Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest 1973

Eurovision Song Contest 1973
Country  Germany
National selection
Selection process Ein Lied für Luxemburg
Selection date(s) 21 February 1973
Selected entrant Gitte
Selected song "Junger Tag"
Finals performance
Final result 8th=, 85 points
Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1972 • 1973 • 1974►

Germany was represented by Danish singer Gitte, with the song "Junger Tag", at the 1973 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 7 April in Luxembourg City. "Junger Tag" was the winner of the German national final, Ein Lied für Luxemburg, held on 21 February.

Final

The final was held at the TV studios in Frankfurt, hosted by Edith Grobleben. Six acts took part, each performing two songs. Songs were voted on by a 10-member jury who each awarded between 1 and 5 points per song. Unlike in the previous year's final, the result of which had caused a degree of controversy, there was no elimination and revote on the top songs. "Junger Tag" emerged the winner by just 1 point over "Sebastian" performed by Tonia, who had been the Belgian Eurovision representative in 1966.[1]

Draw Artist Song Points Place
1 Michael Holm "Das Beste an Dir" (The best thing about you) 25 9=
2 Tonia "Mir gefällt diese Welt" (I like this world) 30 7
3 Inga & Wolf "Manchmal" (Sometimes) 32 6
4 Roberto Blanco "Ich bin ein glücklicher Mann" (I am a lucky man) 34 4
5 Gitte "Junger Tag" (Young day) 40 1
6 Cindy & Bert "Wohin soll ich geh'n" (Where shall I go) 26 8
7 Michael Holm "Glaub daran" (Believe in it) 19 12
8 Tonia "Sebastian" 39 2
9 Inga & Wolf "Schreib ein Lied" (Write a song) 36 3
10 Roberto Blanco "Au revoir, auf wiedersehen" (Goodbye, goodbye) 24 11
11 Gitte "Hallo! Wie geht es Robert?" (Hello! How is Robert?) 33 5
12 Cindy & Bert "Zwei Menschen und ein Weg" (Two people and one way) 25 9=

At Eurovision

On the night of the final Gitte performed 4th in the running order, following Portugal and preceding Norway. At the close of voting "Junger Tag" had received 85 points, placing Germany joint 8th (with Monaco) of the 17 entries.[2]

See also

References

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