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Poland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2009

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Poland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2009

Summary

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FieldValue
Year2009
BroadcasterTelewizja Polska (TVP)
CountryPoland
Selection processPiosenka dla Europy 2009
Selection date14 February 2009
ArtistLidia Kopania
SongI Don't Wanna Leave
Writer
SF resultFailed to qualify (12th)

Poland was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 2009 with the song "I Don't Wanna Leave" written by Alex Geringas, Bernd Klimpel, Rike Boomgaarden and Dee Adam. The song was performed by Lidia Kopania. The Polish broadcaster Telewizja Polska (TVP) organised the national final Piosenka dla Europy 2009 in order to select the Polish entry for the 2009 contest in Moscow, Russia. The national final took place on 14 February 2009 and featured ten entries. "I Don't Wanna Leave" performed by Lidia Kopania was selected as the winner after gaining the most points following the combination of votes from a four-member jury panel and a public vote.

Poland was drawn to compete in the second semi-final of the Eurovision Song Contest which took place on 14 May 2009. Performing in position 5, "I Don't Wanna Leave" was not announced among the ten qualifying entries of the second semi-final and therefore did not qualify to compete in the final. It was later revealed that Poland placed twelfth out of the 19 participating countries in the semi-final with 43 points.

Background

Main article: Poland in the Eurovision Song Contest

Prior to the 2009 contest, Poland had participated in the Eurovision Song Contest thirteen times since its first entry in . Poland's highest placement in the contest, to this point, has been second place, which the nation achieved with its debut entry in 1994 with the song "To nie ja!" performed by Edyta Górniak. Poland has only, thus far, reached the top ten on one other occasion, when Ich Troje performing the song "Keine Grenzen – Żadnych granic" finished seventh in 2003. Between 2005 and 2007, Poland failed to qualify from the semi-final round until their 2008 entry, "For Life" performed by Isis Gee, managed to take the nation to the final and place twenty-fourth (second last).

The Polish national broadcaster, Telewizja Polska (TVP), broadcasts the event within Poland and organises the selection process for the nation's entry. After the 2008 contest, TVP announced that rather to the then-ongoing war in South Ossetia, the decision on the country's participation in the Eurovision Song Contest 2009 would be based on changes, if any, to the current voting system after a proposal was made to the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) to put into use an international jury in the next contest to lessen the impact of neighbourly voting and place more emphasis on the artistic value of the song. TVP confirmed Poland's participation in the 2009 Eurovision Song Contest on 7 November 2008 after the EBU confirmed that each country's votes in the 2009 contest would be decided by a televoting and jury combination. Since 2006, TVP organised televised national finals that featured a competition among several artists and songs in order to select the Polish entry for the Eurovision Song Contest, a selection procedure that continued for their 2009 entry.

Before Eurovision

Piosenka dla Europy 2009

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Competing entries

TVP opened a submission period for interested artists and songwriters to submit their entries between 28 November 2008 and 16 January 2009. Only artists that had either released an album or single with national radio airplays, had competed in at least one professional song contest or music festival at a national level, or had a valid contract with a record company or a professional concert agency were eligible to compete. The broadcaster received 122 submissions at the closing of the deadline. An eight-member selection committee selected twelve entries from the received submissions to compete in the national final. The selection committee consisted of Zuzanna Łapicka (Head of Entertainment of TVP1), Paweł Sztompke (journalist, music critic and editorial director of music at Polish Radio), Piotr Baron (music journalist and presenter at Polish Radio), Tomasz Miara (presenter at Radio ZET), Dariusz Maciborek (music journalist at Radio RMF FM), Tomasz Deszczyński (President of OGAE Poland), Malgorzata Kosturkiewicz (concert director, screenwriter and producer) and Piotr Klatt (musician, songwriter, journalist and music producer at TVP and artistic director of the Opole Festival). The selected entries were announced on 23 January 2009.

On 23 and 28 January 2009, "Amazing", written by Jud Friedman and Allan Rich and to have been performed by Katarzyna Skrzynecka, and "Kardamon i pieprz", written by Natalia Grosiak and to have been performed by Mikromusic, were respectively disqualified from the national final as both songs have been performed in October 2007 during Taniec z Gwiazdami, the Polish version of Dancing with the Stars. The competing artists were required to submit a promotional video for their song to TVP by 9 February 2009.

ArtistSongSongwriter(s)
Artur Chamski"Kilka słów"Paweł Rurak Sokal, Andrzej Ignatowski
Dali"Everyday"Viktar Rudenka, Aliaksandar Liutych, Igor Znyk
Det Betales"Jacqueline"Leif Melander, Peter Nord, Knut Oyvind Hagen
Ira"Dobry czas"Artur Gadowski, Wojciech Byrski
Lidia Kopania"I Don't Wanna Leave"Alex Geringas, Bernd Klimpel
Man Meadow"Love Is Gonna Get You"Thomas G:son, Andreas Rickstrand
Marco Bocchino and Aleksandra Szwed"All My Life"Marco Bocchino
Renton"I'm Not Sure"Marek Karwowski, Paweł Szupiluk, Mariusz Gajewski, Łukasz Różycki
Stachursky"I nie mów nic"Daniel Maczura, Jacek Laszczok
Tigrita Project"Mon chocolat"Klaudia Baszniak Kozłowska

Final

The televised final took place on 14 February 2009. Ten entries competed and the winner, "I Don't Wanna Leave" performed by Lidia Kopania, was determined by a 50/50 combination of votes from a four-member professional jury and a public vote. The jury consisted of Robert Chojnacki (composer), Krzysztof Kasowski (singer), Roman Rogowiecki (deputy entertainment director of TVP1) and Marta Turska (member of OGAE Poland). In addition to the performances of the competing entries, 1994 Polish Eurovision entrant Edyta Górniak and 1999 Polish Eurovision entrant Mietek Szcześniak performed as the interval acts.

DrawArtistSongJuryTelevoteTotalPlace
1Stachursky"I nie mów nic"1569
2Det Betales"Jacqueline"31410
3Man Meadow"Love Is Gonna Get You"2796
4Dali"Everyday"6287
5Ira"Dobry czas"74115
6Artur Chamski"Kilka słów"58134
7Marco Bocchino and Aleksandra Szwed"All My Life"810182
8Tigrita Project"Mon chocolat"4378
9Renton"I'm Not Sure"126182
10Lidia Kopania"I Don't Wanna Leave"1012221

Promotion

Lidia Kopania made several appearances across Europe to specifically promote "I Don't Wanna Leave" as the Polish Eurovision entry. On 28 February, Kopania performed during the Latvian national final, as well as during the Ukrainian national final on 8 March. On 17 April, Kopania performed during the UK Eurovision Preview Party, which was held in London, United Kingdom, and on 18 April during the Eurovision Promo Concert, which was held in Amsterdam, Netherlands.

At Eurovision

Norway]].

The second semi-final and the final were broadcast in Poland on TVP1 and TVP Polonia with commentary by Artur Orzech. The Polish spokesperson, who announced the Polish votes during the final, was Radek Brzózka.

Semi-final

Lidia Kopania took part in technical rehearsals on 4 and 7 May, followed by dress rehearsals on 11 and 12 May. The Polish performance featured Lidia Kopania performing in a long light grey dress joined by a male and female ballet dancer as well as three backing vocalists in long white gowns. The ballet dancers were wrapped in white ribbons at the beginning of the performed but later played with a red ribbon. The stage was predominately dark with the LED screens displaying two images of waterfalls. The stage costumes were designed by designer Maciej Zień, while the choreographer and director for the Polish performance were Anna Milej and Bolesław Pawica, respectively. The ballet dancers that joined Kopania on stage were Daria Akatowa and Maciej Pruszyński, while the backing vocalists were Krzysztof Pietrzak, Jan Radwan and Patrycja Gola.

At the end of the show, Poland was not announced among the ten qualifying entries in the first semi-final and therefore failed to qualify to compete in the final. It was later revealed that Poland placed twelfth in the semi-final, receiving a total of 43 points.

Voting

Below is a breakdown of points awarded to Poland and awarded by Poland in the second semi-final and grand final of the contest. The nation awarded its 12 points to Azerbaijan in the semi-final and to Norway in the final of the contest.

Points awarded to Poland

ScoreCountry12 points10 points8 points7 points6 points5 points4 points3 points2 points1 point

Points awarded by Poland

ScoreCountry12 points10 points8 points7 points6 points5 points4 points3 points2 points1 point
ScoreCountry12 points10 points8 points7 points6 points5 points4 points3 points2 points1 point

Detailed voting results

DrawCountryTelevotesRankPoints01020304050607080910111213141516171819
1,07713
1,74683
23018
82015
4,926210
1,17112
1,31411
1,513101
41716
39217
16,347112
1,57592
2,58274
2,64265
2,90056
3,82747
4,02838
1,02514
DrawCountryResultsPointsJuryTelevotingCombinedVotesRankPoints01020304050607080910111213141516171819202122232425
2,89811
1,15222
12,598141
2,52815
1,50220
68325
52,99510161
2,84212
5,6785662
25,3696573
19,009210106
1,22721
63,5598395
2,07819
48,41638128
122,51616127
32,487173
2,64413
5,178744
1020,8361122212
87,140471510
1,09323
73,5049294
2,17418
91424

References

References

  1. "Poland Country Profile". [[European Broadcasting Union.
  2. Floras, Stella. (2008-09-12). "Poland: TVP proposes international jury for Eurovision". ESCToday.
  3. (2008-09-10). "Poland: TVP joins the spirit of boycotting Moscow's Eurovision?". Oikotimes.
  4. Hondal, Victor. (18 September 2009). "Poland: TVP confirms Eurovision participation".
  5. Viniker, Barry. (2008-12-08). "EBU confirms 50/50 vote for Eurovision Song Contest".
  6. Psomas, Nikolas. (2008-11-04). "Poland: Eurovision preselection to be announced soon". ESCToday.
  7. (2008-12-23). "A Polish song for Europe on Saint Valentine's Day". Oikotimes.
  8. Laufer, Gil. (14 February 2009). "Live: National final in Poland".
  9. (2009-02-17). "Poland: 3,8 million watched the national final". Oikotimes.
  10. Floras, Stella. (2008-11-28). "Poland: TVP calls for songs". ESCToday.
  11. (23 January 2009). "Eurowizja 2009: znamy 12 wykonawców, którzy wezmą udział w polskich eliminacjach".
  12. (2009-01-23). "Poland: TVP reveals the finalists". Oikotimes.
  13. Floras, Stella. (2009-01-23). "Poland: TVP announces 12 finalists". ESCToday.
  14. (2009-01-23). "Poland: TVP disqualifies a song for the national final". Oikotimes.
  15. (2009-01-28). "Poland: Another disqualification for the national final". Oikotimes.
  16. Konstantopoulos, Fotis. (2008-11-28). "Poland: TVP announces Eurovision plans for 2009". Oikotimes.
  17. Schacht, Andreas. (2009-02-14). "Lidia Kopania for Poland to Moscow!". [[European Broadcasting Union.
  18. Klier, Marcus. (2009-02-14). "Poland: Eurovision entrant chosen". ESCToday.
  19. Costa, Nelson. (2009-02-14). "Lidia picked for Moscow". Oikotimes.
  20. Laufer, Gil. (2009-02-14). "National final in Poland". ESCToday.
  21. Calleja Bayliss, Marc. (2009-02-28). "Live from Ventspils, the Eirodziesma 2009 final". Oikotimes.
  22. Klier, Marcus. (2009-03-08). "National final in Ukraine". ESCToday.
  23. Costa, Nelson. (2009-03-15). "Lidia Kopania in UK and Netherlands". Oikotimes.
  24. Romkes, René. (2009-02-24). "Netherlands: Eurovision Promo Concert on April 18". ESCToday.
  25. Bakker, Sietse. (2009-01-30). "LIVE: The Semi-Final Allocation Draw". [[European Broadcasting Union.
  26. (5 May 2009). "Poland: Ballad with ballet".
  27. (8 May 2009). "Poland: Pouring with emotion".
  28. "2009: Lidia Kopania".
  29. "Poland".
  30. "Results of the Second Semi-Final of Moscow 2009". European Broadcasting Union.
  31. "Results of the Grand Final of Moscow 2009". European Broadcasting Union.
  32. (27 May 2009). "Eurovisionary".
  33. Bakker, Sietse. (31 July 2009). "Exclusive: Split jury/televoting results out!". European Broadcasting Union.
  34. "Eurovision Song Contest 2009 - Full Results". European Broadcasting Union.
  35. Engström, Tommy. (2009-05-25). "Complete Polish result including jury and actual number of televoters".
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