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France in the Eurovision Song Contest 1957

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Summary

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FieldValue
Year1957
BroadcasterRadiodiffusion-Télévision Française (RTF)
CountryFrance
Selection processInternal selection
Selection date2 March 1957
SongLa Belle Amour
ArtistPaule Desjardins
Writer
Final result2nd, 17 votes

France was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 1957 with the song "La Belle Amour", composed by Guy Lafarge, with lyrics by Francis Carco, and performed by Paule Desjardins. Though French participating broadcaster Radiodiffusion-Télévision Française (RTF) held a national final to select its entry, it ultimately switched to an internal selection. "La Belle Amour" was performed eighth at the contest and placed second, receiving 17 points.

Before Eurovision

''{{Lang|fr|Sept villes, une chanson}}''

Radiodiffusion-Télévision Française (RTF) aired Sept villes, une chanson on its television channel every two weeks on Fridays between 21 December 1956 and 28 February 1957 at 20:40 CET. It was directed by Igor Barrère and presented by Robert Beauvais in a studio in Paris.

In each show, five new songs were presented. The songs were arranged by , and accompanied by an orchestra under the direction of Paul Durand. Each song was presented twice, once sung, and once in an instrumental version or sung by a different artist.

Six juries sitting in six French cities chose a winner in each show, with the sixth and last jury to give its vote usually being the jury in Paris. Despite the title of the show ("Seven cities, one song"), the heats usually featured juries from only six cities, with the exception of the first heat of 21 December 1957, which featured juries from seven cities.

Every jury consisted of 11 viewers who watched the broadcast on television. Each juror gave one vote to their favourite song. Robert Beauvais called the juries on telephone and oversaw the voting with the help of a scoreboard in the studio. According to newspaper L'Aurore, due to technical issues regarding the telephone lines, all juries were relocated to Paris after the first show.

Heat 1

The first heat of Sept villes, une chanson was aired on 21 December 1957. Five songs were presented. The winning song "Le Petit Homme et la noix" was written by Henri Bourtayre, with lyrics by Francis Blanche. For the interval act, Paule Desjardins performed "Paris palace hôtel".

First PerformanceSecond PerformanceSongSongwriter(s)VotesPlaceR/OArtistR/OArtist
17Paul Péri"Vive le mariage"83
2Jacqueline Roland4"Le Petit Homme et la noix"Henri Bourtayre, Francis Blanche341
3Claudine Céréda and Paul Mattei8Catherine Maisse"Quand ton amour sera fini"45
59"Rio"64
6Les Blue Stars10Paule Desjardins"Il est là"Magenta, Simone Vallauris222
Songnb=1Lille}}nb=1Strasbourg}}nb=1Nancy}}nb=1Lyon}}nb=1Marseille}}nb=1Nice}}nb=1Paris}}Total
"Vive le mariage"411118
"Le Petit Homme et la noix"63585734
"Quand ton amour sera fini"224
"Rio"66
"Il est là"72233522

Heat 2

The second heat of Sept villes, une chanson was aired on 4 January 1957. Five new songs were presented. The winning song "Le Manteau de laine" was written by Léo Chauliac and Henri Contet. As the interval act, Jacqueline Roland performed the winning song from heat 1, "Le Petit Homme et la noix".

An incident occurred during the voting: Despite the rules that allowed each jury to distribute only 11 votes, the jury of Lille distributed 28 votes. The spokespersons of the following juries in Lyon and Nice protested against this irregularity before giving their respective votes, wrongly accusing Marseille instead of Lille. Presenter Robert Beauvais promised that the matter would be investigated, but ultimately continued the voting. He apologised to viewers for the error in the next heat on 18 January 1957.

First PerformanceSecond PerformanceSongSongwriter(s)VotesPlaceR/OArtistR/OArtist
1Marcel Amont4"Le Photographe"Emer, Coulonges133
2Nadine Young7Les Blue Stars"Ma Petite Femme et moi"182
38"Le Manteau de laine"Léo Chauliac, Henri Contet291
5Hélène Martin10Jean Arnaud"Le bleu c'est pour les amoureux"105
69"La Polka du petit poisson rouge"G. Matis133
Songnb=1Marseille}}nb=1Lille}}nb=1Lyon}}nb=1Nice}}nb=1Strasbourg}}nb=1Paris}}Total
"Le Photographe"714113
"Ma Petite Femme et moi"514818
"Le Manteau de laine"310513729
"Le bleu c'est pour les amoureux"233210
"La Polka du petit poisson rouge"631313

Heat 3

The third heat of Sept villes, une chanson was aired on 18 January 1957. It was in this heat that Robert Beauvais announced for the first time that the show would serve as the selection for the French entry in the upcoming Eurovision Song Contest. Five new songs were presented. The winning song "C'est demain" was written by and . performed the winning song from heat 2, "Le Manteau de laine", as the interval act.

First PerformanceSecond PerformanceSongSongwriter(s)VotesPlaceR/OArtistR/OArtist
1Suc et Serre8"Le Clodo des toits"Jean-Pierre Suc45
2Jean Bertola5"C'est demain",181
3Mathé Altéry7"Celui que j'aime"162
4Jacques Leroy9Les Quatre de Paris"La Cour de mon école"Jacques Leroy, R. Bernard162
610Pierre Louki"La Môme aux boutons"Lacome, Pierre Louki124
Songnb=1Nancy}}nb=1Marseille}}nb=1Mulhouse}}nb=1Lyon}}nb=1Roubaix}}nb=1Paris}}Total
"Le Clodo des toits"1214
"C'est demain"3129318
"Celui que j'aime"384116
"La Cour de mon école"3613316
"La Môme aux boutons"2412312

Heat 4

The fourth heat of Sept villes, une chanson was aired on 1 February 1957. The winning song from heat 3, "C'est demain" was played by and Paul Durand's orchestra in an instrumental version as the interval act.

First PerformanceSecond PerformanceSongSongwriter(s)R/OArtistR/OArtist
1Renée Pierre6"Encore de l'argent"
25"Je m'ballade dans Paname"
310"Au bal du samedi"
4Line Andrès8Bob Martin"Seulement"C. Nougaro, J. Walter
7Danièle Dupré9"Le Vieux Marin"Botton

Heat 5

The fifth heat was held on 15 February 1957. In contrast to the other heats, it was directed by Claude Dagues. As the interval act, the winning song from heat 4, "Je m'ballade dans Paname" was performed by . Heat 5 was won by the song "La Belle Amour" written by Guy Lafarge (music) and Francis Carco (lyrics).

First PerformanceSecond PerformanceSongSongwriter(s)VotesPlaceR/OArtistR/OArtist
1Maria Lea7Christian Borel"Les Deux Enfants"J. Solar, Cl. Amy94
24"Des souris et des chats", J. Lasry153
3Louis Massis6"Les Aurochs"D. Lapeyrère, J-P. Michel05
5Josette Privat9"La Belle Amour"Guy Lafarge, Francis Carco251
810Les Bass'Harmonistes"Moi qui vous parle"172
Songnb=1Strasbourg}}nb=1Aix-en-Provence}}nb=1Lens}}nb=1Nice}}nb=1Reims}}nb=1Paris}}Total
"Les Deux Enfants"4149
"Des souris et des chats"68115
"Les Aurochs"0
"La Belle Amour"11761025
"Moi qui vous parle"1042117

Heat 6

The sixth and last heat of Sept villes, une chanson was held on 28 February 1957. In this heat, presenter Robert Beauvais renewed the announcement that the format would be used to select the French entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 1957. In contrast to previous heats with five songs, six songs were presented in this heat. As the interval act, Josette Privat performed the winning song from heat 5, "La Belle Amour". Heat 6 was won by "Quelqu'un viendra demain" and "La Reine du port", finishing both with 15 votes. "La Reine du port" was written by Paul Aliprandi.

First PerformanceSecond PerformanceSongSongwriter(s)VotesPlaceR/OArtistR/OArtist
15"La Dondon"36
2Félix Marten9Les Frères Demarny"Mon Bon Vieux Phono"F. Bonifay, J. Hourdeaux, J. Claudric95
3Guy Severyns7"Quelqu'un viendra demain"J. P. Mottier151
4Victoria Marino11Miguel Amador"Villa Bella"123
6Lucien Lupi10"La Reine du port"Paul Aliprandi151
812Jacqueline Allard"Mon Premier Amour"104
Songnb=1Strasbourg}}nb=1Nîmes}}nb=1Paris}}nb=1Lyon}}nb=1Saint-Amand}}nb=1Nancy}}Total
"La Dondon"33
"Mon Bon Vieux Phono"3249
"Quelqu'un viendra demain"4224315
"Villa Bella"61512
"La Reine du port"334515
"Mon Premier Amour"1314110

Selection of the French entry

Despite having announced Sept villes, une chanson as preselection, RTF finally opted for an internal selection: a separate jury that included Robert Beauvais chose Paule Desjardins as French representative and the song "La Belle Amour" as the French entry. "La Belle Amour" had won the fifth heat of Sept villes, une chanson. It was written by Guy Lafarge (music) and Francis Carco (lyrics).

On 21 February, Deutsches Fernsehen published a press release on the upcoming contest in Frankfurt, saying that Paule Desjardins would sing a song by Guy Lafarge for France. TV listings magazine Radio-Télévision 57 mentioned her as the French representative in its issue of 24 February 1957. It was only on 2 March, one day before the contest, that French newspapers reported that "La Belle Amour" was the French entry.

Official TV listings for the Eurovision Song Contest on 3 March still claimed that the French entry had been chosen in Sept villes, une chanson. Apparently, RTF did not inform television viewers sufficiently ahead of the Eurovision Song Contest: TV listings magazine Télévision Programme Magazine later reported having received numerous letters by angry viewers who criticised RTF for its lack of transparency in the selection and for the last-minute replacement of Josette Privat (who had sung the song in Sept villes, une chanson) with Paule Desjardins. The magazine contacted Robert Beauvais, who had presented all shows and had been involved in the decision. Beauvais stated that RTF wanted a good-looking international star to represent France and that Privat was "young, therefore without experience. Her appearance of a nice urchin [gavroche] could not be suitable." According to Beauvais, RTF first had asked Jacqueline François but since she was not available for the date of the contest, they then turned to Paule Desjardins.

At Eurovision

At the Eurovision Song Contest held on 3 March 1957 in Frankfurt, Paule Desjardins performed eight, following the and preceding . "La Belle Amour" was conducted by Paul Durand. The song received 17 votes, placing second in a field of ten. It was succeeded as French representative at the 1958 contest by André Claveau, with "Dors mon amour".

Eurovision Song Contest 1957 was broadcast on French television RTF and radio Paris-Inter, on both stations with commentary by Robert Beauvais.

Voting

Every country had a jury of ten people. Every jury member could give one vote to their favourite song. The French jury included , France Roche, Cora Vaucaire, Paul Colin, Maurice Dekobra, Louis Ducreux, Marcepoil, Jean Marsac and François Périer.

ScoreCountry6 votes4 votes2 votes1 vote
ScoreCountry6 votes4 votes

Notes

References

References

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  2. (24 February 1957). "Jeudi 28 Février". Télévision Programme Magazine.
  3. (13 January 1957). "Vendredi 18 janvier". Télévision Programme Magazine.
  4. (30 December 1956). "Vendredi 4 Janvier". Télévision Programme Magazine.
  5. (27 January 1957). "Vendredi 1er février". Télévision Programme Magazine.
  6. (10-16 February 1957). "Vendredi 15 février". Télevision Programme Magazine.
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  15. Amont, Marcel. (1956). "Marcel Amont (2)". Polydor.
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  19. Leroy, Jacques. (1962). "Quand Paris S'Promène". Odeon.
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  23. Passy, Florence. (1957). "Seulement". Decca.
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  27. Lea, Maria. (1957). "Chante". Pacific.
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  40. Treich, Léon. (2 March 1957). "Vous avez vu... Les étoiles d’Étienne Lalou sont plus authentiques que celles de Robert Beauvais". [[L'Aurore (newspaper founded 1944).
  41. (3 March 1957). "Programmes de télévision". Radio Cinéma Télévision.
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