Ireland in the Eurovision Song Contest 1984

Eurovision Song Contest 1984
Country  Ireland
National selection
Selection process National Final
Selection date(s) 31 March 1984
Selected entrant Linda Martin
Selected song "Terminal 3"
Finals performance
Final result 2nd, 137 points
Ireland in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1982 • 1984 • 1985►

Ireland was represented by Linda Martin, with the Johnny Logan-penned song '"Terminal 3", at the 1984 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 5 May in Luxembourg City. "Terminal 3" was chosen as the Irish entry at the national final on 31 March.

"Terminal 3" marked Ireland's return to Eurovision following RTÉ's decision to opt out of the 1983 contest because of financial constraints.

Final

The final was held at the studios of broadcaster RTÉ in Dublin, hosted by Gay Byrne. Eight songs took part, with the winner chosen by voting from eight regional juries. Contestants included 1981 Irish representatives Sheeba, and Charlie McGettigan,[1] who would go on to win Eurovision ten years down the line.

National final - 31 March 1984
Draw Artist Song Points Place
1 Girl Talk "Problems" 0 6=
2 Robert Strong "The Show Is Over" 0 6=
3 Flo McSweeney "This Is for You" 16 2
4 Thomas McParland "April Won't Be Here Till September" 3 5
5 Linda Martin "Terminal 3" 18 1
6 Aileen Pringle "Don't Take My Dream Away" 0 6=
7 Charlie McGettigan "Bee Bop Delight" 14 3
8 Sheeba "My Love and You" 13 4
Jury Votes
Song A B C D E F G H Total
Problems 0
The Show Is Over 0
This Is for You1 3122 716
April Won't Be Here Till September 3 3
Terminal 3121 463118
Don't Take My Dream Away 0
Bee Bop Delight 4251 2 14
My Love and You62221 13

A=Cork, B=Buncrana, C=Dublin, D=Athlone, E=Sligo, F=Wexford, G=Limerick, H=Monaghan

At Eurovision

On the night of the final Martin performed 9th in the running order, following Belgium and preceding Denmark. Pre-contest, "Terminal 3" had been rated as one of the front runners in a field with no obvious stand-out song, and Martin gave a vocally strong and visually striking performance. The early voting was very close, with the lead changing hands regularly between Ireland, Denmark and Spain. However from the half-way point, to the surprise of most observers, the unrated song from Sweden pulled away from the rest to claim victory with 145 points, with Ireland eventually finishing in second place with 137 points. "Terminal 3" received four maximum 12s from Belgium, Italy, Sweden and Switzerland with only Yugoslavia failing to award it any points at all. The Irish jury awarded its 12 points to Sweden.[2]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.