Sweden in the Eurovision Song Contest 1959

Eurovision Song Contest 1959
Country  Sweden
National selection
Selection process Melodifestivalen 1959
Selection date(s) 29 January 1959
Selected entrant Brita Borg
Selected song "Augustin"
Finals performance
Final result 9th, 4 points
Sweden in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1958 • 1959 • 1960►

Sweden was in their second Eurovision Song Contest represented by Brita Borg with the song "Augustin". The winning song was elected in the Swedish national final: Melodifestivalen 1959. Eight semi-finals were held on the radio. During the semi-finals, Sveriges Radio decided that the winning song would represent Sweden at the Eurovision Song Contest 1959. The winning singer, Siw Malmkvist, had to stay home as the singer had already been selected.

Melodifestivalen 1959

Melodifestivalen 1959 was the national final for the song to represent Sweden at the Eurovision Song Contest 1959. It was held on 29 January 1959 and was the first time that this system of picking a song had been used. Approximately 200 songs were submitted to SVT for the competition. The final was broadcast on Sveriges Radio TV and Sveriges Radio P1 from Cirkus, Stockholm and the presenter was Thore Ehrling. Brita Borg was chosen by an expert jury with "Augustin".

Draw Artist Song Songwriters Points Place
1 Östen Warnebring "Kungsgatans blues" Axel Flyckt, Sven-Gunnar Johnson 67 4th
2Ulla Christenson"Lyckans soluppgång"Dag Lambert, Bengt Haslum526th
3Staffan Broms"Dags igen att vara kära"Ulf Källqvist, Åke Gerhard792nd
4Britt-Inger Dreilick"Hösten är vår"Gösta Westerberg, Fritz-Gustaf526th
5Åke Söhr"En miljon för dina"Åke Gerhard08th
6Britt Damberg"Nya fågelsången"Sam Samson, Fritz-Gustaf763rd
7Östen Warnebring"Någon saknar dig"Britt Lindeborg565th
8Siw Malmkvist"Augustin"Bo Harry Sandin, Åke Gerhard1051st

At Eurovision

At the contest, which was held in Cannes, Sweden only managed to get a joint 9th place (out of 11).

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.