival. Leuven: Kritak. ISBN 978-94-014-7609-6. OCLC 1240241113.
  2. ^ ESC National Finals database - Belgium semi-finals 1981
  3. ^ ESC National Finals database - Belgium final 1981
  4. ^ "Final of Dublin 1981". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 13 April 2021. Retrieved 13 April 2021.
  5. ^ ESC History - Belgium 1981
  6. ^ a b "Results of the Final of Dublin 1981". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 13 April 2021. Retrieved 13 April 2021.
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