56-576: One Step may refer to: "One Step" (Bettina Soriat song) , the Austrian entry in the Eurovision Song Contest 1997 by Bettina Soriat "One Step" (Kissing the Pink song) , 1986 One Step (film) , an upcoming Korean film "One Step", a song by The Original 7ven from Condensate "One Step", a song by Killah Priest from Heavy Mental "One Step",
112-426: A nomination for Best Dance Recording at the 1998 Grammy Awards . The successful trial of televoting in five countries led to widespread adoption for all countries in 1998, and public voting continues to play a part in determining the result of the contest to the present day. The widespread use of televoting in the following years would however lead to accusations of greater political bias and " bloc voting ", with
168-466: A 20-minute press conference, followed by the second rehearsals on 30 April and 1 May lasting 30 minutes. Times were also arranged during the week for the artists to be recorded in the RTÉ studios, with footage used during the postcards between each song. Three dress rehearsals were held on 2 and 3 May, with an audience in attendance during the evening dress rehearsal on 2 May. The final dress rehearsal on 3 May
224-486: A concert and events venue located amongst the Dublin Docklands which had originally been built as a train depot to serve the nearby port . Opened as a music venue in 1988, it was closed for redevelopment and expansion in 2008 and is now known as the 3Arena . The venue had previously hosted the 1994 and 1995 contests, and with this staging it became the only venue to have hosted three Eurovision Song Contests. Per
280-540: A song by Ronnie Lane from See Me See also [ edit ] One-Step , a ballroom dance Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title One Step . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=One_Step&oldid=1181243304 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
336-411: A trial held by the contest organisers, televoting was used to determine the points from five of the participating countries. In these countries viewers had a total of five minutes to register their vote by calling one of twenty-four different telephone numbers to represent the twenty-five competing entries except that which represented their own country. Once the voting phone lines were opened following
392-638: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages One Step (Bettina Soriat song) The Eurovision Song Contest 1997 was the 42nd edition of the annual Eurovision Song Contest , held on 3 May 1997 at the Point Theatre in Dublin , Ireland . Organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Radio Telefís Éireann (RTÉ) and presented by Carrie Crowley and Ronan Keating ,
448-477: Is listed in the tables below. The below table summarises how the maximum 12 points were awarded from one country to another. The winning country is shown in bold. The United Kingdom received the maximum score of 12 points from ten countries, with France and Turkey receiving three sets of 12 points each, Cyprus receiving two sets of 12 points, and Estonia, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Malta, Russia and Spain each receiving one maximum score. Each participating broadcaster
504-472: Is the last winning UK Eurovision entry. Ireland's second-place finish earned them their fifth placing in the top two within six years, while Turkey and Cyprus achieved their highest placings yet by finishing third and fifth respectively. Norway meanwhile finished in last place for the eighth time and received their fourth nul points . Following this contest Italy 's RAI declined to participate in future events and an Italian entry would not participate in
560-516: The United Kingdom in 1982 . Given the financial impact to staging the contest for a fourth time in five years, there was early speculation following Ireland's win in the 1996 contest that RTÉ might stage the event as a co-production with BBC Northern Ireland , however ultimately the Irish broadcaster decided to organise the event on its own once again. The selected venue was the Point Theatre ,
616-422: The 1997 contest; however following Israel 's withdrawal due to the date of the final clashing with its Holocaust Remembrance Day , Bosnia and Herzegovina was subsequently provided a reprieve and allowed to participate. Macedonia was also excluded due to their failure to progress through the qualifying round in 1996. The calculations used to determine the countries relegated for the 1997 contest are outlined in
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#1733094263342672-490: The Eurovision Song Contest for 14 years, until the country's return at the 2011 event . Each country nominated a spokesperson who was responsible for announcing, in English or French, the votes for their respective country. As had been the case since the 1994 contest , the spokespersons were connected via satellite and appeared in vision during the broadcast. Spokespersons at the 1997 contest are listed below. Jury voting
728-404: The Irish singer Ronan Keating were the presenters of the 1997 contest. The trophy awarded to the winners was designed by Maura Whelan and Luc Racine, and was presented by the previous year's winning artist Eimear Quinn. Each participating broadcaster submitted one song, which was required to be no longer than three minutes in duration and performed in the language, or one of the languages, of
784-479: The Norwegian performer Karoline Krüger in the 1988 contest , and Soriat had supported Austrian entrant George Nussbaumer [ de ] in the previous year's event. Due to the high number of countries wishing to enter the contest a relegation system was introduced in 1993 in order to reduce the number of countries which could compete in each year's contest. Any relegated countries would be able to return
840-423: The back-up juries in these countries was identical to the juries in the other countries with regards to profession, gender and age. The contest took place on 3 May 1997 at 20:00 ( IST ) and lasted 3 hours and 11 minutes. The show was opened by good luck messages from past Eurovision winners and hosts to the contestants in the contest, and short interviews with previous contestants also featured preceding some of
896-494: The boundaries for sexual expression on the Eurovision stage for the first time. The changes in the rules regarding the use of orchestra for this contest would eventually lead to the complete abandonment of live musical accompaniment in the Eurovision Song Contest. Ahead of the 1999 event the rules were modified again to make the procurement of an orchestra an optional component to staging the event, with that year's event becoming
952-659: The contest competed again at this year's event. Two artists represented their country for a second consecutive year, with Şebnem Paker returning for Turkey and Maarja-Liis Ilus , after previously participating with Ivo Linna in Oslo , competing as a solo artist for Estonia . Alma Čardžić also made a second appearance in the contest, having previously represented Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1994 . Additionally, Tor Endresen and Bettina Soriat , who represented Norway and Austria, respectively, in this year's event, had performed in previous contests as backing vocalist. Endresen had supported
1008-454: The contest eleven times, receiving nul points in 1963 , 1965 , and 1982 . Since the introduction of the semi-finals in 2004 , Finland has failed to reach the final eight times. In 2014 , the country had its best result in eight years with "Something Better" by Softengine finishing 11th, a result that would be surpassed with " Dark Side " by Blind Channel , which came sixth in 2021 , and later with " Cha Cha Cha " by Käärijä , which won
1064-508: The contest followed several years of successive Irish wins, with the national juries typically voting for more traditional, middle-of-the-road songs than those that represented the wider tastes of the general public, as was the case in 1996 when Eimear Quinn's "The Voice" was victorious over more modern entries such as Gina G 's " Ooh Aah... Just a Little Bit ", which represented the United Kingdom at that year's event and would go on to receive
1120-409: The contest in their own native language and to relay information about the artists and songs to their viewers. Known details on the broadcasts in each country, including the specific broadcasting stations and commentators, are shown in the tables below: The Barbara Dex Award was first organised for artists in this year's contest. The award, created by the fansite House of Eurovision, was awarded to
1176-509: The contest is Yleisradio (Yle), which has often selected its entrant with a national final, since 2012 known as Uuden Musiikin Kilpailu . The country won the contest for the first – and to date only – time in 2006 with " Hard Rock Hallelujah " performed by Lordi . The country's best result before then was achieved with "Tom Tom Tom" by Marion Rung in 1973 , which placed sixth. Finland has finished last in
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#17330942633421232-470: The contest was held in Ireland following the country's victory at the 1996 contest with the song " The Voice " by Eimear Quinn . The 1997 contest was the seventh – and to date last – edition to be staged in Ireland, as well as the fourth to be produced by RTÉ in five years. The Point Theatre served as the host venue for the third time, following the 1994 and 1995 contests, becoming the only venue to have been
1288-448: The contest with " Hard Rock Hallelujah " by the band Lordi , an entry that stood out from the Europop that had dominated the competition. The song scored the highest number of points in the history of the contest, with 292, a record that was later broken by Norway's Alexander Rybak in 2009 . In 2015 , Finland finished last in the first semi-final with the shortest-ever Eurovision song,
1344-504: The contest, having previously staged the event in 1971 , 1981 , 1988 , 1993 , 1994 and 1995 , with all previous events held in Dublin except the 1993 contest which was held in Millstreet . This was the fourth edition of the contest that Ireland had hosted within five years, and with this edition Ireland equalled the record for the nation which had staged the most contests, originally set by
1400-486: The contest. Each country's participating broadcaster was required to have selected their entry by 10 March, and all entries had to be submitted to the contest organisers by 19 March, including the score of the song for use by the orchestra, a sound recording of the entry and backing track for use during the contest, and the text of the song lyrics in its original language and translations in French and English for distribution to
1456-446: The country which it represented. Short quotations from another language, no more than a single phrase repeated a maximum of three times, were permitted. A maximum of six performers were allowed on stage during each country's performance, and all participants were required to have reached the age of 16 in the year of the contest. Each entry could utilise all or part of the live orchestra and could use instrumental-only backing tracks . This
1512-402: The country's performance and then tallied by the non-voting jury chairperson to determine the points to be awarded. In any cases where two or more songs in the top ten received the same number of votes, a show of hands by all jury members was used to determine the final placing; if a tie still remained, the youngest jury member would have the deciding vote. For the first time however, as part of
1568-420: The event was overseen by Marie-Claire Vionnet as executive supervisor . Rehearsals in the contest venue for the competing acts began on 28 April 1997. Each country had two technical rehearsals in the week approaching the contest, with countries rehearsing in the order in which they would perform. The first rehearsals took place on 28 and 29 April, with each country allowed 40 minutes total on stage followed by
1624-534: The event. Iceland 's Paul Oscar was the first openly gay man to compete as a lead artist in Eurovision. Paul Oscar's participation, as well as changing attitudes to homosexuality in Europe in the following years, marked the beginning of wider visibility of LGBT artists and themes; the following year's event provided the first trans participant in Israel's Dana International , 2002 saw Slovenia 's Sestre become
1680-425: The event; changes to contest rules led to the abandonment of live musical accompaniment in future events; a successful trial of televoting in five countries led to widespread adoption for all countries in 1998. The 1997 contest took place in Dublin , Ireland , following the country's victory at the 1996 edition with the song " The Voice ", performed by Eimear Quinn . It was the seventh time that Ireland had hosted
1736-699: The first competing artists to perform in drag , and the 2000 contest contained the first display of same-sex affection on stage through a kiss between the two male members of the Israeli band PingPong . Since the 1997 contest many openly LGBT artists have competed in the contest, including several winners, among them Dana International, Austria 's Conchita Wurst in 2014 , and the Netherlands ' Duncan Laurence in 2019 . Paul Oscar's contest performance, which featured four female backing dancers dressed in black latex clothing and sexually suggestive choreography, pushed
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1792-475: The first time to feature no live music accompaniment, with each performance being able to use only a backing track rather than utilising any part of the orchestra or any live instrumentation from the performers themselves. The 1997 event would prove to be a watershed for the contest, with many aspects of this event leaving a lasting impact on future editions of Eurovision. These included: the first openly LGBT artist, Iceland's Paul Oscar , selected to compete in
1848-443: The first to have all competing entries performed to pre-recorded backing tracks. The rules of the contest have since been modified further, and no live musical accompaniment is now allowed for any competing entries. The abolishment of the orchestra proved controversial among some circles, with three-time, former Eurovision winner Johnny Logan referring to the modified event as " karaoke " in 2000. The introduction of televoting to
1904-460: The following year, thus allowing all countries the opportunity to compete in at least one in every two editions. The audio-only qualifying round used in 1996 had been poorly received among the competing countries, and so a new relegation system was introduced by the European Broadcasting Union for 1997 and future contests. The twenty-five participants in the 1997 contest were made up of the previous year's winning country and host nation Ireland, and
1960-540: The impact of neighbourly voting by splitting countries by geographical location and voting history in the semi-finals from 2008 and re-introducing juries to account for 50% of each country's points in 2009 . Finland in the Eurovision Song Contest Finland has participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 57 times since its debut in 1961 . The Finnish participant broadcaster in
2016-602: The latter of which is Finland's second best result to date. All of Finland's entries were in English between 1973 and 1976 , and since 2000 (with the exceptions of 2008 , 2010 , 2012 , 2015 and 2023); both of these periods allowed submissions in any language. Finland's entries in 1990 and 2012 were in Swedish , which is an official language in the country alongside Finnish. All of Finland's other songs have been in Finnish . Over
2072-407: The one minute and 27 seconds " Aina mun pitää " performed by Pertti Kurikan Nimipäivät . Finland reached the final for the first time in four years in 2018 , with Saara Aalto placing 25th. After a non-qualification in 2019 with Darude and Sebastian Rejman , Blind Channel placed sixth in 2021 , followed by a 21st place for The Rasmus in 2022 and a second place for Käärijä in 2023 ,
2128-418: The orchestra during their performance, with the host musical director, Frank McNamara, also available to conduct for those countries which did not nominate their own conductor. The entries from Austria, Croatia, Germany and Ireland were performed entirely without live orchestration. Selected entries were not permitted to be released commercially until after 3 February 1997 and after having been selected for
2184-498: The participating broadcasters, their commentators and juries. Following the confirmation of the twenty-five competing countries, the draw to determine the running order was held on 28 November 1996. The results of the 1997 contest were determined through the same scoring system as had first been introduced in 1975 : each country awarded twelve points to its favourite entry, followed by ten points to its second favourite, and then awarded points in decreasing value from eight to one for
2240-425: The perception that neighbouring countries swap points and large diasporas are able to vote en masse for their native countries, skewing the results in their favour. Controversy over the perceived unfairness of the voting system reached a head in 2007 , when the public vote largely rewarded the entries from Eastern European countries over those from Western Europe. The EBU would ultimately make changes to mitigate
2296-440: The performance of the last competing entry, a video recap containing short clips of each competing entry with the accompanying phone number for voting was shown in order to aid viewers during the voting window. In those countries which opted to use televoting to determine their points a jury was still required which would function as a back-up in case technical failure prevented the televote results from being used. The composition of
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2352-518: The performer deemed to have been the "worst dressed" among the participants. The winner in 1997 was Malta's representative, Debbie Scerri (as determined by the founders of the House of Eurovision site, Edwin van Thillo and Rob Paardekam). The Eurovision Song Contest has long held a fandom within the LGBT community , however it was not until the 1997 event that an openly LGBT artist was selected to compete in
2408-649: The postcards between the entries. Irish boy band Boyzone , with co-presenter Keating as a member, featured as part of the show's interval act, performing the song "Let the Message Run Free". The winner was the United Kingdom represented by the song " Love Shine a Light ", composed by Kimberley Rew and performed by Katrina and the Waves . This was the United Kingdom's fifth contest win – their first in sixteen years – following victories in 1967 , 1969 , 1976 and 1981 . As of 2024 , this
2464-432: The previous year after failing to progress from that event's qualifying round . Belgium , Finland and Slovakia , participants in the previous year's contest, were unable to return after being excluded by the new relegation rules. The winner was the United Kingdom with the song " Love Shine a Light ", written by Kimberley Rew and performed by Katrina and the Waves . Ireland , Turkey , Italy and Cyprus rounded out
2520-416: The public vote and came second overall in 2023 , the latter of which is Finland's second best result to date. Yleisradio (Yle) is a full member of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), thus eligible to participate in the Eurovision Song Contest . It has participated in the contest representing Finland since its sixth edition in 1961. Before its 2006 victory, Finland was considered by many to be
2576-634: The remaining songs which featured in the country's top ten, with countries unable to vote for their own entry. The points awarded by the majority of countries were determined by an assembled jury of sixteen individuals, which was required to be split evenly between members of the public and music professionals, comprised additionally of an equal number of men and women, and below and above 30 years of age. Each jury member voted in secret and awarded between one and ten votes to each participating song, excluding that from their own country and with no abstentions permitted. The votes of each member were collected following
2632-527: The rules of the contest twenty-five countries were allowed to participate in the event. Denmark , Germany , Hungary and Russia made a return to the contest after failing to progress from the qualifying round in the previous year's contest, and Italy returned after last competing in 1993 . Conversely Belgium , Finland and Slovakia , participants in the 1996 contest, were relegated and prevented from participating in this year's event. Three representatives who had previously performed as lead artists in
2688-426: The site of three Eurovision Song Contests. Twenty-five countries participated in the contest, with a new relegation system introduced to determine which nations could participate, based on each country's average points total in previous contests. Italy made its first appearance since 1993 , and Denmark , Germany , Hungary and Russia returned after last competing in 1995 , having been prevented from competing
2744-498: The table below. Table key The Eurovision Song Contest 1997 was produced by the Irish public broadcaster Radio Telefís Éireann (RTÉ). Noel Curran served as executive producer, Ian McGarry served as director, Paula Farrell and John Casey served as designers, and Frank McNamara served as musical director, leading the RTÉ Concert Orchestra . On behalf of the contest organisers, the European Broadcasting Union (EBU),
2800-457: The top five, with Ireland earning their fifth placing in the top two within six years and Turkey and Cyprus achieving their best results to date. Five of the competing countries used televoting to determine their points, allowing the general viewing public a say in the results for the first time; following this successful trial all countries were encouraged to use this system starting from the following year's event . Entries were also permitted for
2856-525: The twenty-four countries which had the highest average points total over the preceding four contests. In cases where the average was identical between two or more countries the total number of points scored in the most recent contest determined the final order. Any countries which were not able to compete in the 1997 contest would then be eligible to compete in the 1998 event. Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina , Finland, Lithuania , Luxembourg , Romania and Slovakia were therefore excluded from participating in
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#17330942633422912-422: The under-achiever of the contest. Prior to 2006, it had placed last a total of eight times, three times with nul points . Finland's entry in 1982 , " Nuku pommiin " by Kojo , was one of only fifteen songs to score no points since the modern scoring system was implemented in 1975 . Due to poor results, Finland was relegated from taking part in 1995 , 1997 , 1999 , 2001 and 2003 . In 2006, Finland won
2968-566: Was also recorded for use as a production stand-by in case of problems during the live contest. A tight security presence was felt during the rehearsal week; emergency drills were held by Gardaí , including evacuations of the Point Theatre, as a precaution against potential disruption from loyalist paramilitaries as part of the wider sectarian conflict in Northern Ireland . The Irish television and radio presenter Carrie Crowley and
3024-418: Was required to relay the contest live and in full via television. Non-participating EBU member broadcasters were also able to relay the contest as "passive participants"; any passive countries wishing to participate in the following year's event were also required to provide a live broadcast of the contest or a deferred broadcast within 24 hours. Broadcasters were able to send commentators to provide coverage of
3080-402: Was the first time that a competing song could be accompanied entirely with a backing track following a change to the contest rules, with the previous rules stating that any backing tracks used could only include the sound of instruments featured on stage being mimed by the performers . For those countries which opted to utilise the orchestra a separate musical director could be nominated to lead
3136-461: Was used to determine the points awarded by most countries, with televoting used in Austria, Germany, Switzerland, Sweden and the United Kingdom. The announcement of the results from each country was conducted in the order in which they performed, with the spokespersons announcing their country's points in English or French in ascending order. The detailed breakdown of the points awarded by each country
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