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France in the Eurovision Song Contest 1958

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Summary

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FieldValue
Year1958
BroadcasterRadiodiffusion-Télévision Française (RTF)
CountryFrance
Flag variant1830
Selection processArtist: Internal selection
Song: National final
Selection date7 February 1958
ArtistAndré Claveau
SongDors, mon amour
Writer
Final result1st, 27 votes

Song: National final

France was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 1958 with the song "Dors, mon amour", composed by Pierre Delanoë, with lyrics by Hubert Giraud, and performed by André Claveau. The French participating broadcaster, Radiodiffusion-Télévision Française (RTF), held a national final to select its entry, after having previously selected the performer internally. The song would go on to win the Eurovision Song Contest.

Before Eurovision

The 1958 contest marked France's third appearance in the Eurovision Song Contest, having participated yearly since the first contest in . Radiodiffusion-Télévision Française (RTF) internally selected André Claveau to sing for France, with the song being selected in a national final. A few weeks prior to the national final, RTF asked 20 record labels to send their best songs. 15 songs were submitted, and RTF chose five of them for the national final.

{{lang|fr|Et voici quelques airs}}

The music show Et voici quelques airs was used as the national final. It took place on 7 February 1958 at 20:25 CET and lasted 33 minutes. It was produced by Claude Dagues and hosted by . Five songs were presented. They were sung by one of their songwriters, with the exception of "Musique magique", sung by singer Jocelyne Jocya.

The interval acts included and Christiane Legrand performing "Marjolaine", performing "Buenas noches, mi amor", André Claveau performing "Toi l'amour" and Daniele George performing "Mandoline amoureuse".

A jury consisting of 13 music and television professionals decided the winner: Jean Marsac (jury president), Emmanuel Robert, Paul Peyre, , , Armand Lanoux, , , , , Jacques Seignette, Paul Durand and Eddie Barclay. Only the winning song and the runner-up were announced by jury president Jean Marsac.

André Claveau then performed the winning song, holding a large sheet of paper with the notes and lyrics in front of him as he didn't know the song by heart.

R/OPerformersSongSongwriter(s)Place
1Charles Dumont"Parigi Roma"Charles Dumont
2René Denoncin"Helena"René Denoncin, Roger Desbois2
3Jocelyne Jocya"Musique magique"André Popp, Henri Contet
4Hubert Giraud"Dors, mon amour"Hubert Giraud, Pierre Delanoë1
5André Richin"Tape dans tes mains"André Richin

At Eurovision

The Eurovision Song Contest 1958 took place at AVRO Studios in Hilversum, Netherlands on 12 March 1958. Claveau sang third on the night of the contest, following the and preceding . At the close of the voting he received 27 votes, placing first of 10 countries, and giving France their first victory at the contest.

Voting

Each participating broadcaster assembled a ten-member jury panel. Every jury member could give one vote to their favourite song.

The members of the French jury were: Armand Lanoux (jury president), Henry Torrès, Jean Marsac, Renée Faure, Jean Delannoy, , Jo Bouillon, Line Renaud, Jean Sablon and Henri Jeanson. The French jury's voting was supervised by Paul Peyre, RTF director of television programming.

ScoreCountry9 votes7 votes6 votes1 vote
ScoreCountry3 votes2 votes1 vote

Notes

References

References

  1. "Countries – France". [[European Broadcasting Union]] (EBU).
  2. (8 February 1958). "Radiodiffusion et télévision". Le Monde.
  3. "Et voici quelques airs : émission du 7 février 1958". [[Institut national de l'audiovisuel]].
  4. (7 February 1958). "Et voici quelques airs". Radiodiffusion-Télévision Française.
  5. "Dors, mon amour". Pathé.
  6. André Popp et Son Orchestre. "Musique magique". Fontana.
  7. "Eurovision Song Contest–Hilversum 1958". [[European Broadcasting Union]] (EBU).
  8. (12 March 1958). "3ème Concours Eurovision de la chanson 1958". [[Nederlandse Omroep Stichting.
  9. "Results of the Final of Hilversum 1958". Eurovision Song Contest.
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