Italy in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest

For Italy's most recent participation, see Italy in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2014.
Italy

Member station Rai Gulp
National selection events Internal selection (2014, 2016)
Ti lascio una canzone (2015)
Appearances
Appearances 3
First appearance 2014
Best result 1st: 2014
Worst result 16th: 2015
External links
Italy's page at Eurovision.tv
For the most recent participation see
Italy in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2016

Italy debuted at the Junior Eurovision Song Contest when the twelfth edition of competition was held in Malta in 2014.[1] The Italian broadcaster, RAI, selected the debut entry of country via an internal selection as "Tu primo grande amore" by the singer Vincenzo Cantiello. Italy finished the 2014 edition with a total of 159 points and ranked first. That made Italy the second country that won with the debut entry after Croatia's victory in the first edition. In 2015, the Italian broadcaster decided to participate again, this time sending the twins Chiara and Martina Scarpari to the contest. However, Italy only finished 16th in the contest, collecting 34 points. The next year, Italy achieved its second podium finishing third.

Participation

Table key

 1st place   2nd place   3rd place   Last place 

Year Artist Song Language Place Points
2014 Vincenzo Cantiello "Tu primo grande amore" Italian, English 1 159
2015 Chiara & Martina Scarpari[2] "Viva" Italian 16 34
2016 Fiamma Boccia "Cara Mamma (Dear Mom)" Italian, English 3 209

Photogallery

Broadcasts and voting

Commentators and spokespersons

The contests are broadcast online worldwide through the official Junior Eurovision Song Contest website junioreurovision.tv and YouTube. In 2015, the online broadcasts featured commentary in English by junioreurovision.tv editor Luke Fisher and 2011 Bulgarian Junior Eurovision Song Contest entrant Ivan Ivanov.[3] The Italian broadcaster, RAI, sent their own commentators to each contest in order to provide commentary in the Italian language. Spokespersons were also chosen by the national broadcaster in order to announce the awarding points from Italy. The table below list the details of each commentator and spokesperson since 2014.

Year(s) Commentator Spokesperson
2014 Antonella Clerici and Simone Lijoi Geordie
2015 Simone Lijoi Vincenzo Cantiello
2016 Simone Lijoi and Laura Carusino Vignera Jade Scicluna

Voting history

The tables below shows Italy's top-five voting history rankings up until their most recent participation in 2015:

Most points given
Rank Points Country
1 22  Malta
2 18  Bulgaria
3 12  Albania
4 8
5 7  Slovenia

Most points received
Rank Points Country
1 22  Malta
2 13  Montenegro
3 12
4 11  Armenia
5 10

See also

References

  1. Fisher, Luke James (8 July 2014). "Italy joins Junior Eurovision !". junioreurovision.tv. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
  2. "Chiara and Martina win Italian run-off!".
  3. Fisher, Luke James (21 November 2015). "Tonight: Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2015!". Junior Eurovision Song Contest – Bulgaria 2015. Retrieved 21 November 2015.

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.