Eurovision Dance Contest 2007

Eurovision Dance Contest 2007
Dates
Final 1 September 2007
Host
Venue BBC Television Centre,[1]
London, United Kingdom
Presenter(s) Graham Norton
Claudia Winkleman[1]
Director Nikki Parsons
Executive supervisor Tal Barnea
Executive producer
  • Jane Lush
  • Fenia Vardanis
Host broadcaster British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
Interval act Enrique Iglesias
Participants
Number of entries 16
Debuting countries
Vote
Voting system Each country awards 1-8, 10, and 12 points to their 10 favourite acts.
Nul points   Switzerland
Winning dancers  Finland
Katja Koukkula & Jussi Väänänen
Eurovision Dance Contest
2007 2008►

The Eurovision Dance Contest 2007 was the 1st Eurovision Dance Contest a dance entertainment co-production between the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and the BBC. The first ever pan-European dance competition was held on 1 September 2007 in London, United Kingdom with the participation of 16 countries. Viewers cast their votes by telephone and SMS text message voting on each couple's two dances the first being ballroom or Latin with the second being freestyle, with a "national" flavour. Comedian Graham Norton and Claudia Winkleman presented the 2007 contest from the BBC Television Centre in London.

The first ever winner of the contest was Finland who received a total of 132 points. 2nd place went to Ukraine, 3rd to Ireland, 4th to Poland and 5th place to Austria and Portugal, who received both 74 points.

Location

For more details on the host city, see London.
BBC Television Centre, London - host venue of the 2007 contest.

The host venue was the BBC Television Centre, White City, London, which opened in 1960. It is one of the most readily recognisable facilities of its type having appeared as the backdrop for many BBC programmes. It remained to be one of the largest such facilities in the world until it closed in March 2013.[2]

Production

The contest was hosted by the BBC,[3] and was a co-production by Splash Media run by the developers of its successful Strictly Come Dancing format and sports production house Sunset + Vine with help from the International DanceSport Federation and in association with the European Broadcasting Union.

The contest was broadcast in English and French languages, although France did not take part.[4] Each broadcaster also had the option of providing its own commentators at the event. UK commentators were Len Goodman and Bruno Tonioli.

Participants

The Croatian broadcaster HRT had expressed an interest in taking part, but pulled out due to costs and scheduling problems.

As well as those countries that took part, Albania, Armenia, Belarus, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Cyprus, Iceland, Israel and Macedonia also broadcast the contest despite not taking part in it, with possibility to join it in 2008.[5]

Due to the forest fires in Greece the Greek national broadcaster ERT did not air the show live and therefore used jury instead of televoting.[6]

Austria and Portugal both finished with the same number of points, however, Austria received points from every other participating nation thus receiving points from more countries than Portugal, hence Austria took 5th place.

Draw Country Dancers Dance Styles Place Points
01   Switzerland Denise Biellmann & Sven Ninnemann Paso Doble and Swing 16 0
02  Russia Mariya Sittel & Vladislav Borodinov Rumba and Paso Doble 7 72
03  Netherlands Alexandra Matteman & Redmond Valk Cha-Cha-Cha and Rumba 12 34
04  United Kingdom Camilla Dallerup & Brendan Cole Rumba and Freestyle 15 18
05  Austria Kelly & Andy Kainz Jive and Paso Doble 5 74
06  Germany Wolke Hegenbarth & Oliver Seefeldt Samba dance and Freestyle 8 59
07  Greece Ourania Kolliou & Spiros Pavlidis Jive and Sirtaki 13 31
08  Lithuania Gabrielė Valiukaitė & Gintaras Svistunavičius Paso Doble and Traditional Lithuanian Folk Dance 11 35
09  Spain Amagoya Benlloch & Abraham Martinez Cha-Cha-Cha and Paso Doble 10 38
10  Ireland Nicola Byrne & Mick Donegan Jive and Fandango 3 95
11  Poland Katarzyna Cichopek & Marcin Hakiel Cha-Cha-Cha and Showdance 4 84
12  Denmark Mette Skou Elkjær & David Jørgensen Rumba and Showdance 9 38
13  Portugal Sónia Araújo & Ricardo Silva Jive and Tango 5 74
14  Ukraine Yulia Okropiridze & Illya Sydorenko Quickstep and Showdance 2 121
15  Sweden Cecilia Ehrling & Martin Lidberg Paso Doble and Disco Fusion 14 23
16  Finland Katja Koukkula & Jussi Väänänen Rumba and Paso Doble 1 132

Scoreboard

Wikinews has related news: Finland win first ever Eurovision Dance Contest 2007 held in London

The following 16 countries took part,[4][7][8] and received the scores shown below.

  Voters
Switzerland
Russia 31037 6454 812 10
Netherlands 5 7212 3
United Kingdom 35 7 3
Austria 7352 102334685547
Germany 1056 10 7 57612
Greece 241545 4 212 1
Lithuania 1 6 4 121 1631
Spain 622 7 124 5
Ireland 1107863185 10123876
Poland 4847812 1610 4 1010
Denmark 116723 4284
Portugal 12683288212 2 362
Ukraine 312101256512861267 512
Sweden 1175 8
Finland 87124124101010881010712
THE TABLE IS ORDERED BY APPEARANCE

12 points

Below is a summary of all 12 points in the contest:

N. Contestant Nation(s) giving 12 points
5 Ukraine Finland, Lithuania, Poland, Russia, United Kingdom
3 Finland Austria, Netherlands, Sweden
2 Portugal Spain, Switzerland
1 Ireland Denmark
Lithuania Ireland
Netherlands Greece
Poland Germany
Russia Ukraine
Spain Portugal

International broadcasts and voting

Voting and spokespersons

The order in which each country announced their votes was done in order of performance. The spokespersons are shown alongside each country.[9]

  1.   Switzerland Cécile Bähler
  2.  Russia Like Kremer
  3.  Netherlands Marcus van Teijlingen
  4.  United Kingdom Kirsty Gallagher
  5.  Austria Peter L. Eppinger
  6.  Germany Alice Kessler and Ellen Kessler
  7.  Greece George Amyras
  8.  Lithuania Lavija Šurnaitė-Kairienė
  9.  Spain Jesús Álvarez
  10.  Ireland Pamela Flood
  11.  Poland Ewelina Kopic
  12.  Denmark Louise Wolff
  13.  Portugal Marta Leite de Castro
  14.  Ukraine Svetoslav Vlokh
  15.  Sweden Ulrica Bengtsson
  16.  Finland Johanna Pirttilahti

Commentators

Most countries sent commentators to London or commentated from their own country, in order to add insight to the participants and, if necessary, provide voting information.

References

External links

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