Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest 1987

none


none

FieldValue
Year1987
BroadcasterBritish Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
CountryUnited Kingdom
Selection processA Song for Europe 1987
Selection date10 April 1987
SongOnly the Light
ArtistRikki
WriterRichard Peebles
writer_singley
Final result13th, 47 points

The United Kingdom was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 1987 with the song "Only the Light", written and performed by Rikki. The British participating broadcaster, the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), selected its entry through a national final.

Before Eurovision

''A Song for Europe 1987''

In a change to previous years, 10 songs were performed instead of the usual eight. None of the performers had ever performed in A Song for Europe before, and none of the writers had ever written for the contest before. As well as Music Publisher's Association selecting some of the songs, songs from record publishers were also submitted. They were selected in the following manner (as recounted by the radio commentator during the interval act): "Around 400 songs were selected by the Music Publisher's Association and the British Phonographic Industries. These songs were reviewed by 10 juries of 6 people, whittling them down to 50 songs. They were down reduced to 20 songs, which were sent to the BBC, and the 10 were chosen by producer Brian Whitehouse, Mike Batt, Bruce Welch, some radio and television producers, and representatives from the MPA and BPI".

Final

The final was held on 10 April 1987, live from Studio 1 of the BBC Television Centre in London. The contest was hosted by Terry Wogan. It was also broadcast on BBC Radio 2, and this was the first and only instance in which the radio commentator could also be heard on television, passing comment after each song, and during the interval act. The BBC Concert Orchestra under the direction of Ronnie Hazlehurst as conductor accompanied all the songs, but despite performing live, the orchestra were off-screen, behind the set. Hazlehurst's arrangement of the title music which had made its debut the previous year, was an upbeat arrangement of the traditional Te Deum music and was used again for the title sequence. The interval act was a pre-recorded dancing performance by The Anthony Van Laast Dancers.

Nine regional juries located in Birmingham, Cardiff, Manchester, Belfast, Edinburgh, London, Norwich, Newcastle, and Bristol voted for the songs. Juries ranked the songs internally and awarded 15 points to their favourite, 12 to the second, 10 to the third, 9 to the fourth, 8 to the fifth, 7 to the sixth, 6 to the seventh, 5 to the eighth, 3 to the ninth and 1 to their least preferred.

DrawArtistSongSongwriter(s)PointsPlace
1Rikki"Only the Light"Richard Peebles1121
2Siy"Lion Within"David Hughes, Richard Marcangelo488
3Mike Stacey"I Want You"Steve Thompson, John Verity725
4Mal Pope"Everybody"Mal Pope587
5Ann Turner"Too Hot to Handle"Bob Heatlie1012
6Ian Prince"Master of the Game"Ian Prince3410
7Gordon Campbell"Just Let Me"Gordon Campbell439
8Zuice"Bless Your Lucky Stars"Stephen Carmichael783
9John T Ford"What You Gonna Do"John T Ford, Malcolm Poole754
10Heavy Pettin'"Romeo"Gordon Bonner, Gary Moat, Steve Hayman606
DrawSongnb=1Belfast}}nb=1Birmingham}}nb=1Bristol}}nb=1Edinburgh}}nb=1Cardiff}}nb=1Manchester}}nb=1London}}nb=1Newcastle}}nb=1Norwich}}TotalJury Spokespersons
1"Only the Light"1271515810151515112
2"Lion Within"631035983148
3"I Want You"8596969101072
4"Everybody"1011286871558
5"Too Hot to Handle"912812151212912101
6"Master of the Game"18113557334
7"Just Let Me"737101315643
8"Bless Your Lucky Stars"59551215108978
9"What You Gonna Do"15106777312875
10"Romeo"3153910166760

At Eurovision

"Only the Light" was performed 14th in the running order on the night of the contest, following Luxembourg and preceding France. At the close of the voting, United Kingdom had received 47 points, placing 13th out of 22 competing countries. It was the worst performing entry of the UK up to that point, and would remain so for the next 13 years, until .

The British jury awarded its 12 points to the contest winners .

Voting

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

References

References

  1. (2016). "Songs for Europe: The United Kingdom at the Eurovision Song Contest". [[Telos Publishing]].
  2. "Final of Brussels 1987". European Broadcasting Union.
  3. "Results of the Final of Brussels 1987". European Broadcasting Union.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest 1987 — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report