Switzerland in the Eurovision Song Contest 1986

(Redirected from Pas pour moi)

Switzerland was present at the Eurovision Song Contest 1986, held in Bergen, Norway.

Eurovision Song Contest 1986
Country  Switzerland
National selection
Selection processConcours Eurovision '86
Selection date(s)25 January 1986
Selected entrantDaniela Simmons
Selected song"Pas pour moi"
Selected songwriter(s)
Finals performance
Final result2nd, 140 points
Switzerland in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄198519861987►

Before Eurovision

National final

The Swiss national final to select their entry, Concours Eurovision '86, was held on 25 January 1986 at 21:15 CET, in the Schweizer Radio DRS Studios in Zürich, and was hosted by singer Paola del Medico who previously represented Switzerland in 1969 and 1980.[1][2] Five juries selected the winner: one jury each from the German, French and Italian cantons of Switzerland, one jury made up of radio, television and newspaper journalists, and one jury composed of "music experts."

The winning entry was "Pas pour moi", performed by Daniela Simmons and composed by Atilla Şereftuğ, with lyrics written by Nella Martinetti.

French, German and Italian were represented equally in the national final, with three songs in each language. One of the three German songs, "Verschänk doch dini Liebi", was sung in the Swiss German dialect. The song "Lily Lilas" was sung partially in German and partially in French. For the first time, Romansh was represented in the national selection with the song "Tragnölin".

Final – 25 January 1986
DrawArtistSongRegional JuriesPress
Jury
Expert
Jury
TotalPlace
DRSTSRTSI
1Scarlet Chessex"Fou d'amour pour toujours"58668333
2Nöggi"Verschänk doch dini Liebi"41231119
3Simonetta"Un amore come una fiaba"33444186
4Test"Generation liberté"67752275
5Linard Bardill and Shefali Banerjee"Tragnölin"75576304
6Gruppo Pocafera"Iside"12317147
7Lily Lilas"Lily Lilas"24125147
8Paolo Monte"Amore mio"861083352
9Daniela Simmons"Pas pour moi"101081010481

At Eurovision

Simmons performed tenth on the night of the Contest, following Spain and preceding Israel. At the close of the voting the song had received 140 points, placing 2nd in a field of 20 competing countries.[3] It would become Switzerland's third (and final) second-placing song.

The Swiss conductor at the contest was the composer of the song, Atilla Şereftuğ.

Voting

Points awarded by Switzerland[4]
ScoreCountry
12 points  Sweden
10 points  Belgium
8 points  Turkey
7 points  France
6 points  Norway
5 points  Israel
4 points  United Kingdom
3 points  Denmark
2 points  Luxembourg
1 point  Spain

References

External links