- Source: List of LGBT participants in the Eurovision Song Contest
The following list includes those participants in the Eurovision Song Contest who are known to be members of the LGBT community.
Artists
= Artists with multiple appearances
=Five of the LGBT artists listed above have competed in the Eurovision Song Contest twice:
Belgium: Bob Benny, 1959 and 1961
Luxembourg: Jean-Claude Pascal, 1961 and 1981 (won the first time)
Israel: Dana International, 1998 and 2011 (won the first time)
Bosnia and Herzegovina: Deen, 2004 and 2016
Sweden: Loreen, 2012 and 2023 (won both times)
= Summaries
=As of the 2024 contest:
Of the 50 countries that have competed in the contest, 31 have been represented by LGBT artists at least once, 24 of which have been represented by LGBT artists more than once
Of the 19 countries that have competed in the contest but have never been represented by LGBT artists, five have not been active for over a decade (Andorra, Monaco, Morocco, Slovakia, and Turkey). A sixth country, Belarus, is currently ineligible to participate.
Of the 68 editions of the contest that have been held, 36 had at least one entry performed by LGBT artists, 21 of which had more than one entry performed by LGBT artists.
Every contest held in the 21st century has featured at least one LGBT artist.
Presenters
See also
LGBT visibility in the Eurovision Song Contest
Drag performances in the Eurovision Song Contest:
Slovenia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2002
Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2007
Ukraine in the Eurovision Song Contest 2007
Austria in the Eurovision Song Contest 2014
Australia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024
Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024
Notes
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Daftar negara dalam Kontes Lagu Eurovision
- List of LGBT participants in the Eurovision Song Contest
- Eurovision Song Contest 2025
- Eurovision Song Contest 2024
- List of Eurovision Song Contest winners
- Eurovision Song Contest 2023
- North Macedonia in the Eurovision Song Contest
- List of countries in the Eurovision Song Contest
- Eurovision Song Contest 1958
- History of the Eurovision Song Contest
- Eurovision Song Contest 1997