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Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2006

International song competition for youth

Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2006

Summary

International song competition for youth

FieldValue
nameJunior Eurovision Song Contest
year2006
themeLet the Music Play
logoJESC06logo.PNG
final2 December 2006
presentersAndreea Marin Bănică,
Ioana Ivan
directorDan Manoliu
exsupervisorSvante Stockselius
exproducerIrina Radu
organiserEuropean Broadcasting Union (EBU)
hostTeleviziunea Română (TVR)
venueSala Polivalentă
Bucharest, Romania
winner
"Vesenniy Jazz"
voteEach country awards 1–8, 10, and 12 points to their 10 favourite songs
entries15
debut
return
nonreturn
Map NoSemisY

Ioana Ivan Bucharest, Romania "Vesenniy Jazz"

The Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2006 was the fourth edition of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest, held on 2 December 2006 at Sala Polivalentă in Bucharest, Romania, and presented by Andreea Marin Bănică and Ioana Ivan. It was organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Televiziunea Română (TVR). It was the second time the contest had been held in a capital city.

The show was broadcast live in the competing countries, as well as Andorra, Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Australian television channel Special Broadcasting Service (SBS) that acquired the rights for broadcasting the show, which was broadcast on 1 January 2007. This was Serbia's first participation in a Eurovision event as an independent nation.

The winner was with the song "Vesenniy Jazz" by The Tolmachevy Twins.

Location

Bidding phase and host selection

On 5 October 2005, it was confirmed that TVR had won the rights of hosting the contest over AVRO of the Netherlands (who would later be announced as the host broadcaster of the next contest). Croatia also expressed an interest in hosting this contest.

Venue

Sala Polivalentă]] in Bucharest, venue of the 2006 contest.

Polyvalent Hall from Bucharest () is a multi-purpose hall in Bucharest, Romania, located in the Tineretului Park. It is used for concerts, indoor sports such as tennis, gymnastics, dance, handball, volleyball, basketball, weightlifting, combat sports and professional wrestling. The hall was opened in 1974 but has since been renovated. It has a maximum seating capacity of 12,000 for concerts and 6,000 for handball.

Participants

Cover art of the official album

On 16 May 2006, the EBU released the official list of participants with 15 competing countries. Originally 16 countries had initially signed up for the contest but one unspecified country later dropped out. Portugal, Serbia (for the first time as an independent country after the participation in 2005 contest as part of Serbia and Montenegro) and Ukraine made their debut, while Cyprus returned after a one-year absence.

Two broadcasters withdrew from the contest: Radio télévision belge de la communauté française (RTBF) of the French-speaking Wallonia in Belgium left the contest this year, after co-hosting the previous edition with Flemish broadcaster Vlaamse Radio- en Televisieomroep (VRT), claimed that continuing with the contest was not in their interests financially. Belgium continued to be represented at the contest by Flemish broadcaster VRT. Subsequently also Sveriges Television (SVT) of Sweden decided to withdraw from the contest for focusing on organisation of the MGP Nordic in Stockholm; the country continued to be represented at the contest by commercial broadcaster TV4.

Prior to the event, a compilation album featuring all the songs from the 2006 contest, along with karaoke versions, was put together by the European Broadcasting Union and released by Universal Music Group in November 2006.

CountryBroadcasterArtistSongLanguageSongwriter(s)
BTRCAndrey Kunets"Noviy den" (Новый день)RussianAndrey Kunets
VRTThor!"Een tocht door het donker"DutchThor Salden
HRTMateo Đido"Lea"CroatianMateo Đido
CyBCLuis Panagiotou and Christina Christofi"Agoria koritsia" (Αγόρια κορίτσια)Greek
ERT"Den peirazei" (Δεν πειράζει)Greek
MRTZana Aliu"Vljubena" (Вљубена)MacedonianZana Aliu
PBSSophie Debattista"Extra Cute"EnglishSophie Debattista
AVROKimberly Nieuwenhuis"Goed"DutchKimberly Nieuwenhuis
RTPPedro Madeira"Deixa-me sentir"Portuguese
TVRNew Star Music"Povestea mea"RomanianNew Star Music
VGTRKTolmachevy Twins"Vesenniy Jazz"Russian
RTS"Učimo strane jezike" (Учимо стране језике)Serbian, English
TVEDani Fernández"Te doy mi voz"SpanishDani Fernández
TV4Molly Sandén"Det finaste någon kan få"SwedishMolly Sandén
NTUNazar Slyusarchuk"Khlopchyk Rock 'n' Roll" (Хлопчик рок н рол)UkrainianNazar Slyusarchuk

Format

Presenters

The presenters in charge of conducting the event were Andreea Marin and Ioana Ivan, who also appeared in the green room. Marin has been a presenter at the host broadcaster since 1994 and achieved national fame as the host of Surprize, Surprize, the Romanian version of British light entertainment show Surprise Surprise, on TVR1. Marin has twice appeared on the Eurovision Song Contest, reading out the Romanian televote results in and . Ivan is an actress and television personality and the first child presenter of the event.

Contest overview

The event took place on 2 December 2006 at 21:15 EET (20:15 CET). Fifteen countries participated, with the running order published in October 2006. All the countries competing were eligible to vote by televote. Russia won with 154 points, with Belarus, Sweden, Spain, and Serbia, completing the top five. Malta, the Netherlands, Greece, Portugal, and Macedonia occupied the bottom five positions.

The show was opened by various circus style dancers and performers including fifteen children, champions from the Romanian Gymnastics Federation, plus characters from the Bucharest State Circus and an on-stage appearance by Mihai Trăistariu, dressed as Count Dracula and was followed by the traditional flag parade introducing the 15 participating countries. The interval act included a performance by last year's winner Ksenia Sitnik, a "fight" between street dance and traditional Romanian dance in addition to a remix of songs by the last three Romanian participants at the contest.

R/OCountryArtistSongPointsPlace123456789101112131415
Pedro Madeira"Deixa-me sentir"2214
Luis Panagiotou and Christina Christofi"Agoria koritsia"588
Kimberly Nieuwenhuis"Goed"4412
New Star Music"Povestea mea"806
Nazar Slyusarchuk"Khlopchyk Rock 'n' Roll"589
Dani Fernández"Te doy mi voz"904
"Učimo strane jezike"815
Sophie Debattista"Extra Cute"4811
Zana Aliu"Vljubena"1415
Molly Sandén"Det finaste någon kan få"1163
"Den peirazei"3513
Andrey Kunets"Noviy den"1292
Thor!"Een tocht door het donker"717
Mateo Đido"Lea"5010
Tolmachevy Twins"Vesenniy Jazz"1541

Spokespersons

  1. Joana Galo Costa
  2. George Ioannidies
  3. Tess Gaerthe
  4. Andrea Nastase
  5. Assol
  6. Lucía
  7. Milica Stanišić
  8. Jack Curtis
  9. Denis Dimoski
  10. Amy Diamond
  11. Alexandros Chountas
  12. Liza Anton-Baychuk
  13. Sander Cliquet
  14. Lorena Jelusić
  15. Roman Kerimov

Detailed voting results

nb=1Total score}}nb=1Portugal}}nb=1Cyprus}}nb=1Netherlands}}nb=1Romania}}nb=1Ukraine}}nb=1Spain}}nb=1Serbia}}nb=1Malta}}nb=1Macedonia}}nb=1Sweden}}nb=1Greece}}nb=1Belarus}}nb=1Belgium}}nb=1Croatia}}nb=1Russia}}va=middleContestants}}PortugalCyprusNetherlandsRomaniaUkraineSpainSerbiaMaltaMacedoniaSwedenGreeceBelarusBelgiumCroatiaRussia
2273
5832353331266
44582863
80681412426773242
585246548138
9075786318857715
81245572710415557
48113111753247
142
1168712784810261010210
3512173
12912641010861251086812
71438635261124104
50621012611
15410101012121012441210121212

12 points

Below is a summary of all 12 points received. All countries were given 12 points at the start of voting to ensure that no country finished with nul points.

N.ContestantNation(s) giving 12 points731
****, , , , , ,
, ,

Other countries

For a country to be eligible for potential participation in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest, it needs to be an active member of the EBU. It is currently unknown whether the EBU issue invitations of participation to all 56 active members like they do for the Eurovision Song Contest.

  • Armenian broadcaster AMPTV were negotiating with the EBU to debut. However, plans never came to fruition and they debuted a year later.
  • Danish broadcaster DR, along with all Scandinavian broadcasters (NRK and SVT), decided to withdraw from the contest for various reasons, one being that the content put too much pressure on the participating children. Instead they staged a solely Scandinavian contest called MGP Nordic in Stockholm, as they did in 2002.
  • Although the Latvian broadcaster LTV opened a submission window for their national final for the Junior Eurovision Song Contest, they later decided to withdraw from the contest due to financial reasons.
  • Monégasque broadcaster TMC, who is in charge of the country's participation in the Eurovision Song Contest, had stated an interest to take part in the contest. Monaco did not appear on the list of participants published by the EBU on 16 May 2006.
  • Following the dissolution of Serbia and Montenegro, which had previously taken part in the 2005 contest, the EBU gave to the Montenegrin broadcaster, Radio Televizija Crne Gore (RTCG), extra time to decide whether or not to participate, but they finally declined the invitation.
  • Norwegian broadcaster NRK decided to withdraw from the contest for various reasons, one being that focusing on participation in the MGP Nordic.
  • British broadcaster ITV decided to withdraw from the contest due to low ratings in the last three editions.

Broadcasts

CountryBroadcaster(s)Channel(s)Commentator(s)Ref.BelarusBelgiumCroatiaCyprusGreeceMacedoniaMaltaNetherlandsPortugalRomaniaRussiaSerbiaSpainSwedenUkraine
BTRCBelarus 1, Belarus 24Denis Kurian
VRTEénand
HRTHRT 1Elan Nikk
CyBCRIK 1Kyriakos Pastides
ERTERT 1Renia Tsitsibikou and George Amyras
MRTMTV 1Milanka Rašik
PBSTVMValerie Vella
AVRONederland 1Sipke Jan Bousema
RTPRTP 1
TVRTVR1, TVRiIoana Isopecu and Alexandru Nagy
RTRRussia-1, RTR-Planeta
RTSRTS2Duška Vučinić-Lučićtitle=TV program – subota 2. decembartrans-title=Television – Saturday 2 Decemberurl=https://istorijskenovine.unilib.rs/view/index.html#panel:ppissue:UB_00064_20061202page:7access-date=30 June 2024work=Borbadate=2 December 1986location=Belgrade, Serbiapage=7language=sr-Latnvia=Pretraživa digitalna bibliotekaarchive-date=30 June 2024archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240630112059/https://istorijskenovine.unilib.rs/view/index.html#panel:pp%7Cissue:UB_00064_20061202%7Cpage:7url-status=live }}
TVETVE1, TVE InternacionalFernando Argenta and Lucho
TV4Adam Alsing
NTUPershyiTimur Miroshnychenko
CountryBroadcaster(s)Channel(s)Commentator(s)Ref.AndorraAustraliaBosnia and HerzegovinaIsrael
RTVAATV
SBS (1 January 2007)SBS One
BHRTBHT 1
IBA (8 December 2007)Channel 1

Notes

References

References

  1. "'EBU Confirms: Romania to host Junior 2006'".
  2. (15 October 2004). "Exclusive! 'Croatia and Romania want to host junior 2006'".
  3. (16 May 2006). "Junior 2006: 15 countries signed up - ESCToday.com".
  4. "'EBU: 16 countries signed up for Junior 2006'".
  5. (29 November 2005). "'RTBF withdraws from Junior contest'". ESC Today.
  6. "Participants of Bucharest 2006 - Junior Eurovision Song Contest".
  7. Floras, Stella. (November 29, 2006). "Eurovision JESC Press Conference & Interview with hosts".
  8. "Cine e cea mai de succes Carierista?". Amelie.ro.
  9. Royston, Benny. (October 17, 2006). "Eurovision Andreea Marin will welcome europe".
  10. Royston, Benny. (November 6, 2006). "Eurovision Exclusive: The singing logo is the co-host!!!".
  11. "Final of Bucharest 2006". European Broadcasting Union.
  12. "Results of the Final of Bucharest 2006". European Broadcasting Union.
  13. "Bērnu Eirovīzija".
  14. (2005-07-22). "Eurovision 2023 Monaco plans Junior participation in 2006 - ESCToday.com".
  15. "Junior Eurovision Song Contest". UKGameshows.
  16. Kuipers, Michael. (20 April 2008). "Junior Eurovision 2008: United Kingdom to return to JESC?". ESCToday.
  17. (2 December 1986). "TV program – subota 2. decembar". [[Borba (newspaper).
  18. Telekritika. (5 December 2006). link
  19. (22 November 2007). "Eurovision Israel getting into the JESC spirit". ESC Today.
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