Cyprus in the Eurovision Song Contest 1991 |
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| Participating broadcaster | Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation (CyBC) |
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| Country | Cyprus |
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| Selection process | National final |
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| Selection date | 2 March 1991 |
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| Song | "S.O.S." |
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| Artist | Elena Patroklou |
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| Songwriters | - Kypros Charalambous
- Andreas Christou
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| Final result | 9th, 60 points |
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Cyprus was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 1991 with the song "S.O.S.", composed by Kypros Charalambous, with lyrics by Andreas Christou, and performed by Elena Patroklou. The Cypriot participating broadcaster, the Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation (CyBC), selected its entry through a national final.
Before Eurovision
Epilogí Tragoudioú Giourovízion
Competing entries
The Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation (CyBC) announced its intention to participate in the Eurovision Song Contest 1991 on 25 September 1990.[1] CyBC then opened a submission period for Cypriot artists and composers to submit songs from 22 November 1990 until 10 January 1991.[2] By the end of the submission period, 72 entries had been submitted.[3] On 10 February 1991, a 15-member jury panel, along with a chairman and four non-voting members, listened to the submitted songs and decided the eight competing entries.[3][4]
Competing entry selection jury members[3][4]
| Non-voting
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- Tasos Georgios – chief television operator at CyBC (chairman)
- Panos Ionaddis – head of television programmes at CyBC
- Michalis Stylianou – CyBC chief accountant
- Stavros Panagidis – CyBC first accounting officer
- Christakis Ioannou – checked validity of entered submissions
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| Voting
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- Themis Christodoulou
- Marinos Mitelas
- Christodoulos Achilleovdis
- Michalis Stavridis
- Antonis Christoforidis
- Maro Skordi
- Giorgos Siecherlis
- Mike Sarridis
- Sempouch Apkarian
- Giannis Adeilinis
- Takis Thomas
- Lysandros Avrasmidis
- Giorgos Kotsonis
- Lygia Konstantinidou
- Marios Skordis
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Final
The final was broadcast live at 21:10 (EET) on RIK on 2 March 1991 in a show named Epilogí Tragoudioú Giourovízion (Greek: Επιλογή Τραγουδιού Γιουροβίζιον).[3][6] The final was held in the International Convention Centre in Nicosia, and was hosted by Evi Papamichail.[3] The results were decided by a 24-member jury. The running order was drawn at random.[3]
At Eurovision
On the night of the final, Elena Patroklou performed 21st in the running order, following the United Kingdom and preceding Italy. At the close of voting "S.O.S." had received 60 points, placing Cyprus ninth out of 22 countries. The Cypriot jury awarded its 12 points to Spain.[7]
Voting
References
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| Participation | |
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| Artists | |
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| Songs |
- "Alter Ego"
- "An me thimasai"
- "Anna Maria Lena"
- "Apopse as vrethoume"
- "Aspro mavro"
- "Break a Broken Heart"
- "Comme ci, comme ça"
- "El Diablo"
- "Ela"
- "Ela Ela (Come Baby)"
- "Feeling Alive"
- "Femme Fatale"
- "Firefly"
- "Fuego"
- "Genesis"
- "Gimme"
- "Gravity"
- "I agapi akoma zi"
- "Ime anthropos ki ego"
- "Jalla"
- "La La Love"
- "Liar"
- "Life Looks Better in Spring"
- "Mana mou"
- "Mi stamatas"
- "Milas poli"
- "Monika"
- "Mono i agapi"
- "Mono gia mas"
- "Nomiza"
- "One Thing I Should Have Done"
- "Replay"
"Running"
- "San aggelos s'agapisa"
- "Shh"
- "SOS"
- "Sti fotia"
- "Stronger Every Minute"
- "Teriazoume"
- "Tha'nai erotas"
"Thimame"
- "To katalava arga"
- "Tora zo"
- "Why Angels Cry"
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Note: Entries scored out signify where Cyprus did not compete. Italics indicate an entry in a future contest. |