Ireland in the Eurovision Song Contest 1991

Eurovision Song Contest 1991
Country  Ireland
National selection
Selection process National Final
Selection date(s) 30 March 1991
Selected entrant Kim Jackson
Selected song "Could It Be That I'm In Love"
Finals performance
Final result Shared 10th of 22 (47 points)
Ireland in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1990 • 1991 • 1992►

For the 1991 Eurovision Song Contest in Rome, the song "Could It Be That I'm In Love", written and composed by Liam Reilly and performed by Kim Jackson, was chosen to represent Ireland, after it won the national final selection. Composer Liam Reilly had represented Ireland in the 1990 Eurovision Song Contest in Zagreb, coming in second place with his own composition; Kim Jackson had also provided backing vocals for that entry.

National Finals

Held on 30 March at the RTÉ television centre in Dublin, the national final selection was hosted by Pat Kenny. Originally, eight songs were set to compete, but one was withdrawn the week before the contest, bringing the number of songs to seven. The winner was selected by ten regional juries.[1]

Draw Song Performer Points Rank
1 "Captivity" Patricia Moloney 42 7th
2 "Too Many Questions" Brian O'Reilly 88 3rd
3 "Why Can't Forever Last?" Flo McSweeney 65 5th
4 "When Do I Get Over You?" Mike Sherrard 53 6th
5 "Could It Be That I'm In Love" Kim Jackson 94 1st
6 "Sa Deireadh Thiar" Passion 86 4th
7 "Dream Come True" Jane Hennessy 93 2nd

After the regional juries had voted, songs 5 and 7 were tied. A special tiebreak jury was called to determine the winner, choosing "Could It Be That I'm In Love".

At Eurovision

"Could It Be that I'm in Love" was performed eleventh in the running order on the night of the contest, following Turkey and preceding Portugal. At the close of the voting sequence, Ireland had 47 points, tying them with the United Kingdom for tenth place.

Points Awarded to Ireland
12 points 10 points 8 points 7 points 6 points
  •  Luxembourg
  •  Denmark
5 points 4 points 3 points 2 points 1 point
  •  Belgium
  •  Malta
  •  Turkey
  •  United Kingdom
  •  Italy
  •   Switzerland
  •  Yugoslavia
  •  Finland
  •  Germany
  •  Austria
  •  Israel

References

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