Eurovision Song Contest 2018

63rd edition of the Eurovision Song Contest

The Eurovision Song Contest 2018 was the 63rd edition of the Eurovision Song Contest. Forty-three countries took part and the Grand Final was held on 12 May 2018. Israel won the competition with the song "Toy" by Netta Barzilai.

The four hosts of the event

The competition was held at the Altice Arena in Lisbon after Portugal won the previous contest with Salvador Sobral's song "Amar pelois dois". The event was hosted by Silvia Alberto, Daniela Ruah, Catarina Furtado and Filomena Cautela.

Overview change

The Grand Final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2018 had 26 countries. These were the Big Five (France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom), the host country Portugal and ten countries from each semi-final.

First Semi-Final change

Nineteen countries participated in the first semi-final.[1] Those countries, plus Portugal, Spain and the United Kingdom voted in this semi-final.[2]

R/O Country Artist Song Result No.
1   Azerbaijan Aisel "X My Heart" Eliminated 11
2   Iceland Ari Ólafsson "Our Choice" Eliminated 19
3   Albania Eugent Bushpepa "Mall" Qualified 8
4   Belgium Sennek "A Matter of Time" Eliminated 12
5   Czech Republic Mikolas Josef "Lie to Me" Qualified 3
6   Lithuania Ieva Zasimauskaitė "When We're Old" Qualified 9
7   Israel Netta Barzilai "Toy" Qualified 1
8   Belarus Alekseev "Forever" Eliminated 16
9   Estonia Elina Nechayeva "La forza" Qualified 5
10   Bulgaria Equinox "Bones" Qualified 7
11   Macedonia Eye Cue "Lost and Found" Eliminated 18
12   Croatia Franka "Crazy" Eliminated 17
13   Austria Cesár Sampson "Nobody but You" Qualified 4
14   Greece Yianna Terzi "Oniro mou" Eliminated 14
15   Finland Saara Aalto "Monsters" Qualified 10
16   Armenia Sevak Khanagyan "Qami" Eliminated 15
17   Switzerland Zibbz "Stones" Eliminated 13
18   Ireland Ryan O'Shaughnessy "Together" Qualified 6
19   Cyprus Eleni Foureira "Fuego" Qualified 2

Second Semi-FInal change

Eighteen countries participated in the second semi-final. Those countries, plus France, Germany and Italy voted in this semi-final.[2]

R/O Country Artist Song Result No.
1   Norway Alexander Rybak "That's How You Write A Song" Qualified 1
2   Romania The Humans "Goodbye" Eliminated 11
3   Serbia Sanja Ilić & Balkanika "Nova deca" Qualified 9
4   San Marino Jessika & Jenifer Brening "Who We Are" Eliminated 17
5   Denmark Rasmussen "Higher Ground" Qualified 5
6   Russia Julia Samoylova "I Won't Break" Eliminated 15
7   Moldova DoReDoS "My Lucky Day" Qualified 3
8   Netherlands Waylon "Outlaw in 'Em" Qualified 7
9   Australia Jessica Mauboy "We Got Love" Qualified 4
10   Georgia Ethno-Jazz Band Iriao "For You" Eliminated 18
11   Poland Gromee & Lukas Meijer "Light Me Up" Eliminated 14
12   Malta Christabelle "Taboo" Eliminated 13
13   Hungary AWS "Viszlát nyár" Qualified 10
14   Latvia Laura Rizzotto "Funny Girl" Eliminated 12
15   Sweden Benjamin Ingrosso "Dance You Off" Qualified 2
16   Montenegro Vanja Radovanović "Inje" Eliminated 16
17   Slovenia Lea Sirk "Hvala, ne!" Qualified 8
18   Ukraine Mélovin "Under the Ladder" Qualified 6

Final change

The final took place on 12 May 2018 at 20:00 WEST (21:00 CEST).[3] Twenty-six countries participated in the final (Portugal, the Big 5 and the twenty qualifiers from the semi-finals).[4] All 43 participating countries were eligible to vote. The winner was decided by two votes: one from a group of musical experts from each country and one from the viewers of each participating country. The vote rankings were combined and the winner was declared.

During the performance of the United Kingdom's song, a protestor jumped on stage and stole the microphone off singer SuRie. Security guards removed the protestor from the stage shortly after and the show cut to an interview with Ukrainian contestant Mélovin in the lounge area. SuRie decided not to perform the song again.

R/O Country Artist Song Rank
1   Ukraine Mélovin "Under the Ladder" 17
2   Spain Amaia & Alfred "Tu canción" 23
3   Slovenia Lea Sirk "Hvala, ne!" 22
4   Lithuania Ieva Zasimauskaitė "When We're Old" 12
5   Austria Cesár Sampson "Nobody but You" 3
6   Estonia Elina Nechayeva "La forza" 8
7   Norway Alexander Rybak "That's How You Write A Song" 15
8   Portugal Cláudia Pascoal & Isaura "O jardim" 26
9   United Kingdom SuRie "Storm" 24
10   Serbia Sanja Ilić & Balkanika "Nova deca" 19
11   Germany Michael Schulte "You Let Me Walk Alone" 4
12   Albania Eugent Bushpepa "Mall" 11
13   France Madame Monsieur "Mercy" 13
14   Czech Republic Mikolas Josef "Lie to Me" 6
15   Denmark Rasmussen "Higher Ground" 9
16   Australia Jessica Mauboy "We Got Love" 20
17   Finland Saara Aalto "Monsters" 25
18   Bulgaria Equinox "Bones" 14
19   Moldova DoReDoS "My Lucky Day" 10
20   Sweden Benjamin Ingrosso "Dance You Off" 7
21   Hungary AWS "Viszlát nyár" 21
22   Israel Netta Barzilai "Toy" 1
23   Netherlands Waylon "Outlaw in 'Em" 18
24   Ireland Ryan O'Shaughnessy "Together" 16
25   Cyprus Eleni Foureira "Fuego" 2
26   Italy Ermal Meta & Fabrizio Moro "Non mi avete fatto niente" 5

Notes change

References change

  1. "Lisbon 2018 - Eurovision Song Contest Lisbon 2018". eurovision.tv. Archived from the original on 12 May 2018. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Jordan, Paul (29 January 2018). "Which Countries Will Perform in Which Semi-Final at Eurovision 2018?". eurovision.tv. Archived from the original on 29 January 2018. Retrieved 29 January 2018.
  3. "Eurovision Song Contest 2019: Calendar". Retrieved 13 May 2018.
  4. "Eurovision 2018: This is the running order of the Grand Final!". eurovision.tv. Retrieved 11 May 2018.

Other websites change