[go: up one dir, main page]

Jump to content

Marcel Bezençon Awards

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Marcel Bezençon Awards
Awarded forBest competing songs in the Eurovision Song Contest
CountryVarious participating countries
Presented byEuropean Broadcasting Union (EBU)
First awarded2002
Websiteeurovision.tv/about/in-depth/marcel-bezencon-awards Edit this at Wikidata

The Marcel Bezençon Awards were first handed out during the Eurovision Song Contest 2002 in Tallinn, Estonia honouring the best competing songs in the final. Founded by Christer Björkman (Sweden's representative in the Eurovision Song Contest 1992 and Head of Delegation for Sweden until 2021) and Richard Herrey (member of Herreys, winner of the Eurovision Song Contest 1984 for Sweden), the awards are named after the creator of the annual competition, Marcel Bezençon.[1]

Although sanctioned by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), the awards are not presented during the Eurovision final, but rather are handed out during the official afterparty. Beginning with the 2009 contest, the trophies are handed out prior to the final.

Sweden's Melodifestivalen and Hungary's A Dal also present the awards during their own competition proper.

Categories

[edit]

The awards are divided into 3 categories:

  • Press Award – Given to the best entry as voted on by the accredited media and press during the event.
  • Artistic Award – Presented to the best artist as voted on by the commentators since 2010. Until 2009, the category was voted on by previous winners of the contest.
  • Composer Award – A jury consisting of the participating composers vote for the best and most original composition.

In 2008, a special one-off award was presented, the Poplight Fan Award, as voted by fans on the Swedish website Poplight.se and presented to their favourite debuting artist under the age of 25.[1][2]

Winners

[edit]

Press Award

[edit]
Year Country Song Performer Final Points Host city Ref.
2002  France "Il faut du temps" Sandrine François 5 104 Estonia Tallinn
2003  Turkey "Everyway That I Can" Sertab Erener 1 167 Latvia Riga
2004  Serbia and Montenegro "Lane moje" (Лане моје) Željko Joksimović 2 263 Turkey Istanbul
2005  Malta "Angel" Chiara 2 192 Ukraine Kyiv
2006  Finland "Hard Rock Hallelujah" Lordi 1 292 Greece Athens
2007  Ukraine "Dancing Lasha Tumbai" Verka Serduchka 2 235 Finland Helsinki
2008  Portugal "Senhora do mar (Negras águas)" Vânia Fernandes 13 69 Serbia Belgrade [3]
2009  Norway "Fairytale" Alexander Rybak 1 387 Russia Moscow [4]
2010  Israel "Milim" (מילים) Harel Skaat 14 71 Norway Oslo [5]
2011  Finland "Da Da Dam" Paradise Oskar 21 57 Germany Düsseldorf [6]
2012  Azerbaijan "When the Music Dies" Sabina Babayeva 4 150 Azerbaijan Baku [7]
2013  Georgia "Waterfall" Nodiko Tatishvili and Sophie Gelovani 15 50 Sweden Malmö [8]
2014  Austria "Rise Like a Phoenix" Conchita Wurst 1 290 Denmark Copenhagen [9]
2015  Italy "Grande amore" Il Volo 3 292 Austria Vienna [10]
2016  Russia "You Are the Only One" Sergey Lazarev 3 491 Sweden Stockholm [11]
2017  Italy "Occidentali's Karma" Francesco Gabbani 6 334 Ukraine Kyiv [12]
2018  France "Mercy" Madame Monsieur 13 173 Portugal Lisbon [13]
2019  Netherlands "Arcade" Duncan Laurence 1 498 Israel Tel Aviv [14]
2021  France "Voilà" Barbara Pravi 2 499 Netherlands Rotterdam [15]
2022  United Kingdom "Space Man" Sam Ryder 2 466 Italy Turin [16]
2023  Sweden "Tattoo" Loreen 1 583 United Kingdom Liverpool [17]
2024  Croatia "Rim Tim Tagi Dim" Baby Lasagna 2 547 Sweden Malmö [18]

Artistic Award

[edit]

Voted by previous winners

[edit]
Year Country Performer Song Stage director(s) Final Points Host city Ref.
2002  Sweden Afro-dite "Never Let It Go" 8 72 Estonia Tallinn
2003  Netherlands Esther Hart "One More Night" 13 45 Latvia Riga
2004  Ukraine Ruslana "Wild Dances" 1 280 Turkey Istanbul
2005  Greece Helena Paparizou "My Number One" Fokas Evangelinos 1 230 Ukraine Kyiv
2006  Sweden Carola "Invincible" 5 170 Greece Athens
2007  Serbia Marija Šerifović "Molitva" (Молитва) Gorčin Stojanović 1 268 Finland Helsinki
2008  Ukraine Ani Lorak "Shady Lady" Fokas Evangelinos 2 230 Serbia Belgrade [3]
2009  France Patricia Kaas "Et s'il fallait le faire" 8 107 Russia Moscow [4]

Voted by commentators

[edit]

Since 2010, the show commentators have replaced the previous winners as the selection jury for the winners.

Year Country Performer Song Stage director(s) Final Points Host city Ref.
2010  Israel Harel Skaat "Milim" (מילים) Doron Medalie 14 71 Norway Oslo [5]
2011  Ireland Jedward "Lipstick" Brian Friedman 8 119 Germany Düsseldorf [6]
2012  Sweden Loreen "Euphoria" Ambra Succi 1 372 Azerbaijan Baku [7]
2013  Azerbaijan Farid Mammadov "Hold Me" Fokas Evangelinos 2 234 Sweden Malmö [8]
2014  Netherlands The Common Linnets "Calm After the Storm" Hans Pannecoucke 2 238 Denmark Copenhagen [9]
2015  Sweden Måns Zelmerlöw "Heroes" Fredrik Rydman 1 365 Austria Vienna [10]
2016  Ukraine Jamala "1944" Kostiantyn Tomilchenko and Oleksandr Bratkovskyi 1 534 Sweden Stockholm [11]
2017  Portugal Salvador Sobral "Amar pelos dois" Luísa Sobral 1 758 Ukraine Kyiv [12]
2018  Cyprus Eleni Foureira "Fuego" Sacha Jean-Baptiste 2 436 Portugal Lisbon [13]
2019  Australia Kate Miller-Heidke "Zero Gravity" Philip Gleeson 9 285 Israel Tel Aviv [14]
2021  France Barbara Pravi "Voilà" Marika Prochet 2 499 Netherlands Rotterdam [15]
2022  Serbia Konstrakta "In corpore sano" Jasmin Cvišić and Miodrag Kolarić 5 312 Italy Turin [16]
2023  Sweden Loreen "Tattoo" Anders Wistbacka 1 583 United Kingdom Liverpool [17]
2024   Switzerland Nemo "The Code" Fredrik Rydman 1 591 Sweden Malmö [18]

Composer Award winners

[edit]

This award was first presented in 2004, replacing the Fan Award.

Year Country Song Composer(s)
Lyrics (l) / Music (m)
Performer Final Points Host city Ref.
2004  Cyprus "Stronger Every Minute" Mike Konnaris (m & l) Lisa Andreas 5 170 Turkey Istanbul
2005  Serbia and Montenegro "Zauvijek moja" Slaven Knezović (m) and Milan Perić (l) No Name 7 137 Ukraine Kyiv
2006  Bosnia and Herzegovina "Lejla" Željko Joksimović (m), Fahrudin Pecikoza (l) and Dejan Ivanović (l) Hari Mata Hari 3 229 Greece Athens
2007  Hungary "Unsubstantial Blues" Magdi Rúzsa (m) and Imre Mózsik (l) Magdi Rúzsa 9 128 Finland Helsinki
2008  Romania "Pe-o margine de lume" Andrei Tudor (m), Andreea Andrei (l) and Adina Șuteu (l) Nico & Vlad 20 45 Serbia Belgrade [3]
2009  Bosnia and Herzegovina "Bistra voda" Aleksandar Čović (m & l) Regina 9 106 Russia Moscow [4]
2010  Israel "Milim" (מילים) Tomer Hadadi (m) and Noam Horev (l) Harel Skaat 14 71 Norway Oslo [5]
2011  France "Sognu" Daniel Moyne (m), Quentin Bachelet (m) and Jean-Pierre Marcellesi (l), Julie Miller (l) Amaury Vassili 15 82 Germany Düsseldorf [6]
2012  Sweden "Euphoria" Thomas G:son (m & l) and Peter Boström (m & l) Loreen 1 372 Azerbaijan Baku [7]
2013  Sweden "You" Robin Stjernberg (m & l), Linnea Deb (m & l),
Joy Deb (m & l) and Joakim Harestad Haukaas (m & l)
Robin Stjernberg 14 62 Sweden Malmö [8]
2014  Netherlands "Calm After the Storm" Ilse DeLange (m & l), JB Meijers (m & l), Rob Crosby (m & l),
Matthew Crosby (m & l) and Jake Etheridge (m & l)
The Common Linnets 2 238 Denmark Copenhagen [9]
2015  Norway "A Monster Like Me" Kjetil Mørland (m & l) Mørland & Debrah Scarlett 8 102 Austria Vienna [10]
2016  Australia "Sound of Silence" Anthony Egizii (m & l) and David Musumeci (m & l) Dami Im 2 511 Sweden Stockholm [11]
2017  Portugal "Amar pelos dois" Luísa Sobral (m & l) Salvador Sobral 1 758 Ukraine Kyiv [12]
2018  Bulgaria "Bones" Borislav Milanov (m & l), Trey Campbell (m & l),
Joacim Persson (m & l), and Dag Lundberg (m & l)
Equinox 14 166 Portugal Lisbon [13]
2019  Italy "Soldi" Charlie Charles (m & l), Dario "Dardust" Faini (m & l), and Alessandro Mahmoud (m & l) Mahmood 2 472 Israel Tel Aviv [14]
2021   Switzerland "Tout l'univers" Gjon Muharremaj (m & l), Xavier Michel (m & l),
Wouter Hardy (m & l), and Nina Sampermans (m & l)
Gjon's Tears 3 432 Netherlands Rotterdam [15]
2022  Sweden "Hold Me Closer" Cornelia Jakobsdotter (m & l), David Zandén (m & l), and Isa Molin (m & l) Cornelia Jakobs 4 438 Italy Turin [16]
2023  Italy "Due vite" Davide Simonetta (m & l), Marco Mengoni (l) and Davide Petrella (l) Marco Mengoni 4 350 United Kingdom Liverpool [17]
2024   Switzerland "The Code" Benjamin Alasu (m & l), Lasse Midtsian Nymann (m & l), Linda Dale (m & l), Nemo Mettler (m & l) Nemo 1 591 Sweden Malmö [18]

Winners by country

[edit]
Country Total Press
Award
Artistic
Award
Composer
Award
Fan
Award
 Sweden 9 1 5 3
 France 6 3 2 1
 Netherlands 4 1 2 1
 Ukraine 4 1 3
 Italy 4 2 2
  Switzerland 3 1 2
 Portugal 3 1 1 1
 Finland 3 2 1
 Israel 3 1 1 1
 Australia 2 1 1
 Cyprus 2 1 1
 Norway 2 1 1
 Azerbaijan 2 1 1
 Bosnia and Herzegovina 2 2
 Serbia and Montenegro 2 1 1
 Serbia 2 2
 Croatia 1 1
 Bulgaria 1 1
 Russia 1 1
 Austria 1 1
 Georgia 1 1
 Ireland 1 1
 Romania 1 1
 Armenia 1 1
 Hungary 1 1
 Malta 1 1
 Turkey 1 1
 Greece 1 1
 Spain 1 1
United Kingdom United Kingdom 1 1

Melodifestivalen winners

[edit]

Since 2005, Sveriges Television (SVT) has awarded Marcel Bezençon Awards during its national selection Melodifestivalen. These awards follow the same format as that for the Eurovision awards, with awards given to songs that competed in the final of the contest.[19][20]

Press Award

[edit]
Year Performer Song Final Points Ref.
2005 Shirley Clamp "Att älska dig" 4 130
2006 BWO "Temple of Love" 2 202
2007 Sonja Aldén "För att du finns" 6 62
2008 Sanna Nielsen "Empty Room" 2 206
2009 Caroline af Ugglas "Snälla snälla" 2 171
2010 Anna Bergendahl "This Is My Life" 1 214
2011 Eric Saade "Popular" 1 193
2012 Loreen "Euphoria" 1 268 [21]
2013 Yohio "Heartbreak Hotel" 2 133 [22]
2014 Sanna Nielsen "Undo" 1 212 [23]
2015 Måns Zelmerlöw "Heroes" 1 288 [24]

Artistic Award

[edit]
Year Performer Song Stage director(s) Final Points Ref.
2005 Nanne Grönvall "Håll om mig" 2 209
2006 Carola "Evighet" 1 234
2007 Sonja Aldén "För att du finns" 6 62
2008 BWO "Lay Your Love on Me" 3 158
2009 Sarah Dawn Finer "Moving On" 6 87
2010 Eric Saade "Manboy" 3 155
2011 Danny Saucedo "In the Club" Ambra Succi 2 149
2012 Loreen "Euphoria" Ambra Succi 1 268 [21]
2013 Yohio "Heartbreak Hotel" Rennie Mirro 2 133 [22]
2014 Ace Wilder "Busy Doin' Nothin" Litho Nericcio 2 210 [23]
2015 Isa "Don't Stop" Martin Jonsson 7 56 [24]

Composer Award

[edit]
Year Song Composer(s) Performer Final Points Ref.
2005 "A Different Kind of Love" Joacim Dubbelman, Martin Landh, Sam McCarthy Caroline Wennergren 5 116
2006 "Sing for Me" Andreas Johnson, Peter Kvint Andreas Johnson 3 200
2007 "I Remember Love" Peter Hallström, Sarah Dawn Finer Sarah Dawn Finer 4 122
2008 "Empty Room" Bobby Ljunggren, Aleena Gibson Sanna Nielsen 2 206
2009 "You're My World" Emilia Rydberg, Fredrik "Figge" Boström Emilia 9 28
2010 "Keep on Walking" Salem Al Fakir Salem Al Fakir 2 183
2011 "Leaving Home" Jojo Borg Larsson, Nicke Borg, Fredrik Thomander, Anders "Gary" Wikström Nicke Borg 8 57
2012 "Why Start a Fire" Lisa Miskovsky, Aleksander With, Bernt Rune Stray, Berent Philip Moe Lisa Miskovsky 9 39 [21]
2013 "You" Robin Stjernberg, Linnea Deb, Joy Deb, Joakim Harestad Haukaas Robin Stjernberg 1 166 [22]
2014 "Undo" Fredrik Kempe, David Kreuger, Hamed "K-One" Pirouzpanah Sanna Nielsen 1 212 [23]
2015 "Don't Stop Believing" Miss Li, Sonny Gustafsson Mariette Hansson 3 102 [24]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Marcel Bezençon Award - an introduction". Poplight. Archived from the original on 17 October 2013. Retrieved 2 June 2009.
  2. ^ Viniker, Barry (11 March 2008). "Marcel Bezençon Award for fans". ESCToday. Archived from the original on 13 March 2008. Retrieved 2 June 2009.
  3. ^ a b c Floras, Stella. "The 2008 Bezençon Awards winners". ESCToday.
  4. ^ a b c Klier, Marcus (18 May 2009). "The Eurovision 2009 Marcel Bezençon Awards". ESCToday.
  5. ^ a b c Klier, Marcus (30 May 2010). "Israeli grand slam in the Marcel Bezençon Awards". Eurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 2 June 2010. Retrieved 2 June 2009.
  6. ^ a b c Roxburgh, Gordon (16 March 2011). "Winners of the Marcel Bezençon Awards". Eurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 17 May 2011. Retrieved 16 May 2011.
  7. ^ a b c Roxburgh, Gordon. "Winners of the Marcel Bezençon Awards 2012". Eurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 30 May 2012.
  8. ^ a b c Roxburgh, Gordon. "Winners of the Marcel Bezençon Awards 2013". Eurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 7 June 2013.
  9. ^ a b c Roxburgh, Gordon. "Winners of the Marcel Bezençon Awards". Eurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 14 May 2014.
  10. ^ a b c Roxburgh, Gordon (25 May 2015). "Winners of the Marcel Bezençon Awards 2015". Eurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union.
  11. ^ a b c Roxburgh, Gordon (15 May 2016). "Winners of the Marcel Bezençon Awards 2016". Eurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union.
  12. ^ a b c Kryvinchuk, Yullia; Jordan, Paul (14 May 2017). "Winners of the Marcel Bezençon Awards 2017". Eurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union.
  13. ^ a b c "Here are the winners of the Marcel Bezençon Awards 2018!". Eurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union. 12 May 2018.
  14. ^ a b c "Here are the winners of the 2019 Marcel Bezençon Awards". Eurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union. 18 May 2019.
  15. ^ a b c "Marcel Bezençon Awards 2021". Eurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union. 22 May 2021.
  16. ^ a b c "2022 Marcel Bezençon Award Winners". Eurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union. 14 May 2022. Retrieved 19 May 2022.
  17. ^ a b c "The 2023 Marcel Bezençon Award Winners". Eurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union. 14 May 2023. Retrieved 14 May 2023.
  18. ^ a b c "The 2024 Marcel Bezençon Award Winners". Eurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union. 11 May 2024. Retrieved 11 May 2024.
  19. ^ "Vinnare av Marcel Bezencon Award 2009". Svt.se (in Swedish). Sveriges Television. Archived from the original on 13 June 2011. Retrieved 28 June 2009.
  20. ^ "Melodifestivalen 2011: Eric Saade, Danny och Nicke Borg vann Marcel Bezençon Award". Poplight (in Swedish). 13 March 2011. Archived from the original on 17 October 2013. Retrieved 14 May 2011.
  21. ^ a b c Bokholm, Mirja (12 March 2012). "Loreen och Lisa Miskovsky vinnare i Marcel Bezençon Award 2012". Melodifestivalen (in Swedish). Sveriges Television. Archived from the original on 14 March 2012. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
  22. ^ a b c Dahlander, Gustav (13 March 2013). "YOHIO och Robin Stjernberg prisades i Marcel Bezençon Award 2013". Melodifestivalen (in Swedish). Sveriges Television. Archived from the original on 20 March 2013. Retrieved 19 May 2013.
  23. ^ a b c Bokholm, Mirja (29 April 2012). "Ace Wilder och Sanna Nielsen prisade i Marcel Bezençon Award 2014". Melodifestivalen (in Swedish). Sveriges Television. Archived from the original on 9 March 2014. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  24. ^ a b c Källman, Pär (14 March 2015). "Måns, Isa, Miss Li och Sonny Gustafsson vann Marcel Bezençon 2015". Melodifestivalen (in Swedish). Sveriges Television. Archived from the original on 31 May 2015. Retrieved 25 May 2015.
[edit]