![]() Finland’s Käärijä is becoming a firm favourite. If Loreen wins, this will be the seventh time Sweden has won the contest, matching all-time record holder Ireland, who failed to qualify. The screens she used during Melodifestivalen, the Swedish TV show that chooses their entry, were so huge and hefty (reportedly weighing a tonne) that for Eurovision she’s having to use smaller ones on wheels, so they can be rolled out of the way in time for the next performer. A song all about fighting for love, it starts with her lying down between two LED screens, which look like a giant panini press that she slowly prises apart. It’s not as much of a banger as her last entry, Euphoria (honestly, what song is?), but her performance really stands out. Photograph: Phil Noble/ReutersĬrank up the wind machine … Loreen is back! The winner of Eurovision 2012 is hoping to take the trophy back to Sweden, this time with a song called Tattoo – which is currently the hot favourite. Ones to watchīetween rock and a hard place … Loreen from Sweden. For Eurovision fans, it is a fever dream. The interval will also feature a collaboration between six Eurovision icons, from Iceland’s Daði Freyr (the entrant for the cancelled 2020 event and the 2021 contest, who wore a green jumper containing a Lego version of his own face) to Liverpool’s own Sonia, who represented the UK in 1993. (“Is he going to use a jet pack? Is it going to be on a zip wire?” Giedroyc asked the BBC’s Eurovisioncast podcast.) Norton will also somehow juggle presenting and commentating, with Mel Giedroyc filling in whenever he’s on stage. And alongside hosts Hannah Waddingham (a sensational host, who after speaking in French at the semi-finals, followed it up with “some of us Brits do bother to learn another language”) and Alesha Dixon will be Julia Sanina, from Ukrainian band the Hardkiss. Timur Miroshnychenko, who commentated for Ukrainian viewers from a bunker in Kyiv last year, will make frequent cameos from his commentary box in the arena. These acts include Jamala (winner of Eurovision 2016), Tina Karol (represented Ukraine in 2006), and Verka Serduchka (whose 2007 entry Dancing Lasha Tumbai is the stuff of Eurovision legend). ![]() ![]() Kalush Orchestra will open the grand final, followed by performances from famous Ukrainian entrants during the traditional Flag Parade (which Graham Norton once described as “a new innovation … to make the evening just that little bit longer”). So as the UK’s Sam Ryder came second (with Space Maaaaaaaaan), the BBC offered to host.Īlthough the event is in Liverpool, this is very much a show for Ukraine. Traditionally, the winner hosts Eurovision the following year, but the ongoing war in Ukraine made that impossible. It dominated the public vote, receiving a record 439 points (that’s the maximum 12 points from nearly every other country) and 631 points in total. ![]() Last year’s winners were Ukraine’s Kalush Orchestra with the song Stefania. ![]()
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