Belgium in the Eurovision Song Contest 1970 explained

Year:1970
Country:Belgium
Preselection:Chansons Euro '70
Preselection Date:3 February 1970
Entrant:Jean Vallée
Song:Viens l'oublier
Final Result:8th, 5 points

Belgium was represented by Jean Vallée, with the song "Viens l'oublier", at the 1970 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place in Amsterdam on 21 March. "Viens l'oublier" was chosen at the Belgian national final on 3 February.

Before Eurovision

Chansons Euro '70 / 09.36.70

Format

Chansons Euro '70 consisted of nine shows; six quarter-finals, two semi-finals, and a final. In each quarter-final there were six songs where the top two qualified for the semi-finals. Each semi-final had six songs where the top three qualified to the final, which would then have six songs. All shows were hosted by Claude Delacroix.[1]

Chansons Euro '70 also went by an alternative name in Walloon newspapers: 09.36.70. The numbers represented the number of shows in the national final, the total number of songs competing, and the year. The name would change as the national final went on, and instead represented the number of shows left, the number of songs still left in the competition, and the year.[2]

Competing Entries

RTB received 350 submissions, from which 36, by 20 different artists, were chosen to participate in the national final.

ArtistSongSongwriter(s)
"La belle époque"Andrée Simons
"Perle d'etoile"Andrée Simons, Luc D'Avray
Ann Christy"Le vent, le temps"'
"Merci, printemps"Claude Lombard, Freddy Zeggers
Bébé Suong"La fête aus musiciens"
"Le temps d'avril"
"On m'avait dit"
"Triste été"
Cecily Forde"Mon amour est tombé du nid"R. Morès, P. Philippe
"Prends ma main"Harry Frekin, Cecily Forde
Concetta di Maria"Marche le temps"
"Oui, mais quand"Raymond Vincent, Igor Minarief
Eddy Pascal"Oublie que tu l'aimes"
"Virginia"
Frédéric François"Comme tous les amoureux"Frédéric François, Marino Atria, Alain Darmor
Jacques Albin"Chatte"J.C. Albin
Jean Narcy"Une rose"Hector Delfosse, J. Postula, C. Avanches
Jean Vallée"Viens l'oublier"Jean Vallée
Joanna"A huit heurs au printemps"
"Flash-back"
Johnny White"Mary-Ann"
"Quand on est amoureux"Peter Laine, Armande Hoppe
Josiane Janvier"Tu seras celui-là"Hector Delfosse, Claude Avranches
Lucienne Troka"Dix épines pour une rose"
"Toi soleil"
Marc Bertrand"Ne prends pas le temps comme il vient"Jean-Pierre Pleyel
"Notre raison de vivre"Jean-Pierre Pleyel, Jean-Marc Bertrand
Miles Kovacs"Mélodie d'automne"
Nicole Josy"C'est toi qui as raison"
"Je n'en reviens pas"
Rosy Dany"Ce n'etait que l'amour"
"Et moi je chante"
Serge & Christine Ghisoland"Laï laï laï"Pierre Coran, Serge Ghisoland
"Nous serons toi et moi"Pierre Coran, Serge Ghisoland
Serge Davignac"La vie"Roland Thyssen, Serge Davignac
"Monsieur du printemps"

Shows

Quarter-Finals

The qualifiers in the quarter-finals were decided by a jury and postcard voting. The song that scored the highest with the juries and the song that scored the highest with the public postcard voting, as long as it hadn't already qualified with the juries, would qualify to the semi-finals. The jury consisted of 100 people across 10 cities in Belgium who would be phoned and asked to vote for 1 song. Since the postcard voting started after the semi-final had already taken place and the jury qualifier was already known, the jury winner would often place last in the postcard voting.

The jury points for Quarter-final 5 are unknown.

Quarter-final 1 - 09.36.70 - 14 October 1969
DrawArtistSongJuryPublicResult
1Bébé Suong"Le temps d'avril"1934Out
2Eddy Pascal"Oublie que tu l'aimes"065Out
3Cecily Forde"Mon amour est tombé du nid"943Out
4Serge & Christine Ghisoland"Laï laï laï"4916Jury Qualifier
5Ann Christy"Le vent, le temps"'2021Public Qualifier
6Concetta di Maria"Marche le temps"352Out
Quarter-final 2 - 08.32.70 - 28 October 1969
DrawArtistSongJuryPublicResult
1Rosy Dany"Et moi je chante"454Out
2Serge Davignac"La vie"1632Out
3Nicole Josy"Je n'en reviens pas"1243Out
4Jean Vallée"Viens l'oublier"4015Jury Qualifier
5Joanna"Flash-back"166Out
6Marc Bertrand"Ne prends pas le temps comme il vient"2721Public Qualifier
Quarter-final 3 - 07.28.70 - 11 November 1969
DrawArtistSongJuryPublicResult
1Eddy Pascal"Virginia"1521Public Qualifier
2Josiane Janvier"Tu seras celui-là"653Out
3Johnny White"Mary-Ann"942Out
4Bébé Suong"On m'avait dit"1134Out
5Jacques Albin"Chatte"365Out
6Andrée Simons"La belle époque"5616Jury Qualifier
Quarter-final 4 - 06.24.70 - 25 November 1969
DrawArtistSongJuryPublicResult
1Miles Kovacs"Mélodie d'automne"165Out
2Lucienne Troka"Toi soleil"554Out
3Jean Narcy"Une rose"1042Out
4Andrée Simons"Perle d'etoile"4216Jury Qualifier
5Frédéric François"Comme tous les amoureux"2821Public Qualifier
6Ann Christy"Merci, printemps"1433Out
Quarter-final 5 - 05.20.70 - 9 December 1969
DrawArtistSongJuryPublicResult
1Rosy Dany"Ce n'etait que l'amour"32Out
2Marc Bertrand"Notre raison de vivre"21Public Qualifier
3Concetta di Maria"Oui, mais quand"53Out
4Bébé Suong"Triste été"44Out
5Serge & Christine Ghisoland"Nous serons toi et moi"16Jury Qualifier
6Nicole Josy"C'est toi qui as raison"65Out
Quarter-final 6 - 04.16.70 - 23 December 1969
DrawArtistSongJuryPublicResult
1Bébé Suong"La fête aus musiciens"54=3Out
2Cecily Forde"Prends ma main"54=4Out
3Serge Davignac"Monsieur du printemps"2021Public Qualifier
4Lucienne Troka"Dix épines pour une rose"1532Out
5Joanna"A huit heurs au printemps"54=5Out
6Johnny White"Quand on est amoureux"5016Jury Qualifier
Semi-Finals

The qualifiers in the semi-finals were decided by two different juries and a public postcard vote. The first jury (Jury A) consisted of 100 people across 10 cities in Belgium who would be phoned and asked to vote for 1 song. The second jury (Jury B) consisted of 100 young people who each voted for a song. Jury A and Jury B voted simultaneously but since the postcard voting started after the semi-final had already taken place and the jury qualifiers were already known, the jury qualifiers would often place low in the public vote. The winner of each jury and public vote qualified; Jury A's qualifier was decided first, then Jury B then the public.

Semi-final 1 - 03.12.70 - 6 January 1970
DrawArtistSongJury A PointsJury B PointsPublicResult
1Andrée Simons"Perle d'étoile"1122431Public Qualifier
2Serge & Christine Ghisoland"Nous serons toi et moi"103=2525Jury B Qualifier
3Ann Christy"Le vent, le temps"103=4Out
4Marc Bertrand"Notre raison de vivre"852Out
5Eddy Pascal"Virginia"663Out
6Jean Vallée"Viens l'oublier"5514816Jury A Qualifier
Semi-final 2 - 02.09.70 - 20 January 1970
DrawArtistSongJury A PointsJury B PointsPublicResult
1Johnny White"Quand on est amoureux"1631Public Qualifier
2Andrée Simons"La belle époque"3816Jury A Qualifier
3Marc Bertrand"Ne prends pas la vie comme elle vient"1242Out
4Serge & Christine Ghisoland"Laï laï laï"2924215Jury B Qualifier
5Frédéric François"Comme tous les amoureux"353Out
6Serge Davignac"Monsieur le printemps"264Out
Final

Serge & Christine Ghisoland and Andrée Simons, who had each qualified two songs for the final, both decided in advance to withdraw one of their songs ("Nous serons toi et moi" and "Perle d'étoile" respectively) in order not to risk splitting their vote, leaving only four songs in the final. The winning song was chosen by a combination of two juries: Jury A consisted of 600 TV viewers from 6 cities who were gathered in Dinant, and Jury B consisted of one jury from each of the other eleven participating countries in Eurovision 1970 and several journalists.[3]

Final - 01.04.70 - 3 February 1970
DrawArtistSongJury AJury BTotalPlace
1Andrée Simons"La belle époque"1262503763
2Serge & Christine Ghisoland"Laï laï laï"27002704
3Johnny White"Quand on est amoureux"3571675242
4Jean Vallée"Viens l'oublier"2305838131

At Eurovision

On the night of the final Vallée performed 5th in the running order, following Yugoslavia and preceding France. At the close of voting "Viens l'oublier" had received 5 points (3 from France and 1 apiece from Ireland and Luxembourg), placing Belgium joint 8th (with Italy and Monaco) of the 12 entries. The Belgian jury awarded 9 of its 10 points to contest winners Ireland, the highest ever mark given by one country to another under the 10-points-per-jury system.[4]

Voting

Notes and References

  1. Book: Vermeulen, André . Van Canzonissima tot Eurosong. 65 jaar Belgische preselecties voor het Eurovisiesongfestival. . 2021 . Kritak . 978-94-014-7609-6 . Leuven . 1240241113.
  2. Web site: Chansons Euro '70 - België 1970 . 2023-04-23 . Songfestival.be . nl.
  3. http://natfinals.50webs.com/70s_80s/Belgium1970.html ESC National Finals database - Belgium final 1970
  4. http://www.esc-history.com/details.asp?key=259 ESC History - Belgium 1970
  5. Web site: Results of the Final of Amsterdam 1970 . Eurovision Song Contest . 8 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210408115527/https://eurovision.tv/event/amsterdam-1970/final/results/belgium . 8 April 2021 . live.