Eurovision Song Contest 2017

Eurovision Song Contest 2017
Dates
Semi-final 1 9 May 2017
Semi-final 2 11 May 2017
Final 13 May 2017
Host
Venue International Exhibition Centre, Kiev, Ukraine
Executive supervisor Jon Ola Sand
Executive producer
  • Oleksander Kharebin
  • Victoria Romanova
Host broadcaster National Television Company of Ukraine (NTU)
Participants
Number of entries 43
Debuting countries None
Returning countries  Portugal
 Romania
Withdrawing countries  Bosnia and Herzegovina
Vote
Voting system Each country awards two sets of 12, 10, 8–1 points to their 10 favourite songs: one from their professional jury and the other from televoting.
Eurovision Song Contest
◄2016 2017

The Eurovision Song Contest 2017 will be the 62nd edition of the Eurovision Song Contest. It will take place in the International Exhibition Centre in Kiev, Ukraine, following Ukraine's victory at the 2016 contest in Stockholm with the song "1944", performed by Jamala. This will be the second time the contest has taken place in Kiev, after 2005, and the fourth Eurovision event after hosting the Junior Eurovision Song Contest's in 2009 and 2013. The contest is expected to consist of two semi-finals on 9 and 11 May and the final on 13 May 2017.

Forty-three countries will participate in the 2017 contest. Portugal and Romania will return to the contest; both of whom were absent from the 2016 edition. Bosnia and Herzegovina, who had returned in 2016, have withdrawn due to financial difficulties.

Location

For more details on the host country, see Ukraine.

Bidding phase

Locations of the candidate cities: the eliminated cities are marked in red, with the shortlisted cities in green and the chosen host city in blue.

The Deputy Chief of the host broadcaster, the National Television Company of Ukraine (NTU) and the Head of Delegation for Ukraine, Viktoria Romanova, stated on 18 May 2016 that the first organisational meeting for the contest would take place before 8 June, during which the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and NTU would go through the technical requirements for the contest, as well as any training required for the contest to take place in Ukraine. Romanova also announced that the venue for the contest would be announced over the summer.[1][2][3]

NTU and the Ukrainian Government formally launched the bidding process for interested cities to apply to host the contest on 23 June.[4][5] The selection of the host city was scheduled to be conducted in four stages:

The following selection criteria were outlined for the selection of the host city:[6]

Six cities submitted applications by the deadline of 8 July: Dnipro, Kharkiv, Kherson, Kiev, Lviv and Odessa.[7] Prior to the opening of the bidding process, the cities of Cherkasy, Irpin, Uzhhorod and Vinnytsia had declared their interest in hosting the contest, but did not submit a formal bid.[8][9] Ukrainian Culture Minister Yevhen Nyshchuk stated on 30 June that an appropriate venue for the contest does not exist in Ukraine, suggesting that the construction of a new venue in Kiev or Lviv should be considered.[10]

The six candidate cities were officially presented to the LOC on 20 July in a two-hour live discussion show titled City Battle, broadcast from the UA:Pershyi studios in Kiev and moderated by Timur Miroshnychenko, with radio commentary from Olena Zelinchenko. The show was broadcast on UA:Pershyi, Radio Ukraine and the UA:Pershyi YouTube channel with commentary in English and Ukrainian. During the show, a representative from each candidate city presented its bid in front of a live studio audience:[11]

  • Dnipro: Borys Filatov (City Mayor)
  • Kharkiv: Igor Terekhov (Deputy City Mayor)
  • Kherson: Volodymyr Mykolaienko (City Mayor)
  • Kiev: Oleksii Reznikov (Deputy Head of City State Administration)
  • Lviv: Andrii Moskalenko (Deputy City Mayor)
  • Odessa: Pavel Vugelman (Deputy City Mayor)

Members of the LOC, media representatives, Ukrainian musical experts and fans also participated in the discussion.

NTU announced on 22 July that the bids from Dnipro, Kiev and Odessa had been shortlisted for further consideration.[12]

The EBU announced on 30 July that the host city would be announced "in due course", rather than on the previously stated date of 1 August, with Executive Supervisor of the contest Jon Ola Sand stating that the EBU "really want to take the time it takes to come up with the right decision".[13] The Deputy General Director of NTU, Oleksandr Kharebin, stated on 10 August that the host city would be announced on Ukrainian Independence Day, 24 August.[14] The announcement was later scheduled to take place on 25 August; however, it was postponed at 14:00 EEST, one hour before it was due to take place, with NTU citing the need to further consider some fine details regarding the decision.[15]

After several delays in announcing the host city, NTU announced on 8 September that they would be meeting with the Ukrainian Government and the LOC on 9 September and that a press conference to announce the host city was scheduled to take place at 13:00 EEST on the same day from the Government Press Centre in Kiev. Kiev was announced as the host city for the contest with the International Exhibition Centre selected as the venue.[16][17]

Key     Host venue     Shortlisted

City[18] Venue Capacity Notes
Dnipro DniproEuroArena 9,500 Proposal included the complete reconstruction of the Meteor Stadium and Sports Complex Meteor, which would have been completed by March 2017.[19] Withdrew after the host city announcement being postponed for a fourth time.
Kharkiv Metalist Oblast Sports Complex 40,003 Hosted three group stage matches of UEFA Euro 2012. Would have required significant construction including the addition of a roof.[20]
Kherson Concert Hall "Yubileyniy" 1,600 Proposal included expansion and reconstruction of the venue, which would have taken approximately 7–8 months.[21]
Kiev
Palace of Sports 10,000 Hosted the Eurovision Song Contest 2005 and the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2009. May have conflicted with contest preparations as the venue will host part of the 2017 IIHF World Championship Division I ice hockey tournament between 22–28 April 2017.[22]
International Exhibition Centre 13,000 Venue was initially submitted as a reserve.[23][24] Kiev later announced on 24 August 2016 that this was their preferred venue for staging the contest.[25]
Lviv Arena Lviv 34,915 Hosted three of the group-stage games for UEFA Euro 2012. The arena required the construction of a roof.[26]
Unfinished venue N/A An unfinished venue originally planned for EuroBasket 2015 that was 25% complete when construction halted.[26]
Odessa Chornomorets Stadium 34,000 Proposal included plans for reconstruction of the venue and options for providing a covered roof.[27][28]

Venue

The venue of the contest, International Exhibition Centre in Kiev, Ukraine

The contest will take place in the International Exhibition Centre in Kiev, following Ukraine's victory at the 2016 contest in Stockholm with the song "1944", performed by Jamala. The International Exhibition Centre has a capacity of approximately 11,000 attendees, and this will be the second time the contest has taken place in Kiev, after 2005.[17]

Format

Preliminary dates

The preliminary dates for the contest were announced on 14 March 2016 at a meeting of Heads of Delegation in Stockholm, with the semi-finals expected to take place on 16 and 18 May and the final on 20 May 2017. These preliminary dates were chosen by the EBU to avoid the contest coinciding with any major television and sporting events scheduled to take place around that time.[29]

However, the EBU announced on 24 June that the preliminary dates for the contest had been brought forward a week, with the semi-finals scheduled for 9 and 11 May and the final on 13 May.[4] This was reportedly due to a request from NTU, as the initial preliminary dates conincided with the Remembrance Day for the victims of the Crimean Tatar Genocide on 18 May.[30][31] However, the current preliminary dates coincide with the second leg of the UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League semi-finals.[31]

Participating countries

On 31 October 2016, EBU announced that forty-three countries will participate in the 2017 contest, equalling the record number from 2008 and 2011. Portugal and Romania will return after being absent from 2016 contest, while Bosnia and Herzegovina withdrew due to the financial difficulties.[32]

Returning artists

O'G3NE will return to a Eurovision event after having previously represented the Netherlands in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2007.[33]

Semifinalists

Country[32] Artist Song Language
 Albania TBD 23 December 2016[34] TBD 23 December 2016[35]
 Armenia TBD December 2016[36]
 Australia
 Austria
 Azerbaijan
 Belarus TBD 25 January 2017[37]
 Belgium Blanche[38]
 Bulgaria
 Croatia
 Cyprus Hovig[39]
 Czech Republic
 Denmark TBD 25 February 2017[40] TBD 25 February 2017[40]
 Estonia TBD 4 March 2017[41] TBD 4 March 2017[41]
 Finland TBD 28 January 2017[42] TBD 28 January 2017[42]
 Georgia
 Greece TBD February 2017[43] TBD February 2017[43]
 Hungary
 Iceland TBD 11 March 2017[44] TBD 11 March 2017[44]
 Ireland
 Israel
 Latvia TBD 26 February 2017[45] TBD 26 February 2017[45]
 Lithuania
 Macedonia Jana Burčeska[46]
 Malta TBD February 2017[47] TBD February 2017[47]
 Moldova
 Montenegro TBD December 2016[48][49]
 Netherlands O'G3NE[33]
 Norway
 Poland
 Portugal
 Romania
 Russia
 San Marino
 Serbia
 Slovenia TBD February 2017[50] TBD February 2017[50]
 Sweden TBD 11 March 2017[51] TBD 11 March 2017[51]
  Switzerland TBD 5 February 2017[52] TBD 5 February 2017[52]

Finalists

Country[32] Artist Song Language
 France
 Germany TBD 9 February 2017[53] TBD 9 February 2017[53]
 Italy TBD 11 February 2017[54][55] TBD 11 February 2017[54][55]
 Spain TBD February 2017[56] TBD February 2017[56]
 Ukraine TBD 25 February 2017[57] TBD 25 February 2017[57]
 United Kingdom

Other countries

Eligibility for potential participation in the Eurovision Song Contest requires a national broadcaster with active EBU membership that will be able to broadcast the contest via the Eurovision network. The EBU had issued an invitation of participation to all fifty-six active members and one associate member (Australia). Several countries have provisionally confirmed their participation in the contest, while the following countries have made announcements regarding their participation:[58]

Active EBU members

Associate EBU members

EBU non-members

International broadcasts and voting

Commentators

Non-participating countries

See also

Notes and references

References

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External links

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