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Eurovision Song Contest 2011

International song competition

Eurovision Song Contest 2011

Summary

International song competition

FieldValue
nameEurovision Song Contest
year2011
themeFeel Your Heart Beat!
logoLogo ESC 2011.png
semi1
semi2
final
venueDüsseldorf Arena
Düsseldorf, Germany
presenters
directorLadislaus Kiraly
execsupervisorJon Ola Sand
execproducers
organiserEuropean Broadcasting Union (EBU)
hostARD – Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR)
entries43
finalists25
return
Map FinalY
voteEach country awarded 12, 10, 8–1 points to their 10 favourite songs
winner

Düsseldorf, Germany

The Eurovision Song Contest 2011 was the 56th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest. It consisted of two semi-finals on 10 and 12 May and a final on 14 May 2011, held at the Düsseldorf Arena in Düsseldorf, Germany, and presented by Anke Engelke, Stefan Raab, and Judith Rakers. It was organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR) on behalf of ARD, which staged the event after winning the for with the song "Satellite" by Lena.

Broadcasters from forty-three countries participated in the contest, equalling the record for the . Four countries returned to the contest this year; returned after their last participation , returned after their last participation , returned after their first participation . also returned to the contest after their last participation fourteen years earlier, .

The winner was with the song "Running Scared", performed by Ell and Nikki, and written by Stefan Örn, Sandra Bjurman, and Iain James Farquharson. This was Azerbaijan's first victory in the contest, after only four years of participation. It was also the first male-female duo to win the contest since . Azerbaijan won the televote and combined vote, while won the jury vote and came second overall. , , and rounded out the top five. Apart from Italy, the only other "Big Five" country to make the top 10 was host nation Germany, finishing tenth. The United Kingdom followed closely behind, finishing eleventh. This was the first time since the juries were reintroduced alongside the televoting in 2009 that the winner did not place first in the jury voting; Italy was the jury winner, while Azerbaijan was the televote winner. Georgia, finishing ninth, equalled its best result from . For the first time since the introduction of semi-finals in , Turkey failed to qualify for the final. Additionally, Armenia failed to qualify for the final for the first time since its debut in .

The broadcast of the final won the Rose d'Or award for Best Live Event.

Location

Düsseldorf Arena]] – host venue of the 2011 contest.

The contest took place in Düsseldorf, the seventh-largest city in Germany. This was the first contest to take place outside the host nation's capital city since the in Istanbul. It was also the first Eurovision Song Contest held in Germany since German reunification, with West Germany having previously hosted the contest in and . Germany was also the first country of the "Big Five" to host the contest since the implementation of the rule in 2000 that permits the five countries whose broadcasters are the largest contributors to the EBU – , , the , , and – to qualify automatically for the final alongside the previous year's winner.

The Düsseldorf Arena, a multi-functional football stadium, hosted the contest. The stadium acquired a rental period of six weeks, in order to allow construction and dismantling work in relation to the contest to be carried out. The arena accommodated 35,000 spectators during the contest. Düsseldorf offered 23,000 hotel beds and 2,000 additional beds in the Düsseldorf surroundings and on ships on the River Rhine.

Bidding phase

Twenty-three cities submit official bids to Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR), in order to be the host city for the 2011 contest. Eight of these cities continued to show interest in hosting the event including Berlin, Hamburg, Hanover, Gelsenkirchen, Düsseldorf, Cologne, Frankfurt, and Munich. NDR announced on 21 August 2010 that four of those cities had officially applied to host the 2011 contest: Berlin, Hamburg, Hanover, and Düsseldorf. On 2 October 2010 the Hamburger Abendblatt newspaper announced that Hamburg would be unable to host the 2011 Song Contest, because the city could no longer fulfil the required financial conditions.

Concerns were raised about Berlin's bid concept which consisted of an inflatable tent to be built on Tempelhof's hangar area. Decision makers at NDR reportedly doubted the venue's ability to provide advantageous acoustic conditions. Berlin's speaker Richard Meng neither confirmed nor denied that because, he stated, "secrecy about the bid concepts was promised to the NDR".

On 24 September 2010, it was announced that Fortuna Düsseldorf football club had applied to the Deutsche Fußball Liga for permission to move its home matches to the Paul-Janes-Stadion if the Düsseldorf Arena was awarded the Song Contest. This message indicated that talks with Düsseldorf to host the song contest in the Düsseldorf Arena were already at an advanced stage. The club later announced on 6 October 2010 that it had obtained permission to move its games if necessary. The Neue Ruhr Zeitung newspaper reported on 12 December 2010 that Fortuna Düsseldorf were to be moved to the Paul-Janes-Stadion due to the contest, however it was later decided Fortuna Düsseldorf's training venue next to the Düsseldorf Arena would be equipped with mobile stands from a Swiss event construction specialist, Nussli Group, creating 20,000 extra seats, the decision being made for logistical purposes. The stadium would be named the Lena-Arena and host the remaining 3 home games of Fortuna Düsseldorf's 2. Bundesliga campaign.

On 12 October 2010, NDR announced that the Düsseldorf Arena had been chosen as the host venue for the 2011 Eurovision Song Contest.

Key Host venue

CityVenueNotesRef.BerlinDüsseldorfHamburgHanover
A large tent on the grounds of Tempelhof AirportIf chosen, the tent would have been located on the field near the hangars. Allegedly only room for 9,000 spectators.title=Eurovision Song Contest – Lenas großer Triumphurl=http://www.stern.de/kultur/musik/bewerbung-um-den-eurovision-song-contest-2011-warum-ein-aussenseiter-gute-chancen-hat-1596112.htmlwork=Sternaccess-date=10 September 2010language=dedate=23 August 2010archive-date=14 October 2013archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131014091104/http://www.stern.de/kultur/musik/bewerbung-um-den-eurovision-song-contest-2011-warum-ein-aussenseiter-gute-chancen-hat-1596112.htmlurl-status=live}}
Düsseldorf ArenaHome of the Fortuna Düsseldorf football club. The stadium can hold up to 50,000 spectators, but would hold up to 38,000 spectators for the contesttitle=Eurovision Song Contest 2011 findet in Düsseldorf statturl=https://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5h1QDV7Qal4GNHaCdXRTkupYspFXA?docId=CNG.102b5d2d00dfeacb1243f7cc91081584.151archive-url=https://archive.today/20121216065955/http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5h1QDV7Qal4GNHaCdXRTkupYspFXA?docId=CNG.102b5d2d00dfeacb1243f7cc91081584.151url-status=deadarchive-date=16 December 2012agency=Agence France-Presseaccess-date=13 April 2011date=12 October 2010}}
Hamburg Messehallen, Hall A1Would be staged at Hall A1, but with room for less than 10,000 spectators.
Hanover Exhibition Centre

Participants

On 31 December 2010, it was confirmed that 43 countries would compete in the 2011 contest. The 2011 edition saw the returns of , which had last participated ; , which had last participated ; , which had only taken part ; and , which had last participated . Montenegro had applied to take part in the contest on 4 December, but decided against participation and withdrew on 23 December, two days before 25 December no-strings-attached deadline.

Slovenská televízia (STV) announced its withdrawal from the 2011 contest due to financial reasons, despite holding a public poll on its website on its Eurovision participation which received an 87.5% positive vote. STV announced that it planned to return in the 2012 contest. However, 's application remained on the provisional list, leading to its participation in the 2011 contest. STV announced in January 2011 that it would yet withdraw from the contest, citing to financial reasons and organisational changes. However it was listed by the EBU as one of the semi-finalist countries in the semi-final allocation draw on 17 January, and STV later confirmed it would continue its participation to avoid a fine for a late withdrawal.

At a meeting in Belgrade on 28 August 2010, the EBU decided that each country had to choose its artist and song before 14 March 2011. On 15 March 2011, the draw for the running order took place in the host city. The semi-final allocation draw took place on 17 January in Düsseldorf.

Israeli backing vocalists, at Eurovision 2011

Several of the performing artists had previously represented the same country in past editions, including Dino Merlin, who had represented . Gunnar Ólason, a member of Sjonni's Friends, had represented as part of Two Tricky. Zdob și Zdub had represented . Sophio Toroshelidze, the lead singer of Eldrine, had provided backing vocals for . In addition, TWiiNS representing Slovakia, had provided backing vocals for the .

Along with those artists, two previous Eurovision winners also returned to the contest: Dana International who won the contest for , and Lena who won for and brought the contest to Düsseldorf. Stefan Raab, who represented and appeared as a conductor and backing artist for other German entries, hosted the contest. This was the first time since and only the second time in the history of the contest that two former winners returned on the same year.

CountryBroadcasterArtistSongLanguageSongwriter(s)
RTSHAurela Gaçe"Feel the Passion"English
AMPTVEmmy"Boom Boom"English
ORFNadine Beiler"The Secret is Love"English
İTVEll and Nikki"Running Scared"English
BTRCAnastasia Vinnikova"I Love Belarus"English
RTBFWitloof Bay"With Love Baby"English
BHRTDino Merlin"Love in Rewind"EnglishDino Merlin
BNTPoli Genova"Na inat" (На инат)Bulgarian
HRTDaria"Celebrate"English
CyBCChristos Mylordos"San aggelos s'agapisa" (Σαν άγγελος σ'αγάπησα)Greek
DRA Friend in London"New Tomorrow"English
ERRGetter Jaani"Rockefeller Street"EnglishSven Lõhmus
YleParadise Oskar"Da Da Dam"EnglishAxel Ehnström
France TélévisionsAmaury Vassili"Sognu"Corsican
GPBEldrine"One More Day"English
NDRLena"Taken by a Stranger"English
ERTLoukas Yorkas Stereo Mike"Watch My Dance"English, Greek
MTVAKati Wolf"What About My Dreams?"English, Hungarian
RÚVSjonni's Friends"Coming Home"English
RTÉJedward"Lipstick"English
IBADana International"Ding Dong"Hebrew, EnglishDana International
RAIRaphael Gualazzi"Madness of Love"Italian, EnglishRaffaele Gualazzi
LTVMusiqq"Angel in Disguise"EnglishMarats Ogļezņevs
LRTEvelina Sašenko"C'est ma vie"English
MRTVlatko Ilievski"Rusinka" (Русинкa)Macedonian, English
PBSGlen Vella"One Life"English
TRMZdob şi Zdub"So Lucky"English
TROS3JS"Never Alone"English
NRKStella Mwangi"Haba Haba"English, Swahili
TVPMagdalena Tul"Jestem"PolishMagdalena Tul
RTPHomens da Luta"A luta é alegria"Portuguese
TVRHotel FM"Change"English
C1RAlexey Vorobyov"Get You"English, Russian
SMRTVSenit"Stand By"EnglishRadiosa Romani
RTSNina"Čaroban" (Чаробан)SerbianKristina Kovač
RTVSTwiins"I'm Still Alive"English
RTVSLOMaja Keuc"No One"English
RTVELucía Pérez"Que me quiten lo bailao"SpanishRafael Artesero
SVTEric Saade"Popular"EnglishFredrik Kempe
SRG SSRAnna Rossinelli"In Love for a While"EnglishDavid Klein
TRTYüksek Sadakat"Live It Up"English
NTUMika Newton"Angel"English
BBCBlue"I Can"English

Format

The four countries that were part of the "Big Four", along with the host of the contest, automatically qualify for a place in the grand final. Since Germany was both a "Big Four" country and the host for the 2011 contest, there was a vacant spot in the grand final. At a Reference Group meeting in Belgrade it was decided that the existing rules would remain in place, and that the number of participants in the grand final would simply be lowered from twenty-five to twenty-four. On 31 December 2010, the official participation list was published by the EBU, which stipulated that with the return of Italy to the contest, the nation would become a member of the newly expanded "Big Five". This change permitted Italy automatic qualification into the grand final, alongside France, Spain, the United Kingdom and host nation Germany, restoring the number of participants for the grand final to twenty-five nations.

On 30 August 2010, it was announced that Svante Stockselius, Executive Supervisor of the Eurovision Song Contest, would be leaving his position on 31 December 2010. On 26 November 2010, the EBU announced that Jon Ola Sand would succeed Stockselius as Executive Supervisor.

Semi-final allocation draw

Pre-qualified for the final but also voting in the second semi-final}}

The draw to determine the semi-final running orders was held on 17 January 2011. All of the participating countries excluding the automatic finalists were split into six pots, based on the voting history of those countries in previous years. From these pots, half (or as close to half as was possible) competed in the first semi-final on 10 May 2011. The other half in that particular pot competed in the second semi-final on 12 May 2011. This draw doubled as an approximate running order, in order for the delegations from the countries to know when their rehearsals commenced. The draw also determined in which of the semi-finals the automatic finalists would be able to cast their votes.

Israeli broadcaster IBA requested to compete in the second semi-final, rather than the first semi-final that was pulled in the draw, due to Israel's Memorial Day coinciding with the first semi-final. German broadcaster NDR also requested that it be allowed to vote in the second semi-final for scheduling reasons.

Pot 1Pot 2Pot 3Pot 4Pot 5Pot 6

Graphic design

Ell and Nikki]] of Azerbaijan, during their performance

The design of the contest was built around the slogan "Feel Your Heart Beat", with the logo and on-screen graphics designed by Turquoise Branding. The postcard introducing each performance included the logo in the colours of the performing country (e.g. the United Kingdom in red, white and blue); then a German place was shown in a toy-like view using tilt-shift photography and a story happened there, whose main characters were people either living in Germany or tourists from that country. The contest's motto, 'Feel your heart beat', was then shown or said in the country's national or native language. For example, in the first postcard shown (Poland's), the boyfriend drops a piece of paper. The camera then pans down to the paper, to show the Polish phrase "Poczuj bicie serca" handwritten on it. In the second postcard shown (Norway's), a mountain climber from Norway climbs to the top of a mountain and yells the Norwegian phrase "Kjenn ditt hjerte slå.". Then, the heart appeared once again, and the stage and the crowd could be seen, with heartbeat sounds and pink lights pulsating in rhythm with the heartbeat, before the performance started.

The main colours of the letterboxes were black and pink. The scoreboard showed a spokesperson from the country giving their votes on the right, while showing a table of results on the left. The large points (8, 10 and 12) were highlighted in pink, whilst the lower points, (1–7) were in purple. This scoreboard design was used again the following year, with minor changes such as the large points appearing progressively larger in size compared to the lower points and the highlighted colours changed to match the 2012 theme, "Light your fire!"

Host broadcaster

Hosts [[Anke Engelke]], [[Judith Rakers]], and [[Stefan Raab]].

ARD, the German participating broadcaster in the Eurovision Song Contest, is a joint organisation of Germany's regional public-service broadcasters. The ARD has 10 members. The venues that were in consideration are located in the areas of three different members: Berlin is located within the Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (RBB) member area, Hamburg and Hanover within the Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR) area and Düsseldorf within the Westdeutscher Rundfunk (WDR) broadcasting area. While ARD has delegated its participation in the contest to NDR in recent years, the financial scope of the three broadcasters seemed to have become a decisive factor in the application procedure for the 2011 contest. The Tagesspiegel reported on 7 October 2010 that the costs for hosting this event resulted in a tense discussion about necessary savings on other programme contents made by the three broadcasters.

Hosts

On 16 December 2010, NDR announced that Anke Engelke, Judith Rakers, and Stefan Raab were to be the presenters for the contest. It was the third time three people would host the contest, the previous such contests being and . Raab had represented Germany in 2000 with "Wadde hadde dudde da?", whereas Engelke is an actress and comedian, and Rakers journalist and television presenter.

Event concept and ticket sale

On 13 October 2010 Thomas Schreiber, coordinator at ARD, outlined details of Düsseldorf's event concept. The Düsseldorf Arena was to be split in two parts separated from each other. On one side of the stadium the stage would be installed while the other side would function as background dressing rooms for the artist delegations. An athletics arena next to the Düsseldorf Arena would serve as the press centre for the event. The Düsseldorf Arena offered comfortable seats relatively near to the stage that created an indoor event arena atmosphere rather than a football-stadium ambiance. There were plans to allow the public the chance to attend the dress rehearsals. Altogether, tickets were sold for seven shows (the grand final, two semi-finals and four dress rehearsals).

He also said in that interview that tickets for the event were likely to go on sale "within the next four weeks" (by mid-November 2010). NDR had already opened a preregistration e-mail-newsletter on its website for all people interested in tickets for the event.

Ticket sales started on 12 December 2010 at 12:12 CET on the website www.dticket.de, the only authorised seller. However, the ticket page opened for sales approximately two hours earlier than originally advertised; this announcement was made by an email newsletter sent to preregistered buyers minutes before opening, giving them a slight benefit in acquiring tickets. The grand final 32,000 tickets that were put on sale on 12 December sold out in less than six hours. Once camera positions had been determined, a few thousand extra tickets were put on sale.

Tickets for the semi-finals were put on sale in mid-January, when it was known which countries would take part in each semi-final.

Contest overview

Semi-final 1

The first semi-final took place on 10 May 2011 at 21:00 CEST. All the countries competing in this semi-final were eligible to vote, plus Spain and the United Kingdom. The ten countries in this semi-final with the highest scoring points, according to a combination of televotes and jury votes from each voting country, qualified for the grand final.

Multiple broadcasters lost contact with their commentators during this semi-final due to a technical glitch. Dropouts in the multi-channel sound connections were the cause of this fault, which was corrected with a backup system put in place and tested extensively before the second semi-final. Some commentators phoned their broadcaster to get their voice on television and radio broadcasts during the semi-final.

R/OCountryArtistSongPointsPlace12345678910111213141516171819
"Jestem"1819
"Haba Haba"3017
"Feel the Passion"4714
Emmy"Boom Boom"5412
Yüksek Sadakat"Live It Up"4713
Nina"Čaroban"678
"Get You"649
"In Love for a While"5510
Eldrine"One More Day"746
Paradise Oskar"Da Da Dam"1033
"One Life"5411
Senit"Stand By"3416
Daria"Celebrate"4115
Sjonni's Friends"Coming Home"1004
"What About My Dreams?"727
Homens da Luta"A luta é alegria"2218
"C'est ma vie"815
Ell and Nikki"Running Scared"1222
Stereo Mike"Watch My Dance"1331

Semi-final 2

The second semi-final took place on 12 May 2011 at 21:00 CEST. All the countries competing in this semi-final were eligible to vote, plus France, Germany and Italy. The ten countries in this semi-final with the highest scoring points, according to a combination of televotes and jury votes from each voting country, qualified for the grand final.

R/OCountryArtistSongPointsPlace12345678910111213141516171819
"Love in Rewind"1095
"The Secret Is Love"697
3JS"Never Alone"1319
Witloof Bay"With Love Baby"5311
Twiins"I'm Still Alive"4813
"Angel"816
Zdob și Zdub"So Lucky"5410
"Popular"1551
"San aggelos s'agapisa"1618
"Na inat"4812
"Rusinka"3616
Dana International"Ding Dong"3815
"No One"1123
Hotel FM"Change"1114
"Rockefeller Street"609
"I Love Belarus"4514
Musiqq"Angel in Disguise"2517
A Friend in London"New Tomorrow"1352
Jedward"Lipstick"688

Final

The final took place on 14 May 2011 at 21:00 CEST and was won by Azerbaijan. Only the "Big Five" countries automatically qualified for the grand final. From the two semi-finals on 10 and 12 May 2011, twenty countries qualified for the grand final. A total of 25 countries competed in the final and all 43 participants voted. The voting system used was the same as in the 2010 contest, with a combination of televotes and jury votes selecting the winner. Viewers were able to vote during the performances; the voting window ended 15 minutes after the conclusion of the songs.

Background music for the show included "Wonderful" by Gary Go.

Azerbaijan won with 221 points, also winning the televote. Italy (who won the jury vote) came second with 189 points, with Sweden, Ukraine, Denmark, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Greece, Ireland, Georgia and Germany completing the top ten. Finland, Hungary, Spain, Estonia and Switzerland occupied the bottom five positions.

R/OCountryArtistSongPointsPlace12345678910111213141516171819202122232425
Paradise Oskar"Da Da Dam"5721
"Love in Rewind"1256
A Friend in London"New Tomorrow"1345
"C'est ma vie"6319
"What About My Dreams?"5322
Jedward"Lipstick"1198
"Popular"1853
"Rockefeller Street"4424
Stereo Mike"Watch My Dance"1207
"Get You"7716
"Sognu"8215
"Madness of Love"1892
"In Love for a While"1925
Blue"I Can"10011
Zdob și Zdub"So Lucky"9712
Lena"Taken by a Stranger"10710
Hotel FM"Change"7717
"The Secret Is Love"6418
Ell and Nikki"Running Scared"2211
"No One"9613
Sjonni's Friends"Coming Home"6120
"Que me quiten lo bailao"5023
"Angel"1594
Nina"Čaroban"8514
Eldrine"One More Day"1109

Spokespersons

Each participating broadcaster appointed a spokesperson who was responsible for announcing, in English or French, the votes for its respective country. Unlike previous years, the voting order was not drawn with the order of presentation of songs. Rather, the voting order was calculated just before the event, to reduce the likelihood of there being an outright winner from the start. Countries revealed their votes in the following order:

  1. RussiaDima Bilan
  2. BulgariaMaria Ilieva
  3. NetherlandsMandy Huydts
  4. ItalyRaffaella Carrà
  5. CyprusLoukas Hamatsos
  6. UkraineRuslana
  7. FinlandSusan Aho
  8. NorwayNadia Hasnaoui
  9. ArmeniaLusine Tovmasyan
  10. North MacedoniaKristina Taleska
  11. IcelandRagnhildur Steinunn Jónsdóttir
  12. SlovakiaMária Pietrová
  13. United KingdomAlex Jones
  14. DenmarkLise Rønne
  15. AustriaKati Bellowitsch
  16. Poland
  17. SwedenDanny Saucedo
  18. San MarinoNicola Della Valle
  19. GermanyIna Müller
  20. AzerbaijanSafura Alizadeh
  21. SloveniaKlemen Slakonja
  22. Turkey
  23. Switzerland
  24. GreeceLena Aroni
  25. GeorgiaSofia Nizharadze
  26. FranceCyril Féraud
  27. Serbia
  28. CroatiaNevena Rendeli
  29. BelarusLeila Ismailava
  30. RomaniaMalvina Cservenschi
  31. AlbaniaLeon Menkshi
  32. MaltaKelly Schembri
  33. PortugalJoana Teles
  34. HungaryÉva Novodomszky
  35. Lithuania
  36. Bosnia and HerzegovinaIvana Vidmar
  37. IrelandDerek Mooney
  38. SpainElena S. Sánchez
  39. IsraelOfer Nachshon
  40. EstoniaPiret Järvis
  41. MoldovaGeta Burlacu
  42. BelgiumMaureen Louys
  43. LatviaAisha

Detailed voting results

The split jury/televoting results were announced by the EBU after the final. As in 2010, only the split totals received by each country were given, not the full breakdown.

Semi-final 1

PlaceCombinedJuryTelevotingCountryPointsCountryPointsCountryPoints12345678910111213141516171819
133113154
122109124
103104111
10010293
818690
748479
727675
677473
647456
556554
546152
545845
475142
474942
413339
343132
302925
221324
1868
nb=1Total score}}nb=1Poland}}nb=1Norway}}nb=1Albania}}nb=1Armenia}}nb=1Turkey}}nb=1Serbia}}nb=1Russia}}nb=1Switzerland}}nb=1Georgia}}nb=1Finland}}nb=1Malta}}nb=1San Marino}}nb=1Croatia}}nb=1Iceland}}nb=1Hungary}}nb=1Portugal}}nb=1Lithuania}}nb=1Azerbaijan}}nb=1Greece}}nb=1Spain}}nb=1United Kingdom}}va=middleContestants}}PolandNorwayAlbaniaArmeniaTurkeySerbiaRussiaSwitzerlandGeorgiaFinlandMaltaSan MarinoCroatiaIcelandHungaryPortugalLithuaniaAzerbaijanGreece
1834425
301112841021
4786874212
54278877483
4712253210121
67672412733125132
644312365315333553
55363262685662
74581045182112810
10310126131210312687346
54267256124217
3485516162
41712112414
100410283810121086127
7256101216751010
22442183
8112841731022564512
12285121011251051087710714
133711010476774568101241078

12 points

Below is a summary of the maximum 12 points each country awarded to another in the first semi-final:

N.ContestantNation(s) giving 12 points321
, ,
,
,
,
,
,
,

Semi-final 2

PlaceCombinedJuryTelevotingCountryPointsCountryPointsCountryPoints12345678910111213141516171819
155146159
135129131
11299121
11195115
1098591
818378
697668
687161
607154
546652
536551
485950
485346
454743
383843
363640
252433
162223
131117
nb=1Total score}}nb=1Bosnia and Herzegovina}}nb=1Austria}}nb=1Netherlands}}nb=1Belgium}}nb=1Slovakia}}nb=1Ukraine}}nb=1Moldova}}nb=1Sweden}}nb=1Cyprus}}nb=1Bulgaria}}nb=1Macedonia}}nb=1Israel}}nb=1Slovenia}}nb=1Romania}}nb=1Estonia}}nb=1Belarus}}nb=1Latvia}}nb=1Denmark}}nb=1Ireland}}nb=1France}}nb=1Germany}}nb=1Italy}}va=middleContestants}}Bosnia and HerzegovinaAustriaNetherlandsBelgiumSlovakiaUkraineMoldovaSwedenCyprusBulgariaMacedoniaIsraelSloveniaRomaniaEstoniaBelarusLatviaDenmarkIreland
10912104124812125271074
6973514410172521125
1385
538166262281362
4863312733335
814108353686271216
54425412101457
1555101212753122125712871281213
16628
48221511014413410
361071387
38525174671
1121288847810610548653
11164106127814765638612
60568645183104
4521101038146
25428227
135177733212612101051041212210
683152210716310108

12 points

Below is a summary of the maximum 12 points each country awarded to another in the second semi-final:

N.ContestantNation(s) giving 12 points7421
, , , , , ,
, , ,
, , ,
,

Final

PlaceCombinedJuryTelevotingCountryPointsCountryPointsCountryPoints12345678910111213141516171819202122232425
221251223
189182221
185168176
159160168
134145166
125119151
120117138
119111138
110106113
107104101
1009099
979098
968689
858479
828276
777973
777564
647461
637260
616655
576047
535739
505332
443825
19252
nb=1Total score}}nb=1Russia}}nb=1Bulgaria}}nb=1Netherlands}}nb=1Italy}}nb=1Cyprus}}nb=1Ukraine}}nb=1Finland}}nb=1Norway}}nb=1Armenia}}nb=1Macedonia}}nb=1Iceland}}nb=1Slovakia}}nb=1United Kingdom}}nb=1Denmark}}nb=1Austria}}nb=1Poland}}nb=1Sweden}}nb=1San Marino}}nb=1Germany}}nb=1Azerbaijan}}nb=1Slovenia}}nb=1Turkey}}nb=1Switzerland}}nb=1Greece}}nb=1Georgia}}nb=1France}}nb=1Serbia}}nb=1Croatia}}nb=1Belarus}}nb=1Romania}}nb=1Albania}}nb=1Malta}}nb=1Portugal}}nb=1Hungary}}nb=1Lithuania}}nb=1Bosnia and Herzegovina}}nb=1Ireland}}nb=1Spain}}nb=1Israel}}nb=1Estonia}}nb=1Moldova}}nb=1Belgium}}nb=1Latvia}}va=middleContestants}}FinlandBosnia and HerzegovinaDenmarkLithuaniaHungaryIrelandSwedenEstoniaGreeceRussiaFranceItalySwitzerlandUnited KingdomMoldovaGermanyRomaniaAustriaAzerbaijanSloveniaIcelandSpainUkraineSerbiaGeorgia
57121055725137
1252844121287121012351277
1347123712653104687151210106
6323612127211017
5341252522876
1193510481212411288627710
18511010161046710310634461101443610545121234
442722775624
1208102126738108263810818
7742881541445436855
82317545312262124102121
189136137610123134107823612101041065126612
194105
100412104312523251621267336145
9778758547547125481
107765681046738431823358
7764124165118611210
645113232141251733227
22112681058788310121586106108128788481032
965261017311210124316122323
615884611041212
50421231255124
15910875127122212677106510234778
85332618765106815104
11061121077108812512237

12 points

Below is a summary of the maximum 12 points each country awarded to another in the grand final:

A record number of 20 countries received at least one set of 12 points during the grand final. The only countries not to receive full marks were Estonia, Russia, Switzerland, Germany and Serbia.

N.ContestantNation(s) giving 12 points54321
, , , ,
, , ,
****, ,
, ,
, ,
, ,
, ,
,
,
,
,
,
,

Broadcasts

Most countries sent commentators to Düsseldorf or commentated from their own country, in order to add insight to the participants and, if necessary, the provision of voting information.

CountryBroadcasterChannel(s)Show(s)Commentator(s)Ref(s)AlbaniaArmeniaAustriaAzerbaijanBelarusBelgiumBosnia and HerzegovinaBulgariaCroatiaCyprusDenmarkEstoniaFinlandFranceGeorgiaGermanyGreeceHungaryIcelandIrelandIsraelItalyLatviaLithuaniaMacedoniaMaltaMoldovaNetherlandsNorwayPolandPortugalRomaniaRussiaSan MarinoSerbiaSlovakiaSloveniaSpainSwedenSwitzerlandTurkeyUkraineUnited Kingdom
RTSHTVSHAll showsLeon Menkshi
AMPTVArmenia 1All shows
ORFORF einsAll showsAndi Knoll
Hitradio Ö3
Final
İTVAll showsLeyla Aliyeva
BTRCBelarus-1All showsDenis Kurian
RTBFLa UneAll showsJean-Pierre Hautier and
VRTEénSven Pichal and André Vermeulen
Radio 2
BHRTBHT 1All showsDejan Kukrić
BNTAll showsGeorgi Kushvaliev and Elena Rosberg
HRTHRT 1All showsDuško Ćurlić
CyBCRIK 1All showsMelina Karageorgiou
DRDR1, DR HDAll showsOle Tøpholm
ERRETVAll showsMarko Reikop
Raadio 2
YLEYLE TV2,All shows
YLE Radio SuomiSanna Kojo and Jorma Hietamäki
YLE Radio VegaEva Frantz and Johan Lindroos
France TélévisionsFrance ÔSF2and
France 3FinalLaurent Boyer and Catherine Lara
Radio FranceFrance BleuFabien Lecœuvre and Serge Poezevara
GPB1TVAll showsSopho Altunashvili
ARDEinsfestivalSF1Peter Urban and Steven Gätjen
Das ErsteSF2/FinalPeter Urban
NDR 2, WDR 1LIVE, hr3FinalThomas Mohr, and Tim Frühling
ProSiebenProSiebenSF1Peter Urban and Steven Gätjen
ERTNET, ERT HDAll showsMaria Kozakou
Deftero Programma
MTVAm1All showsurl=http://eschungary.hu/eurovizio-2011/magyarorszag/title=MTV Press Conferencedate=9 March 2011publisher=eschungary.huaccess-date=23 April 2011url-status=deadarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110315195109/http://eschungary.hu/eurovizio-2011/magyarorszag/archive-date=15 March 2011df=dmy-all}}
RÚVSjónvarpiðAll showsHrafnhildur Halldorsdóttir
RTÉRTÉ TwoSemi-finalsMarty Whelan
RTÉ OneFinal
RTÉ Radio 1SF2/FinalShay Byrne and Zbyszek Zalinski
IBAAll showsNo commentary
RAIRai 5, Rai Radio 2SF2Raffaella Carrà and Bob Sinclar
Rai 2Final
LTVAll showsValters Frīdenbergs and Uģis Joksts
LRTAll showsDarius Užkuraitisurl=http://pramogos.delfi.lt/eurovision_2011/lietuva-eurovizijos-finale.d?id=45312319title=Lietuva – "Eurovizijos" finale!, DELFI Pramogospublisher=Pramogos.delfi.ltaccess-date=17 May 2011archive-date=13 May 2011archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110513061905/http://pramogos.delfi.lt/eurovision_2011/lietuva-eurovizijos-finale.d?id=45312319url-status=live }}
MRTMTV 1All showsEli Tanaskovska
PBSTVMAll showsEileen Montesin
TRMMoldova 1All showsMarcel Spătari
NPONederland 1All showsJan Smit and Daniël Dekker
NRKNRK1All showsOlav Viksmo-Slettan
TVPTVP1All showsArtur Orzech
RTPRTP1, RTP HD, RTP InternacionalAll showsSílvia Albertourl=http://www.oikotimes.com/eurovision/?p=4680title=SILVIA ALBERTO THE RTP COMMENTATOR IN DUSSELDORFdate=7 April 2011publisher=oikotimes.comaccess-date=28 April 2011archive-date=4 July 2013archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130704081829/http://oikotimes.com/2013/02/10/eurovision-2013-%CF%83%CF%84%CE%BF-mad-radio-1062/url-status=dead}}
TVRTVR 1, TVR HD, TVR InternaţionalAll showsLiana Stanciu and Bogdan Pavlică
Channel OneAll showsYana Churikova and
Final
SMRTVSMtv San MarinoAll showsLia Fiorio and Gigi Restivo
RTSRTS1, RTS SatSF1Marina Nikolić
SF2Dragan Ilić
FinalDuška Vučinić-Lučić
Radio BelgradeAll showsTanja Zeljković
RTVSJednotka, Rádio FMAll showsRoman Bomboš
RTVSLOTV SLO 2Semi-finals
TV SLO 1Final
RTVELa 2Semi-finalsJosé María Íñigo
La 1, TVE HD, TVE InternacionalFinal
SVTSVT1All showsand Edward af Sillén
SRG SSRSF zweiSF1/FinalSven Epiney
TSR 2SF1Jean-Marc Richard and Henri Dès
FinalJean-Marc Richard and Nicolas Tanner
RSI La 2Semi-finalsJonathan Tedesco
RSI La 1Final
HD suisseSF1/FinalNo commentary
TRTTRT 1All showsBülend Özveren and
NTUPershyi NatsionalnyiAll showsTimur Miroshnychenko and Tetyana Terekhova
UROlena Zelinchenko
BBCBBC Three, BBC HDSemi-finalsScott Mills and Sara Cox
BBC One, BBC One HDFinalGraham Norton
BBC Radio 2Ken Bruce
CountryBroadcasterChannel(s)Show(s)Commentator(s)Ref(s)AustraliaFaroe IslandsGreenlandNew Zealand
SBSSBS One, SBS HDAll showsJulia Zemiro and Sam Pangurl=http://www.sbs.com.au/eurovision/article/preview/id/87/n/Whats-on-SBSONEtitle=SBS Eurovision – Whats-on-SBSONEwork=Special Broadcasting Serviceaccess-date=4 May 2011archive-date=21 October 2012archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121021125509/http://www.sbs.com.au/eurovision/article/preview/id/87/n/Whats-on-SBSONEurl-status=dead}}
KvFAll showsOle Tøpholm
KNRKNRFinalNo commentary
Triangle TelevisionTriangle StratosAll showsNo commentary

Other awards

In addition to the main winner's trophy, the Marcel Bezençon Awards and the Barbara Dex Award were contested during the 2011 Eurovision Song Contest. The OGAE, "General Organisation of Eurovision Fans" voting poll also took place before the contest.

Marcel Bezençon Awards

The Marcel Bezençon Awards, organised since 2002 by Sweden's then-Head of Delegation and 1992 representative Christer Björkman, and 1984 winner Richard Herrey, honours songs in the contest's final. The awards are divided into three categories: Artistic Award, Composers Award, and Press Award.

CategoryCountrySongArtistSongwriter(s)Artistic AwardComposers AwardPress Award
"Lipstick"Jedward
"Sognu"Amaury Vassili
"Da Da Dam"Paradise OskarAxel Ehnström

OGAE

OGAE, an organisation of over forty Eurovision Song Contest fan clubs across Europe and beyond, conducts an annual voting poll first held in 2002 as the Marcel Bezençon Fan Award. After all votes were cast, the top-ranked entry in the 2011 poll was Hungary's "What About My Dreams?" performed by Kati Wolf; the top five results are shown below.

CountrySongArtistPoints
"What About My Dreams?"Kati Wolf277
"Sognu"Amaury Vassili270
"I Can"Blue253
"Popular"Eric Saade238
"Rockefeller Street"Getter Jaani183

Barbara Dex Award

The Barbara Dex Award is a humorous fan award given to the worst dressed artist each year. Named after Belgium's representative who came last in the 1993 contest, wearing her self-designed dress, the award was handed by the fansite House of Eurovision from 1997 to 2016 and is being carried out by the fansite songfestival.be since 2017.

PlaceCountryArtistVotes12345
Eldrine133
Jedward81
Zdob și Zdub66
Yüksek Sadakat61
Homens da Luta59

Official album

Cover art of the official album

Eurovision Song Contest: Düsseldorf 2011 was the official compilation album of the 2011 contest, put together by the European Broadcasting Union and released by EMI Records and CMC International on 15 April 2011. The album featured all 43 songs that entered in the 2011 contest, including the semi-finalists that failed to qualify into the grand final.

Charts

Chart (2011)Peak
position

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