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The Eurovision Song Contest 2013 was the 58th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest. It took place in Malmö, Sweden, following the country's victory at the 2012 contest with the song "Euphoria" by Loreen. Organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Sveriges Television (SVT), the contest was held at Malmö Arena and consisted of two semi-finals on 14 and 16 May, and a final on 18 May 2013. The three live shows were presented by Swedish comedian and television presenter Petra Mede, being the first time only one host had presented the show since the 1995 contest. Former Swedish entrant Eric Saade acted as the green room host in the final.

Eurovision Song Contest 2013
We Are One
Dates
Semi-final 114 May 2013 (2013-05-14)
Semi-final 216 May 2013 (2013-05-16)
Final18 May 2013 (2013-05-18)
Host
VenueMalmö Arena
Malmö, Sweden[1]
Presenter(s)
Directed by
Executive supervisorJon Ola Sand
Executive producerMartin Österdahl
Host broadcasterSveriges Television (SVT)
Opening act
Interval act
Websiteeurovision.tv/event/malmo-2013/
Participants
Number of entries39
Debuting countriesNone
Returning countries Armenia
Non-returning countries
  •  Bosnia and Herzegovina
  •  Portugal
  •  Slovakia
  •  Turkey
Participation map
  •      Participating countries     Did not qualify from the semi final     Countries that participated in the past but not in 2013
Vote
Voting systemEach country awarded 12, 10, 8–1 points to their 10 favourite songs.
Nul points in finalNone
Winning song
2012 Eurovision Song Contest 2014

Thirty-nine countries participated, with Armenia returning after their one-year absence. Bosnia and Herzegovina, Portugal, Slovakia and Turkey all withdrew from the contest for various reasons. Slovakia and Turkey have never returned to the contest since.

The winner was Denmark with the song "Only Teardrops", performed by Emmelie de Forest and written by Lise Cabble, Julia Fabrin Jakobsen and Thomas Stengaard. This was the second time that Denmark had won on Swedish soil after 2000. Azerbaijan, Ukraine, Norway and Russia rounded out the top five. Of the "Big Five" countries, only Italy managed to finish in the top ten, for the third time in a row since its return, coming seventh. The Netherlands finished ninth in what was the country's first appearance in a final since 2004. For the first time since 1985, no country of the former Yugoslav federation participated in the final.

This year marked the first time that the "Parade of Nations", a concept that had been used in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest since its inception in 2004, was used in Eurovision. It sees all countries performing in the final presenting themselves with their national flags before the contest begins. This year, the contestants entered the main stage by walking across a bridge over the audience. This idea has subsequently continued in every Eurovision edition onwards.

The EBU reported that 170 million viewers watched the semi-finals and final of the 2013 edition.


Location


Malmö Arena, Malmö – host venue of the 2013 contest.
Malmö Arena, Malmö – host venue of the 2013 contest.

On 8 July 2012, the Swedish broadcaster Sveriges Television (SVT) announced that Malmö Arena in Malmö would be the host venue for the 2013 Eurovision Song Contest. This was the fifth time after 1975, 1985, 1992 and 2000 that the competition was held in Sweden and the second time, after 1992, that it was held in Malmö. SVT had expressed the desire to host the contest at a slightly smaller venue than previous years, as well as smaller environment which is easier to dedicate and decorate for other celebrations and festivities of the event within the host city. These were factors in the choice of Malmö Arena as the host venue,[12] and Malmö as Sweden's third-largest city by population after Stockholm and Gothenburg, the two other initial location-bidders.

SVT made the advance decision to allocate Denmark at one semi-final and Norway at the other, in consideration for the number of Danish and Norwegian fans likely to come, with the arena being relatively small and so not suitable for accommodating both countries' fans at one semi-final event. The Øresund Bridge was eventually also used as the main artistic medium for the theme of the contest, as an expression of binding cultures.


Bidding phase


Stockholm
Malmö
Locations of the candidate cities: the chosen host city is marked in blue, while the eliminated cities are marked in red.
Square in Malmö before the finals, with time table demonstrating the countdown for the broadcast.
Square in Malmö before the finals, with time table demonstrating the countdown for the broadcast.

On the night of the final for the 2012 contest, the chief executive of SVT, Eva Hamilton, stated to the Swedish media that various venues in Stockholm, Gothenburg and Malmö were being considered for hosting the 2013 contest.[13] One alternative put forward in the Expressen, was to hold the competition at three venues – the semi-finals in Gothenburg and Malmö, and the final in Stockholm.[14] This proposal was dismissed as unfeasible by SVT, which declared that the contest would be hosted in only one city.[15]

On 20 June 2012, it was announced that Gothenburg had withdrawn from the bidding process due to the city being the host of the Göteborg Horse Show in late April 2013. There were also concerns about the availability of hotel rooms due to a variety of other events taking place in the same time frame as the Eurovision Song Contest.[16] The executive producer for the 2013 contest, Martin Österdahl, told Swedish press that he did not like the decisions made by previous hosts to hold the contest in larger arenas, stating that he and SVT wanted the 2013 contest to be "more close and personal".[12][17] SVT also claimed that the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) wanted the 2013 contest to be "smaller" due to the escalating costs of previous contests.[17]

The following candidate cities had provisionally reserved venues and hotel rooms, as part of their bids to host the 2013 contest.[18] On 8 July 2012, Malmö Arena was confirmed as the host venue for the contest. Malmö Arena is Sweden's fourth-largest indoor arena, after Friends Arena, Tele2 Arena and Globe Arena, all located in Stockholm.

Key    Host venue

City Venue Notes
Gothenburg Scandinavium The venue hosted the 1985 contest.
Swedish Exhibition Centre Withdrew on 20 June 2012.[16]
Malmö Malmö Arena The venue has served as the host of the Melodifestivalen semi-finals for the past four years.
Stockholm Friends Arena Opened in October 2012; hosted the final of Melodifestivalen in March 2013.

Format


The combination of televoting and jury voting results underwent changes that were detailed in the official rules for the 2013 contest.[19][20] Each member of a respective nation's jury was required to rank every song, except that of their own country. The voting results from each member of a particular nation's jury were combined to produce an overall ranking from first to last place. Likewise, the televoting results were also interpreted as a full ranking, taking into account the full televoting result rather than just the top ten. The combination of the jury's full ranking and the televote's full ranking produced an overall ranking of all competing entries. The song which scored the highest overall rank received 12 points, while the tenth-best ranked song received 1-point. It was announced in the official Media Handbook that an official app would also be available for voters to vote via during the contest.[21]

Official sponsors of the broadcast were the main Swedish-Finnish telecommunication company TeliaSonera, and the German cosmetics company Schwarzkopf.[22][23] The competition sponsors were the makeup company IsaDora cosmetics, the supermarket ICA and Tetra Pak.[24][25]

The Stockholm based singer and actress Sarah Dawn Finer also appeared in both semi-finals and the final in sketches as the comic character Lynda Woodruff.[26] "Lynda" presented the votes for Sweden at the previous contest in Baku.[26] Finer also appeared in the final as herself performing the ABBA song "The Winner Takes It All" before the results were announced.[11] The ex Swedish football captain Zlatan Ibrahimović was revealed on 28 April to be part of the opening segment of the Eurovision final, in a pre-recorded message welcoming viewers to his home city of Malmö.[27] The 2011 Swedish entrant Eric Saade was the host of the green room during the final.[28]


Semi-final allocation draw


The draw that determined the semi-final allocation was held on 17 January 2013 at the Malmö City Hall.[29] A draw at the EBU headquarters determined that, due to their geographical proximity with Malmö, Denmark would perform in the first semi-final, while Norway would perform in the second semi-final. This provided a maximum availability of tickets for visitors from both countries.[30] The EBU also allocated Israel to the second semi-final after a request from the delegation in order to avoid complications with a national holiday coinciding with the date of the first semi-final.[31] The remaining participating countries, excluding the automatic finalists (France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom), were split into five pots, based on voting patterns from the previous nine years. From these pots, 15 (in addition to Denmark) were allocated to compete in the first semi-final on 14 May 2013 and 15 (in addition to Norway and Israel) were allocated to compete in the second semi-final on 16 May 2013.[32]

The pots were calculated by the televoting partner Digame and were as follows:[31]

Pot 1 Pot 2 Pot 3 Pot 4 Pot 5
  •  Albania
  •  Croatia
  •  Macedonia
  •  Montenegro
  •  Serbia
  •   Switzerland
  •  Estonia
  •  Finland
  •  Iceland
  •  Ireland
  •  Latvia
  •  Lithuania
  •  Armenia
  •  Azerbaijan
  •  Belarus
  •  Georgia
  •  Russia
  •  Ukraine
  •  Belgium
  •  Bulgaria
  •  Cyprus
  •  Greece
  •  Malta
  •  Netherlands
  •  Austria
  •  Hungary
  •  Moldova
  •  Romania
  •  San Marino
  •  Slovenia

Running order


Unlike previous years, the running order was not decided by the drawing of lots, but instead by the producers, with the aim of making the shows more exciting and ensuring that all contestants had a chance to stand out, preventing entries that are too similar cancelling each other out.[30] The decision elicited mixed reactions from both fans of the contest and participating broadcasters.[33][34][35][36]

The running order for the semi-finals was released on 28 March 2013.[37] The running order for the final was determined on 17 May 2013.[38][39] An additional allocation draw occurred for the final with each finalist nation drawing to perform either in the first or second half of the final.[38] The allocation draw for qualifying countries from the semi-finals occurred during the semi-final winners' press conferences following each semi-final, while the allocation draw for the Big Five countries (France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom) occurred during their first individual press conferences on 15 May 2013.[38][40] As the host country, the running order position for Sweden in the final was exclusively determined by a draw during the heads of delegation meeting on 18 March 2013.[38] Sweden was drawn to perform 16th in the final.[38]


Graphic design


The stage with its movable parts and the audience closely surrounding it during the opening act of the second semi-final
The stage with its movable parts and the audience closely surrounding it during the opening act of the second semi-final

As aforesaid, SVT wanted to make a good use of Malmo Arena's space to highlight the performances and increase the audience's visibility compared to previous years. SVT created a main stage and a smaller stage with higher-lower shifted floors, connected by a trail closely surrounded by a standing crowd from both sides of it and around the small stage. The main stage mobility was expressed as a main artistic medium at the opening act of the second semi-final and with highlighting Moldova's performance towards its finish, as a movable part beneath the singer's dress making her look gradually taller. The small stage mobility highlighted United Kingdom's performance towards its finish, lifted above the close-standing audience.

On 17 January 2013, at the semi-final allocation draw, the EBU revealed the graphic design, created by the Gothenburg-based branding agency Happy F&B for the 2013 contest, featuring a butterfly and slogan "We Are One".[41] The butterfly featured an array of colours and textures, it also represented something small which can start powerful and big movements, a phenomenon known as the butterfly effect, indicating that a flap from one butterfly can start a hurricane.[42] Meanwhile, the slogan, "We Are One", highlighted equality and unity of all the participating countries alongside the cultural diversity and influence of each participant.

SVT confirmed on 19 February 2013 that the postcard films, used to introduce each song in the contest, would feature each artist in their respective country, to give the viewer a personal insight of each competing participant. This broke with recent tradition of the postcards often containing short segments of life within either the host city or country of the contest.[43] They were produced by a company called Camp David.[44] The on-air graphics were produced by Broken Doll, a production company. The animation of the many butterflies was done by the visual effects studio Swiss International.[45] For example, Sweden's postcard features Robin and his friends at a funfair, having fun and meeting fans, while Ireland's postcard shows Ryan together with his family. In addition to the graphic design, there was a theme music for the contest entitled "Wolverine" composed by Adam Kafe, which was used in the intros and in-between commercial breaks.[46]


National host broadcaster


On 11 July 2012, the show producer Christer Björkman advised the public not to buy tickets for the 2013 contest that are currently in circulation and instead to wait for tickets to be released through official channels. Björkman said that official tickets had not yet been released, as necessary decisions over the stage and seating plans had not yet been made.[47] Björkman also gave reassurance that accommodation would be available, as while the organizers had booked a large quantity of hotel rooms, some may be made available to the general public.[47] On 21 November 2012, SVT officially announced the launch of ticket sales.[48]

On 17 October 2012, the executive producer Martin Österdahl told the Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter that SVT plans for the 2013 contest to have only one presenter for the entire contest, unlike previous years where there were up to three presenters per show. The last time there was just one presenter was in the 1995, in Dublin, Ireland, when the solo host was Mary Kennedy.[49][50] Petra Mede was announced as the host for the 2013 contest on 28 January 2013.[2][51]


Participating countries


  Countries in the first semi-final   Countries voting in the first semi-final   Countries in the second semi-final   Countries voting in the second semi-final
  Countries in the first semi-final
  Countries voting in the first semi-final
  Countries in the second semi-final
  Countries voting in the second semi-final

The EBU announced on 21 December 2012 that 39 countries would compete in the Eurovision Song Contest 2013. Armenia, which was last represented in 2011, confirmed that it would be returning to the contest following a one-year break.[52][53] Bosnia and Herzegovina and Portugal both decided not to enter the 2013 contest due to financial difficulties,[54][55] while Slovakia and Turkey did not participate for different reasons, with Turkish broadcaster TRT mentioning dissatisfaction with the 50-50 jury-televote voting system as well as the rule of the "Big Five".[56][57]


Returning artists


Valentina Monetta represented San Marino for the second year in a row. She would also return for the 2014 and 2017 contests.[58]

Elitsa Todorova and Stoyan Yankoulov returned as a duo, having previously represented Bulgaria in 2007. Yankoulov would also return for the 2022 contest, as part of Intelligent Music Project.[59]

Nevena Božović represented Serbia as part of Moje 3 and became the first contestant to compete in the Eurovision Song Contest after competing in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest, where she came third in 2007.[60] She later represented Serbia in 2019.

Bledar Sejko, who represented Albania, was the on-stage guitarist for the Albanian entry in 2011.

Gor Sujyan, who represented Armenia, was a backing vocalist for the Armenian entry in 2010.

Aliona Moon, who represented Moldova, was a backing vocalist for the Moldovan entry in 2012. In addition, Pasha Parfeny, the Moldovan representative of 2012, was the composer of the Moldovan entry and accompanied her on stage on the piano.

Estonian backing vocalists Lauri Pihlap and Kaido Põldma were part of the group 2XL, which won the contest in 2001 together with Dave Benton and Tanel Padar.


Semi-final 1


Italy, Sweden and the United Kingdom voted in this semi-final.[32]

  Qualifiers
R/O[37] Country[61] Artist[62] Song[62] Language[63] Points Place[64]
1  Austria Natália Kelly "Shine" English 27 14
2  Estonia Birgit "Et uus saaks alguse" Estonian 52 10
3  Slovenia Hannah "Straight into Love" English 8 16
4  Croatia Klapa s Mora "Mižerja" Croatian 38 13
5  Denmark Emmelie de Forest "Only Teardrops" English 167 1
6  Russia Dina Garipova "What If" English 156 2
7  Ukraine Zlata Ognevich "Gravity" English 140 3
8  Netherlands Anouk "Birds" English 75 6
9  Montenegro Who See[lower-alpha 1] "Igranka" (Игранка) Montenegrin 41 12
10  Lithuania Andrius Pojavis "Something" English 53 9
11  Belarus Alyona Lanskaya "Solayoh" English 64 7
12  Moldova Aliona Moon "O mie" Romanian 95 4
13  Ireland Ryan Dolan "Only Love Survives" English 54 8
14  Cyprus Despina Olympiou "An me thimasai" (Aν με θυμάσαι) Greek 11 15
15  Belgium Roberto Bellarosa "Love Kills" English 75 5
16  Serbia Moje 3 "Ljubav je svuda" (Љубав је свуда) Serbian 46 11

Semi-final 2


France, Germany and Spain voted in this semi-final.[32]

  Qualifiers
R/O[37] Country[61] Artist[62] Song[62] Language[63] Points Place[65]
1  Latvia PeR "Here We Go" English 13 17
2  San Marino Valentina Monetta "Crisalide (Vola)" Italian 47 11
3  Macedonia Esma and Lozano "Pred da se razdeni" (Пред да се раздени) Macedonian, Romani 28 16
4  Azerbaijan Farid Mammadov "Hold Me" English 139 1
5  Finland Krista Siegfrids "Marry Me" English 64 9
6  Malta Gianluca "Tomorrow" English 118 4
7  Bulgaria Elitsa Todorova and Stoyan Yankoulov "Samo shampioni" (Само шампиони) Bulgarian 45 12
8  Iceland Eythor Ingi "Ég á líf" Icelandic 72 6
9  Greece Koza Mostra feat. Agathon Iakovidis "Alcohol Is Free" Greek[lower-alpha 2] 121 2
10  Israel Moran Mazor "Rak Bishvilo" (רק בשבילו) Hebrew 40 14
11  Armenia Dorians "Lonely Planet" English 69 7
12  Hungary ByeAlex "Kedvesem" (Zoohacker Remix) Hungarian 66 8
13  Norway Margaret Berger "I Feed You My Love" English 120 3
14  Albania Adrian Lulgjuraj and Bledar Sejko "Identitet" Albanian 31 15
15  Georgia Nodi Tatishvili and Sophie Gelovani "Waterfall" English 63 10
16   Switzerland Takasa "You and Me" English 41 13
17  Romania Cezar "It's My Life" English 83 5

Final


For the first time since 1985 contest, which was, coincidentally, held in Sweden as well, no country of the former Yugoslavia participated in the final of the Eurovision Song Contest.[66][67]

  Winner
R/O[39] Country[61] Artist[62] Song[62] Language[63] Points Place[68]
1  France Amandine Bourgeois "L'enfer et moi" French 14 23
2  Lithuania Andrius Pojavis "Something" English 17 22
3  Moldova Aliona Moon "O mie" Romanian 71 11
4  Finland Krista Siegfrids "Marry Me" English 13 24
5  Spain ESDM "Contigo hasta el final" Spanish[lower-alpha 3] 8 25
6  Belgium Roberto Bellarosa "Love Kills" English 71 12
7  Estonia Birgit "Et uus saaks alguse" Estonian 19 20
8  Belarus Alyona Lanskaya "Solayoh" English 48 16
9  Malta Gianluca "Tomorrow" English 120 8
10  Russia Dina Garipova "What If" English 174 5
11  Germany Cascada "Glorious" English 18 21
12  Armenia Dorians "Lonely Planet" English 41 18
13  Netherlands Anouk "Birds" English 114 9
14  Romania Cezar "It's My Life" English 65 13
15  United Kingdom Bonnie Tyler "Believe in Me" English 23 19
16  Sweden Robin Stjernberg "You" English 62 14
17  Hungary ByeAlex "Kedvesem" (Zoohacker Remix) Hungarian 84 10
18  Denmark Emmelie de Forest "Only Teardrops" English 281 1
19  Iceland Eythor Ingi "Ég á líf" Icelandic 47 17
20  Azerbaijan Farid Mammadov "Hold Me" English 234 2
21  Greece Koza Mostra feat. Agathon Iakovidis "Alcohol Is Free" Greek[lower-alpha 2] 152 6
22  Ukraine Zlata Ognevich "Gravity" English 214 3
23  Italy Marco Mengoni "L'essenziale" Italian 126 7
24  Norway Margaret Berger "I Feed You My Love" English 191 4
25  Georgia Nodi Tatishvili and Sophie Gelovani "Waterfall" English 50 15
26  Ireland Ryan Dolan "Only Love Survives" English 5 26

Detailed voting results


The EBU published the split results of the semi-finals and final on 29 May 2013. Unlike in previous years a full points breakdown of the jury and public voting was not revealed, instead an average rank was provided for each country based on the votes of the juries and televote in isolation.[69]


Semi-final 1


  Qualifiers
Split results of semi-final 1[69]
Place Combined Jury Televoting
Country Points Country Avg. Rank Country Avg. Rank
1  Denmark 167  Denmark 3.58  Denmark 3.33
2  Russia 156  Russia 3.74  Russia 3.89
3  Ukraine 140  Moldova 4.32  Ukraine 3.94
4  Moldova 95  Ukraine 5.16  Montenegro 7.33
5  Belgium 75[lower-alpha 4]  Austria 6.32  Lithuania 7.44
6  Netherlands 75[lower-alpha 4]  Netherlands 6.42  Ireland 7.61
7  Belarus 64  Belgium 6.63  Belgium 7.72
8  Ireland 54  Estonia 7.47  Belarus 7.83
9  Lithuania 53  Belarus 8.26  Netherlands 7.94
10  Estonia 52  Ireland 9.26  Croatia 8.00
11  Serbia 46  Lithuania 9.37  Moldova 8.28
12  Montenegro 41  Cyprus 9.47  Serbia 8.39
13  Croatia 38  Croatia 9.95  Estonia 10.06
14  Austria 27  Montenegro 10.16  Cyprus 12.00
15  Cyprus 11  Serbia 10.95  Austria 12.33
16  Slovenia 8  Slovenia 11.47  Slovenia 13.17
Semi-final 1 voting results[70][71]
Total score
Austria
Estonia
Slovenia
Croatia
Denmark
Russia
Ukraine
Netherlands
Montenegro
Lithuania
Belarus
Moldova
Ireland
Cyprus
Belgium
Serbia
Italy
Sweden
United Kingdom
Contestants
Austria 2711443423221
Estonia 523151445581564
Slovenia 853
Croatia 3852463511110
Denmark 167121281210412868712810861212
Russia 1561010108127771010810107641010
Ukraine 1402612787812121212212851212
Netherlands 75873103275121188
Montenegro 4165826122
Lithuania 53421572636107
Belarus 644212268103647
Moldova 95737161210643655785
Ireland 545236355417436
Cyprus 1112233
Belgium 75486378101234775
Serbia 46651021101434

12 points

Below is a summary of the maximum 12 points each country awarded to another in the first semi-final:

N. Contestant Nation(s) giving 12 points
7  Ukraine Belarus,  Cyprus,  Italy,  Lithuania,  Moldova,  Montenegro,  Slovenia
 Denmark Austria,  Croatia,  Estonia,  Ireland,  Netherlands,  Sweden,  United Kingdom
1  Belarus Ukraine
 Moldova Russia
 Montenegro Serbia
 Netherlands Belgium
 Russia Denmark

Semi-final 2


  Qualifiers
Split results of semi-final 2[69]
Place Combined Jury Televoting
Country Points Country Avg. Rank Country Avg. Rank
1  Azerbaijan 139  Malta 3.40  Romania 4.78
2  Greece 121  Azerbaijan 4.60  Greece 5.00
3  Norway 120  Greece 5.55  Azerbaijan 5.28
4  Malta 118  Norway 5.80  Norway 5.50
5  Romania 83  Georgia 6.05   Switzerland 7.00
6  Iceland 72  Finland 7.05  Bulgaria 7.44
7  Armenia 69  Armenia 7.15  Malta 7.78
8  Hungary 66  Iceland 7.40  Hungary 8.39
9  Finland 64  Israel 7.95  Iceland 8.61
10  Georgia 63  San Marino 8.40  Finland 8.89
11  San Marino 47  Hungary 8.55  Armenia 9.44
12  Bulgaria 45  Albania 9.10  San Marino 9.47
13   Switzerland 41  Romania 9.70  Georgia 9.89
14  Israel 40  Macedonia 9.75  Israel 10.67
15  Albania 31  Latvia 9.90  Albania 11.78
16  Macedonia 28   Switzerland 10.65  Macedonia 12.22
17  Latvia 13  Bulgaria 10.75  Latvia 13.28
Semi-final 2 voting results[72][73]
Total score
Latvia
San Marino
Macedonia
Azerbaijan
Finland
Malta
Bulgaria
Iceland
Greece
Israel
Armenia
Hungary
Norway
Albania
Georgia
Switzerland
Romania
France
Germany
Spain
Contestants
Latvia 132371
San Marino 4735116144214510
Macedonia 28255124
Azerbaijan 139738312128121212581231282
Finland 6487317158123738
Malta 118610121256527812667725
Bulgaria 458342101144116
Iceland 7210121101010127
Greece 1215126777102683710261085
Israel 4062416352443
Armenia 69188784105126
Hungary 6624863273126310
Norway 120125751037124557888212
Albania 31610285
Georgia 6341410434671244
Switzerland 41621532632101
Romania 83184102101010365671

12 points

Below is a summary of the maximum 12 points each country awarded to another in the second semi-final:

N. Contestant Nation(s) giving 12 points
7  Azerbaijan Bulgaria,  Georgia,  Greece,  Hungary,  Israel,  Malta,  Romania
3  Malta Azerbaijan,  Macedonia,  Norway
 Norway Iceland,  Latvia,  Spain
2  Iceland Finland,  Germany
1  Armenia France
 Georgia Armenia
 Greece San Marino
 Hungary  Switzerland
 Macedonia Albania

Final


  Winner
Split results of the final[69]
Place Combined Jury Televoting
Country Points Country Avg. Rank Country Avg. Rank
1  Denmark 281  Denmark 6.23  Denmark 4.97
2  Azerbaijan 234  Azerbaijan 7.77  Ukraine 5.66
3  Ukraine 214  Sweden 8.05  Azerbaijan 5.86
4  Norway 191  Norway 8.23  Greece 6.00
5  Russia 174  Moldova 8.69  Russia 6.84
6  Greece 152  Ukraine 8.74  Norway 7.14
7  Italy 126  Netherlands 9.05  Romania 7.49
8  Malta 120  Italy 9.46  Hungary 8.19
9  Netherlands 114  Malta 9.54  Malta 10.97
10  Hungary 84  Russia 9.67  Italy 11.70
11  Moldova 71[lower-alpha 5]  Belgium 9.92  Netherlands 11.70
12  Belgium 71[lower-alpha 5]  France 10.95  Iceland 13.05
13  Romania 65  Georgia 12.10  Belarus 14.11
14  Sweden 62  Greece 12.28  Ireland 14.62
15  Georgia 50  United Kingdom 12.46  Armenia 15.11
16  Belarus 48  Estonia 13.41  Germany 15.81
17  Iceland 47  Iceland 13.44  Belgium 16.03
18  Armenia 41  Finland 13.77  Sweden 16.19
19  United Kingdom 23  Armenia 14.44  Moldova 16.57
20  Estonia 19  Germany 15.44  Finland 16.68
21  Germany 18  Hungary 15.59  Lithuania 16.73
22  Lithuania 17  Belarus 16.15  United Kingdom 17.03
23  France 14  Ireland 16.21  Georgia 17.08
24  Finland 13  Romania 17.82  Estonia 19.59
25  Spain 8  Lithuania 17.95  France 21.68
26  Ireland 5  Spain 19.64  Spain 22.92
Final voting results[74][75]
Total score
San Marino
Sweden
Albania
Netherlands
Austria
United Kingdom
Israel
Serbia
Ukraine
Hungary
Romania
Moldova
Azerbaijan
Norway
Armenia
Italy
Finland
Spain
Belarus
Latvia
Bulgaria
Belgium
Russia
Malta
Estonia
Germany
Iceland
France
Greece
Ireland
Denmark
Montenegro
Slovenia
Georgia
Macedonia
Cyprus
Croatia
Switzerland
Lithuania
Contestants
France 1482211
Lithuania 17136511
Moldova 7121681214243364357
Finland 1334132
Spain 862
Belgium 7157123334332825452
Estonia 196103
Belarus 48312475213551
Malta 1201087285810610175555234333
Russia 17454107847726812541221610771066567
Germany 1836531
Armenia 4116312821710
Netherlands 114848652881237861072244
Romania 65454410661761101
United Kingdom 231345712
Sweden 623151244411345861
Hungary 84638722310641224105
Denmark 2811011051281251066574127816210468101212712101271271032
Iceland 476264568145
Azerbaijan 234272121251012108710312512124781221231287612
Greece 152121017821745871617210466841258
Ukraine 21451510107412121125101271081101038838101210
Italy 126412104111268106682106812
Norway 19171226673282238125381773371041245484376
Georgia 507310105528
Ireland 5212

12 points

Below is a summary of the maximum 12 points each country awarded to another in the final:[76]

N. Contestant Nation(s) giving 12 points
10  Azerbaijan Austria,  Bulgaria,  Georgia,  Greece,  Hungary,  Israel,  Lithuania,  Malta,  Montenegro,  Russia
8  Denmark France,  Iceland,  Ireland,  Italy,  Macedonia,  Serbia,  Slovenia,  United Kingdom
5  Ukraine Armenia,  Azerbaijan,  Belarus,  Croatia,  Moldova
3  Italy Albania,  Spain,   Switzerland
 Norway Denmark,  Finland,  Sweden
2  Greece Cyprus,  San Marino
 Russia Estonia,  Latvia
1  Belarus Ukraine
 Belgium Netherlands
 Hungary Germany
 Moldova Romania
 Netherlands Belgium
 Sweden Norway

Spokespersons

The order in which each country announced their votes was determined in a draw following the jury results from final dress rehearsal. Similar to the 2012 contest an algorithm was used to generate as much suspense as possible. The spokespersons are shown alongside each country.[77]

  1.  San Marino  John Kennedy O'Connor
  2.  Sweden  Yohio
  3.  Albania  Andri Xhahu
  4.  Netherlands  Cornald Maas
  5.  Austria  Kati Bellowitsch
  6.  United Kingdom  Scott Mills
  7.  Israel  Ofer Nachshon [he]
  8.  Serbia  Maja Nikolić [sr]
  9.  Ukraine  Matias
  10.  Hungary  Éva Novodomszky
  11.  Romania  Sonia Argint
  12.  Moldova  Olivia Furtună
  13.  Azerbaijan  Tamilla Shirinova [az]
  14.  Norway  Tooji
  15.  Armenia  André
  16.  Italy  Federica Gentile [it]
  17.  Finland  Kristiina Wheeler
  18.  Spain  Inés Paz
  19.  Belarus  Darya Domracheva
  20.  Latvia  Anmary
  21.  Bulgaria  Joanna Dragneva [bg]
  22.  Belgium  Barbara Louys [fr]
  23.  Russia  Alsou
  24.  Malta  Emma Hickey
  25.  Estonia  Rolf Roosalu
  26.  Germany  Lena
  27.  Iceland  María Sigrún Hilmarsdóttir
  28.  France  Marine Vignes [fr]
  29.  Greece  Adriana Magania
  30.  Ireland  Nicky Byrne
  31.  Denmark  Sofie Lassen-Kahlke [da]
  32.  Montenegro  Ivana Sebek
  33.  Slovenia  Andrea F
  34.  Georgia  Liza Tsiklauri
  35.  Macedonia  Dimitar Atanasovski
  36.  Cyprus  Loukas Hamatsos
  37.  Croatia  Uršula Tolj
  38.   Switzerland  Mélanie Freymond [fr]
  39.  Lithuania  Ignas Krupavičius

Other countries



Broadcasts


Most countries sent commentators to Malmö or commentated from their own country, in order to add insight to the participants and, if necessary, the provision of voting information.

It was reported by the EBU that the 2013 contest was viewed by a worldwide television audience of a record breaking 170 million viewers.[90]

Broadcasters and commentators in participating countries
Country Show(s) Broadcaster(s) Commentator(s) Ref(s)
 Albania All shows TVSH, TVSH 2, RTSH Muzikë Andri Xhahu
 Armenia Semi-finals Armenia 1 André and Arevik Udumyan [91]
Final Erik Antaranyan and Anna Avanesyan [hy]
 Austria All shows ORF eins Andi Knoll [92]
 Azerbaijan All shows İTV Konul Arifgizi [93]
 Belarus All shows Belarus-1, Belarus 24 Evgeny Perlin [94]
 Belgium All shows La Une French: Maureen Louys and Jean-Louis Lahaye [fr] [95][96]
één, Radio 2 Dutch: André Vermeulen and Tom De Cock
 Bulgaria All shows BNT 1 Georgi Kushvaliev and Elena Rosberg
 Croatia Semi-finals HRT 2 Duško Ćurlić [97][98]
Final HRT 1
SF1/Final HR 2 Robert Urlić [99]
 Cyprus All shows RIK 1, RIK Triton Melina Karageorgiou [100]
 Denmark All shows DR1 Ole Tøpholm [101]
 Estonia All shows ETV Marko Reikop [102]
SF1/Final Raadio 2 Mart Juur and Andrus Kivirähk [103]
 Finland All shows YLE TV2 Finnish: Aino Töllinen and Juuso Mäkilähde [fi] [104][105]
YLE Radio Suomi Finnish: Sanna Kojo and Jorma Hietamäki
YLE TV2, YLE Radio Vega Swedish: Eva Frantz [fi] and Johan Lindroos
 France SF2 France Ô Audrey Chauveau [fr] and Bruno Berberes [fr] [106]
Final France 3 Cyril Féraud and Mireille Dumas [107]
 Georgia All shows 1TV Temo Kvirkvelia [108]
 Germany Semi-finals[lower-alpha 6] Einsfestival Peter Urban [109]
NDR Fernsehen
SF2 Phoenix
Final Das Erste
 Greece All shows NET Maria Kozakou and Giorgos Kapoutzidis [110][111][112]
Proto Programma, Deftero Programma, Voice of Greece
 Hungary All shows M1 Gábor Gundel Takács [hu] [113]
 Iceland All shows RÚV, Rás 2 Felix Bergsson [is] [114]
 Ireland Semi-finals RTÉ Two Marty Whelan [115]
Final RTÉ One
SF1/Final RTÉ Radio 1 Shay Byrne and Zbyszek Zalinski [116]
 Israel All shows Channel 1 No commentary; Hebrew subtitles [117]
Channel 33 No commentary; Arabic subtitles
IBA 88FM Kobi Menora [118]
SF1 Ofer Nachshon [he]
SF2 Amit Kotler [he] and Yuval Caspin [he]
Final Ron Levinthal [he], Kobi Oshrat and Yhaloma Bat Porat
 Italy SF1 Rai 5 Federica Gentile [it] [119][120]
Final Rai 2 Filippo Solibello [it], Marco Ardemagni [it] and Natascha Lusenti [it]
 Latvia All shows LTV Valters Frīdenbergs [121]
Final Kārlis Būmeisters
 Lithuania All shows LRT, LRT Radijas Darius Užkuraitis [lt] [122]
 Macedonia All shows MRT 1 Karolina Petkovska [123]
 Malta All shows TVM Gordon Bonello and Rodney Gauci [124]
 Moldova All shows Moldova 1, Radio Moldova Lidia Scarlat [125][126]
 Montenegro All shows TVCG 1 Dražen Bauković and Tamara Ivanković [127]
Radio Crne Gore, Radio 98 Sonja Savović and Sanja Pejović
 Netherlands All shows Nederland 1, BVN Jan Smit and Daniël Dekker
 Norway All shows NRK1 Olav Viksmo-Slettan [128]
Final NRK P3 Ronny Brede Aase [no], Silje Nordnes [no] and Yngve Hustad Reite [no] [129]
 Romania All shows TVR 1 Liana Stanciu [130]
 Russia All shows Channel One Yana Churikova and Yuriy Aksyuta [ru] [131]
 San Marino All shows SMtv San Marino Lia Fiorio and Gigi Restivo [132]
 Serbia SF1 RTS1 Duška Vučinić-Lučić [133]
SF2 Marina Nikolić
Final RTS2 Silvana Grujić [134]
 Slovenia Semi-finals TV SLO 2 Andrej Hofer [sl] [135]
Final TV SLO 1
 Spain SF2 La 2 José Luis Uribarri [136]
Final La 1
 Sweden All shows SVT1 Josefine Sundström [137]
SR P4 Carolina Norén [138]
Semi-finals Ronnie Ritterland
Final Björn Kjellman
  Switzerland SF2 SRF zwei German: Sven Epiney [139]
Final SRF 1
SF2/Final RTS Deux French: Jean-Marc Richard and Nicolas Tanner [140]
SF2 RSI La 2 Italian: Alessandro Bertoglio [it] [141]
Final RSI La 1
 Ukraine All shows First National Timur Miroshnychenko and Tetyana Terekhova [142][143]
UR-1 Olena Zelinchenko [144]
 United Kingdom Semi-finals BBC Three Scott Mills and Ana Matronic [145]
Final BBC One Graham Norton
BBC Radio 2 Ken Bruce
Broadcasters and commentators in non-participating countries
Country Show(s) Broadcaster(s) Commentator(s) Ref(s)
 Australia All shows SBS One Julia Zemiro and Sam Pang [146]
 Bosnia and Herzegovina All shows BHT 1, BH Radio 1 Dejan Kukrić [147][148][non-primary source needed]
 China All shows[lower-alpha 7] CCTV-15 No commentary [149]
 Kazakhstan All shows Arna Media Roman Raifeld and Kaldybek Zhaysanbay [150][151]
 Portugal All shows[lower-alpha 8] RTP1 Sílvia Alberto [152]
 Slovakia Final Rádio FM Daniel Baláž [sk] and Pavol Hubinák [153]

Incidents



Azerbaijan's vote rigging


Prior to the finals, the Lithuanian media outlet 15min released an undercover video suggesting that representatives from Azerbaijan were trying to bribe Lithuanians for votes in the televoting.[154] The video detailed the plan, which involved recruiting groups of 10 people each, and supplying them with SIM cards so they could vote multiple times during the voting window. It was also suggested that similar activity was taking place in a total of 15 countries including Latvia, Estonia, Belarus, Ukraine, Croatia and Switzerland.[155] In response to the allegations, Executive Supervisor Jon Ola Sand reaffirmed the contest's commitment to a "fair and transparent result". He stated that while Eurovision organisers were looking into the case, they "[emphasised] that the intention of these individuals have not yet been clarified, and nor has a link been established between the individuals in the video and the Azeri delegation, the Azeri act or the Azeri EBU member Ictimai TV." He added that, since 1998, when he was first involved with the contest, "every year there are rumors about irregularities in the voting".[154]

The EBU later confirmed an attempt of cheating in the contest, which was unsuccessful according to EBU as the EBU's system prevent fraud. According to the EBU, there is no evidence that any broadcaster has been involved in cheating. The rules were changed the next year to ensure that all broadcasters would be responsible for preventing fraud to their advantage or face a three-year suspension if fraud is revealed.[156] However, in May 2015, a member of the contest's Reference Group confirmed that Azerbaijan had cheated, and that it was organized and very expensive.[157]

When Azerbaijan officially awarded no points to Dina Garipova of Russia, despite Garipova having reportedly come second in the country's phone poll, the Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev ordered an inquiry. The Russian Foreign Affairs Minister Sergei Lavrov claimed that the result had been falsified, and stated that "this outrageous action will not remain without a response". He promised a co-ordinated response with his Azerbaijani counterpart Elmar Mammadyarov. Simultaneously, the Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko claimed that his own country having received no points from Russia showed that the result must have been falsified.[158]


Plagiarism allegations


Cascada's entry for Germany, "Glorious", was the subject of investigation by NDR following allegations that it was too similar to the 2012 winner, "Euphoria" by Loreen.[159] NDR spokeswoman Iris Bents played down the allegations, stating that "Every year there are attempts to create scandals around the Eurovision Song Contest and the participants."[160] Following an independent audit, "Glorious" was found not to have plagiarized "Euphoria".[161]

Allegations of plagiarism against the winning Danish entry surfaced after Eric van Tijn, a notable Dutch music producer, mentioned the opening flute solo's similarity to "I Surrender", a 2002 song by the Dutch band K-Otic. However, Van Tijn also stated that the flute solo was the only similarity between the two songs, thus calling it "a storm in a teacup".[162]


Finland's same-sex kiss


Finland's contestant Krista Siegfrids kissing one of her backing singers.
Finland's contestant Krista Siegfrids kissing one of her backing singers.

The performance of the Finnish entry, "Marry Me", caused controversy in certain more socially conservative countries broadcasting the contest. The act featured the female singer Krista Siegfrids and one of her female backing singers kissing each other at the end, widely labelled in media as Eurovision's first "lesbian kiss". Siegfrids stated to the media that the act was done to encourage Finland to legalise same sex marriage. It was reported that Turkish and Greek media reacted negatively to Siegfrids' act.[163] According to Gay Star News, the Turkish Eurovision broadcaster TRT, who had previously decided not to participate itself, initially indicated that they would still broadcast the contest, but made a late decision not to do so.[164]


Eric Saade's green room incident


Green room host Eric Saade referred to Petra Mede as a "MILF" on air during the break between the first and second halves of the voting, saying "Back to you, Petra. #MILF". When the broadcaster for the United Kingdom, BBC aired this, the sound was lost. It remains unknown whether this was just an accident, or if the BBC did it purposely.[165] While the statement was supposedly scripted and SVT were aware of Saade's plan, some on social media were confused and offended by the comment.[166]


Other awards


In addition to the main winner's trophy, the Marcel Bezençon Awards and the Barbara Dex Award were contested during the 2013 Eurovision Song Contest. The OGAE, "General Organisation of Eurovision Fans" voting poll also took place before the contest.


Marcel Bezençon Awards


The Marcel Bezençon Awards, organised since 2002 by Sweden's then-Head of Delegation and 1992 representative Christer Björkman, and 1984 winner Richard Herrey, honours songs in the contest's final.[167] The awards are divided into three categories: Artistic Award, Composers Award, and Press Award.[168]

Category Country Song Performer(s) Composer(s)
Artistic Award  Azerbaijan "Hold Me" Farid Mammadov
Composers Award  Sweden "You" Robin Stjernberg
Press Award  Georgia "Waterfall" Nodi Tatishvili and Sophie Gelovani Thomas G:son

OGAE


OGAE, an organisation of over forty Eurovision Song Contest fan clubs across Europe and beyond, conducts an annual voting poll first held in 2002 as the Marcel Bezençon Fan Award. After all votes were cast, the top-ranked entry in the 2013 poll was also the winner of the contest, "Only Teardrops" performed by Emmelie de Forest; the top five results are shown below.[169][170][171]

Country Song Performer(s) OGAE result
 Denmark "Only Teardrops" Emmelie de Forest 374
 San Marino "Crisalide (Vola)" Valentina Monetta 282
 Norway "I Feed You My Love" Margaret Berger 269
 Germany "Glorious" Cascada 195
 Italy "L'essenziale" Marco Mengoni 177

Barbara Dex Award


The Barbara Dex Award is a humorous fan award given to the worst dressed artist each year. Named after Belgium's representative who came last in the 1993 contest, wearing her self-designed dress, the award was handed by the fansite House of Eurovision from 1997 to 2016 and is being carried out by the fansite songfestival.be since 2017.[172]

Place Country Performer(s) Votes
1  Serbia Moje 3 967
2  Romania Cezar 544
3  Israel Moran Mazor 296
4  Albania Adrian Lulgjuraj and Bledar Sejko 150
5  Montenegro Who See 110

Official album


Cover art of the official album
Cover art of the official album

Eurovision Song Contest: Malmö 2013 was a compilation album put together by the European Broadcasting Union, and released by CMC International and Universal Music Group on 29 April 2013.[173] The album featured all 39 songs that entered in the 2013 contest including the semi-finalists that failed to qualify into the grand final. The digital version featured a bonus track, "We Write the Story", performed by ex-ABBA members, Björn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson and the late Swedish DJ and record producer, Avicii.[174]


Charts


Chart (2013) Peak
position
German Compilation Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[175] 2

See also



Notes


  1. Performance contains uncredited live vocals from Nina Žižić
  2. The song is in Greek; however, the titular English phrase is repeated throughout the song
  3. The song is Spanish; however the last phrase was sung in English
  4. Despite finishing with the same number of points as the Netherlands, Belgium is deemed to have finished in fifth place due to receiving points from a greater number of countries.
  5. Despite finishing with the same number of points as Belgium, Moldova is deemed to have finished in eleventh place due to receiving a greater individual score from one country, as both countries received points from the same number of national juries.
  6. Germany provided a deferred broadcast of semi-final 2 on Einsfestival and of the semi-finals on NDR Fernsehen
  7. Broadcast between 5 and 7 October 2013
  8. Portugal provided deferred broadcast of the semi-finals

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На других языках


- [en] Eurovision Song Contest 2013

[ru] Евровидение-2013

Конкурс песни «Евровидение-2013» (англ. Eurovision Song Contest 2013; фр. Concours Eurovision de la chanson 2013; швед. Eurovisionsschlagerfestivalen 2013) — 58-й конкурс песни «Евровидение»; проводился в шведском городе Мальмё с 14 по 18 мая 2013 года. Швеция стала страной-победительницей предыдущего конкурса «Евровидение-2012», прошедшего в Баку (Азербайджан)[10], где победной песней стала «Euphoria» в исполнении певицы Лорин[10].



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