- Source: Belgium in the Eurovision Song Contest 1987
Belgium was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 1987 with the song "Soldiers of Love", written by Gyuri Spies, Marc de Coen, and Liliane Saint-Pierre, and performed by Saint-Pierre herself. The Belgian participating broadcaster, Flemish Belgische Radio- en Televisieomroep (BRT), selected its entry through a national final. In addition, Walloon Radio-télévision belge de la Communauté française (RTBF) was the host broadcaster and staged the event at the Centenary Palace in Brussels, after winning the previous edition with the song "J'aime la vie" by Sandra Kim.
Before Eurovision
= Organization
=Flemish broadcaster Belgische Radio- en Televisieomroep (BRT) competed in the Eurovision Song Contest 1987 for Belgium, while Walloon broadcaster Radio-télévision belge de la Communauté française (RTBF) hosted the event due to them winning the previous year. BRT decided to host another edition of Eurosong to select their entry for Eurovision.
= Eurosong '87
=Competing Entries
BRT had asked professionals from the music scene, record companies, producers, and publishers to propose artists to compete in Eurosong '87. The artists did not necessarily have to have a song ready. More than seventy artists had been submitted by the end of the submission period. On 12 December 1986, a 12-member jury assessed the artists and chose twelve to compete in Eurosong '87. The jury consisted of: three members of SABAM (Mary Boduin, Ben Gyselinck, and Els Van Den Abeele), three representatives from Belgian TV (Tom Huybrechts, Marc Maes, and Johannes Thuy), three representatives from Belgian radio (Ro Burms, Paul De Wijngart, and Nora Nys), and three representatives from the press (Paul Cajot, Toni Smeulders, and Guido Van Liefferinge). The twelve chosen artists were: Daan Van Den Durpel, Angie Dylan, Margriet Hermans, Bart Kaëll, Curt Lawrence, Dan O'Neil, Sonia Pelgrims, Sofie, Liliane Saint-Pierre, John Terra, Vincent, and Judith Vindevogel. However, a few weeks before the final, Judith Vindevogel withdrew after a dispute with her producer.
Final
The national final was broadcast live at 20:20 CET on 14 March 1987 from the Amerikaans Theater in Brussels, and was hosted by Luc Appermont. The BRT Orchestra was conducted by Freddy Sunder. Voting was done by regional juries in the five Flemish provinces of Belgium, each consisting of forty television viewers between the ages of 16 and 60, and a professional jury. The professional jury consists of the same twelve members that chose the participating artists. All juries vote by giving each entry a score out of ten. Saint-Pierre emerged the winner by a 5-point margin, having been placed first by four of the regional juries (and second by the other), but being ranked only sixth by the professional jury.
At Eurovision
On the night of the final Saint-Pierre performed 5th in the running order, following Iceland and preceding Sweden. At the close of the voting "Soldiers of Love" had received 56 points with votes from 12 countries (the highest mark being 8 from the United Kingdom), placing Belgium 11th out of 22 entries. The Belgian jury awarded its 12 points to contest winners Ireland.
The contest was shown on TV1 with commentary by Luc Appermont, and RTBF1. It was also broadcast on a radio station BRT 2.
= Voting
=References
External links
Belgian Preselection 1987
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Belgium in the Eurovision Song Contest 1987
- Eurovision Song Contest 1987
- Belgium in the Eurovision Song Contest
- Eurovision Song Contest 2025
- Eurovision Song Contest 2024
- List of Eurovision Song Contest winners
- Eurovision Song Contest 1986
- Eurovision Song Contest 1962
- Eurovision Song Contest 1958
- Belgium in the Eurovision Song Contest 1986