Eurovision Song Contest 1978
Country Norway
National selection
Selection processMelodi Grand Prix 1978
Selection date(s)18 March 1978
Selected entrantJahn Teigen
Selected song"Mil etter mil"
Selected songwriter(s)Kai Eide
Finals performance
Final result20th, 0 points
Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1977 1978 1979►

Norway was represented by Jahn Teigen, with the song "Mil etter mil", at the 1978 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 22 April in Paris. "Mil etter mil" was chosen as the Norwegian entry at the Melodi Grand Prix on 18 March.

"Mil etter mil" is famous both for Teigen's notoriously bizarre stage performance in Paris, and for being the first song ever to score nul-points under the 12 points voting system. (It was said that one of the reasons for the introduction of the current system in 1975 had been that the European Broadcasting Union had considered it unlikely in the extreme that any song would finish the evening with a zero with national juries now able to vote for ten songs, rather than the three or five which had been the case with previous ranking systems used in the 1960s and which had led to so many going home empty-handed.)

Before Eurovision

Melodi Grand Prix 1978

The Melodi Grand Prix 1978 was held at the studios of broadcaster NRK in Oslo, hosted by Egil Teige. The orchestra was conducted by Carsten Klouman. Eight songs took part in the final, with the winner chosen by a 9-member "expert" jury, which included Ellen Nikolaysen, who represented Norway in 1973 (as part of the Bendik Singers) and 1975 and Odd Børre, who represented Norway in 1968. The rankings of the jury members were used to calculate the result so the song with the lowest aggregate score was the winner.[1]

18 March 1978
Draw Artist Song Songwriters(s) Points Place
1 New Jordal Swingers "Spilleman" Eigil Berg, Ivar Hovden 50 6
2 Stein Ingebrigtsen "Fortsett sangen" Petter Hurlen, Espen Dietrichs 43 5
3 Maj-Britt Andersen "Hør hva andre har fått til" Kristian Lindeman 40 4
4 Anne Lise Gjøstøl "Min sang" Halvdan Presthus 20 2
5 Septimus "La meg bli med deg" Torbjørn Daleng, Gunnar Jørstad 37 3
6 Ingrid Elisabeth Johansen "Den danseglade fruen" Dag Kolsrud 52 7
7 Anita Skorgan and Georg Keller "Prima Donna" Svein Strugstad, Dag Nordtømme 67 8
8 Jahn Teigen "Mil etter mil" Kai Eide 15 1
Detailed Jury Votes
Draw Song K. Stokke E. Nikolaysen Ø. Thorsen L. Dalseth E. Iversen K. Karlsen O. Børre A. Naumik S. Børja Total
1"Spilleman"58788334450
2"Fortsett sangen"45453257843
3"Hor hva andre har fått till"76334623640
4"Min sang"12111562120
5"La meg bli med dig"33565445237
6"Den danseglade fruen"64646786552
7"Prima Donna"87877878767
8"Mil etter mil"21222111315

At Eurovision

On the night of the final Teigen performed second in the running order, following Ireland and preceding Italy. His stage performance appeared inexplicable at the time, involving braces-twanging and a huge split leap into the air which were completely at odds with the nature of the song. However it was later rumoured that Teigen was unhappy with the new arrangement the song had been given by NRK following MGP, and had performed in a deliberately inappropriate manner to vent his displeasure. Nevertheless the performance soon entered Eurovision legend, and is invariably included in montages put together to illustrate the contest's more absurd moments.

By the end of the night, no national jury had been persuaded to cast any votes in Norway's direction, and the country finished at the bottom of the scoreboard for a fifth time.[2] The Norwegian jury awarded its 12 points to Ireland. It is worth noting that, had the Norwegian jury not awarded Finland its only 2 points of the evening, they would not have been alone at the foot of the table.[3]

Voting

Norway did not receive any points at the 1978 Eurovision Song Contest.[4]

Points awarded by Norway[4]
Score Country
12 points  Ireland
10 points  Sweden
8 points  Israel
7 points  Belgium
6 points  Italy
5 points   Switzerland
4 points  Monaco
3 points  France
2 points  Finland
1 point  Turkey

After Eurovision

Far from being bitter about, or humiliated by, his Eurovision disaster, Teigen would subsequently use his notoriety very cleverly to become one of the most successful artists on the Norwegian musical scene, and made two further appearances at Eurovision in 1982 and 1983.

References

  1. ESC National Finals database 1978
  2. "Final of Paris 1978". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 11 April 2021. Retrieved 11 April 2021.
  3. ESC History - Norway 1978
  4. 1 2 "Results of the Final of Paris 1978". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 11 April 2021. Retrieved 11 April 2021.
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