Serbia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024

Serbia participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024 in Malmö, Sweden, with "Ramonda" performed by Teya Dora. The Serbian national broadcaster, Radio Television of Serbia (RTS), organised the national final Pesma za Evroviziju '24 in order to select the Serbian entry for the contest.

Eurovision Song Contest 2024
Country Serbia
National selection
Selection processPesma za Evroviziju '24
Selection date(s)
  • Semi-finals:
  • 27 February 2024
  • 29 February 2024
  • Final:
  • 2 March 2024
Selected entrantTeya Dora
Selected song"Ramonda"
Selected songwriter(s)
  • Andrijano Kadović
  • Luka Jovanović
  • Teodora Pavlovska
Finals performance
Semi-final resultQualified (10th, 47 points)
Final result17th, 54 points
Serbia in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄202320242025►

Serbia was drawn to compete in the first semi-final of the Eurovision Song Contest which took place on 7 May 2024 and was later selected to perform in position 2. At the end of the show, "Ramonda" was announced among the top 10 entries of the first semi-final and hence qualified to compete in the final. It was later revealed that Serbia placed tenth out of the fifteen participating countries in the semi-final with 47 points. In the final, Serbia performed in position 16 and placed seventeenth out of the 25 performing countries, scoring a total of 54 points.

Background

Prior to the 2024 contest, Serbia had participated in the Eurovision Song Contest fifteen times since its first entry in 2007, winning the contest with their debut entry "Molitva" performed by Marija Šerifović. Since 2007, 12 out of the 15 total Serbian entries had featured in the final with the nation failing to qualify in 2009, 2013 and 2017. Serbia's 2023 entry, "Samo mi se spava" performed by Luke Black, qualified to the final and placed 24th.[1]

The Serbian national broadcaster, Radio Television of Serbia (RTS), broadcasts the event within Serbia and organises the selection process for the nation's entry. The broadcaster had used both internal selections and national finals to determine their entries throughout the years. Between 2007 and 2009, Serbia used the Beovizija national final, but after their 2009 entry failed to qualify Serbia to the final, the broadcaster shifted their selection strategy to selecting specific composers to create songs for artists. After a successful internal selection in 2012, in 2013 RTS returned to an open national final format, titled Beosong, but the country failed to qualify to the final. After reverting to internal selection in 2016 and 2017, the country returned to using the Beovizija national final in 2018 and 2019, managing to qualify to the final on both occasions. In 2022, RTS returned to organising a national final under the name Pesma za Evroviziju, a format which was re-confirmed in 2023.

On 13 July 2023, RTS confirmed Serbia's participation in the 2024 contest, announcing the organisation of a national final in order to select the country's entry.[2] This was later confirmed to be Pesma za Evroviziju for a third time.[3][4]

Before Eurovision

Pesma za Evroviziju '24

The third edition of Pesma za Evroviziju, the Serbian national final for the Eurovision Song Contest, took place between 27 February and 2 March 2024 among 28 competing entries.[5]

Semi-finals

  • The first semi-final took place on 27 February 2024. "Bedem" performed by Hristina, "Zovi me Lena" performed by Lena Kovačević, "Percepcija" performed by M.IRA, "No No No" performed by Bojana and David, "Gnezdo orlovo" performed by Breskvica, "Dno" performed by Marko Mandić, "Dijamanti" performed by Keni nije mrtav and "Lik u ogledalu" performed by Zorja advanced to the final, while "Elektroljubav" performed by Saša Baša and Virtual Ritual, "Da me voliš" performed by Martina Vrbos, "Ko je ta žena?" performed by Filarri, "Jaka" performed by Ivana Vladović, "Sama" performed by Chai and "Vavilon" performed by Kavala were eliminated from the contest.[6]
  • The second semi-final took place on 29 February 2024. "Dom" performed by Iva Lorens, "Novo, bolje" performed by Konstrakta, "Zbog tebe živim" performed by Dušan Kurtić, "Najbolja" performed by Zejna, "Ramonda" performed by Teya Dora, "Moje tvoje" performed by Milan Bujaković, "Jutra bez tebe" performed by Nemanja Radošević and "Luna park" performed by Džordži advanced to the final, while "Sudari" performed by Nadia, "Nemoguća misija" performed by Hydrogen, "Duga je noć" performed by Filip Baloš, "Kolo" performed by Yanx, "Tajni začin" performed by Kat Dosa and "Muzika" performed by Durlanski were eliminated from the contest.[7]

Final

Teya Dora, the winner of Pesma za Evroviziju '24, posing for the reporters following her win

The final took place on 2 March 2024. The winner was selected based on the 50/50 combination of votes from five jurors and from a public televote. The winner was "Ramonda" written by Teodora Pavlovska (Teya Dora), Luka Jovanović and Andrijano Kadović, and performed by Teya Dora.[8][9]

Final – 2 March 2024[6][7][9]
DrawArtistSongJuryTelevoteTotalPlace
VotesPointsVotesPoints
1Iva Lorens"Dom"1021,5540212
2Džordži"Luna park"815,085568
3Breskvica"Gnezdo orlovo"28545,16012172
4Teya Dora"Ramonda"441228,11410221
5Hristina"Bedem"1231,0920310
6Marko Mandić"Dno"701,0300015
7M.IRA"Percepcija"301,6781113
8Nemanja Radošević"Jutra bez tebe"401,6300014
9Milan Bujaković"Moje tvoje"004140016
10Keni nije mrtav"Dijamanti"702,5182211
11Zorja"Lik u ogledalu"421010,5327173
12Zejna"Najbolja"3173,6274115
13Konstrakta"Novo, bolje"34819,5378164
14Bojana and David"No No No"308,773667
15Lena Kovačević"Zovi me Lena"2961,676069
16Dušan Kurtić"Zbog tebe živim"2842,834376

Promotion

Teya Dora at the PrePartyES event in Madrid

As part of the promotion of her participation in the contest, Teya Dora attended the PrePartyES in Madrid on 30 March 2024, the Barcelona Eurovision Party on 6 April 2024, the Eurovision in Concert event in Amsterdam on 13 April 2024 and the Copenhagen Eurovision Party (Malmöhagen) on 4 May 2024.[10][11][12][13] On 1 May, Teya Dora took part in her birthday party organised by the Serbian and Croatian delegations and open to press and fans.[14][15] In addition, she performed at the Eurovision Village in Malmö on 8 May 2024.[16] A day prior to the first semi-final, RTS aired a documentary on Teya Dora's life, career and Eurovision journey, titled Stazama Ramonde (transl. "Walking the path of 'Ramonda'").[17]

Send-off ceremony

In April 24, RTS held a ceremonial farewell for the Serbian representative to the Eurovision Song Contest 2024. The ceremony was attended by numerous guests, including the Swedish ambassador to Serbia Annika Ben David, the editor in chief of RTS' entertainment program Sandra Perović and the director of RTS Dragan Bujošević, as well as members of OGAE Serbia, fans of the competition, journalists and others. At the ceremony, Teya Dora was given the flag of Sweden by the Swedish ambassador and was handed over the flag of Serbia by Luke Black, the 2023 representative.[18]

At Eurovision

Teya Dora during a rehearsal before the first semi-final.

The Eurovision Song Contest 2024 took place at the Malmö Arena in Malmö, Sweden, and consisted of two semi-finals held on the respective dates of 7 and 9 May and the final on 11 May 2024. All nations with the exceptions of the host country and the "Big Five" (France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom) were required to qualify from one of two semi-finals in order to compete in the final; the top ten countries from each semi-final progressed to the final. On 30 January 2024, an allocation draw was held to determine which of the two semi-finals, as well as which half of the show, each country would perform in; the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) split up the competing countries into different pots based on voting patterns from previous contests, with countries with favourable voting histories put into the same pot.[19] Serbia was scheduled for the first half of the first semi-final.[20] The shows' producers then decided the running order for the semi-finals; Serbia was set to perform in position 2.[21]

In Serbia, all the shows were broadcast on RTS 1,[22] as well as internationally through RTS Svet,[23][24][25] with commentary provided by Duška Vučinić.[26] Radio Beograd 1 [sr] is airing the first semi-final, with commentary by Katarina Epstein,[27] and the final, with commentary by Katarina Epstein and Nikoleta Dojčinović.[28] During the performance of Poland in the first semi-final, the broadcast was moved from RTS 1 to RTS 2 with no warning, so the former could air the arrival ceremony of General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and Chairman of the Central Military Commission (CMC), and thus the paramount leader of China, Xi Jinping. RTS 2 aired approximately 25 minutes of the semi-final, including the remainder of the Polish entry, performances from Iceland, Croatia, and the first part of the German performance, before the broadcast was eventually restored to RTS 1.[29]

Performance

Teya Dora took part in technical rehearsals on 27 April and 1 May, followed by dress rehearsals on 6 and 7 May.[30] The staging of her performance of "Ramonda" at the contest featured blue lighting, smoke and a rock-shaped prop.[31]

Semi-final

Serbia performed in position 2, following the entry from Cyprus and before the entry from Lithuania.[21] At the end of the show, the country was announced as a qualifier for the final. It was later revealed that Serbia placed tenth out of the fifteen participating countries in the first semi-final with 47 points.

Final

Following the semi-final, Serbia drew "producer's choice" for the final, meaning that the country will perform in the half decided by the contest's producers.[32] Serbia performed in position 16, following the entry from Italy and before the entry from Finland.[33] Teya Dora once again took part in dress rehearsals on 10 and 11 May before the final, including the jury final where the professional juries cast their final votes before the live show on 11 May. She performed a repeat of her semi-final performance during the final on 11 May. Serbia placed seventeenth in the final, scoring 54 points; 32 points from the public televoting and 22 points from the juries.

Voting

Below is a breakdown of points awarded by and to Serbia in the first semi-final and in the final. Voting during the three shows involved each country awarding sets of points from 1-8, 10 and 12: one from their professional jury and the other from televoting in the final vote, while the semi-final vote was based entirely on the vote of the public.[34] The Serbian jury consisted of Alek Aleksov, Luke Black, who represented Serbia in the 2023 contest, Milovan Bošković, Lena Kovačević, and Zejna.[35] In the first semi-final, Serbia placed 10th with 47 points, receiving maximum twelve points from Croatia and marking the country's sixth consecutive qualification to the final. In the final, Serbia placed 17th with 54 points, receiving twelve points in the televote from Croatia. Over the course of the contest, Serbia awarded its 12 points to Croatia in the first semi-final, and in both the jury vote and televote in the final.[36][37]

The spokesperson for the Serbian jury at the final was Konstrakta, who represented Serbia in the 2022 contest.[38]

Points awarded to Serbia

Points awarded to Serbia (Final)[37]
ScoreTelevoteJury
12 points  Croatia
10 points
8 points
7 points
6 points
5 points
4 points  Slovenia
3 points  Malta  Croatia
2 points  Albania  Denmark
1 point

Points awarded by Serbia

Points awarded by Serbia (Final)[37]
ScoreTelevoteJury
12 points  Croatia  Croatia
10 points  France   Switzerland
8 points  Greece  France
7 points  Ireland  Lithuania
6 points   Switzerland  Italy
5 points  Sweden  Sweden
4 points  Italy  United Kingdom
3 points  Israel  Greece
2 points  Slovenia  Ireland
1 point  Armenia  Ukraine

Detailed voting results

Each nation's jury consisted of five music industry professionals who are citizens of the country they represent. Each jury, and individual jury member, is required to meet a strict set of criteria regarding professional background, as well as diversity in gender and age. No member of a national jury was permitted to be related in any way to any of the competing acts in such a way that they cannot vote impartially and independently.[39] The individual rankings of each jury member as well as the nation's televoting results were released shortly after the grand final.

The following members comprised the Serbian jury:[35]

Detailed voting results from Serbia (Semi-final 1)[36]
DrawCountryTelevote
RankPoints
01  Cyprus74
02  Serbia
03  Lithuania92
04  Ireland47
05  Ukraine56
06  Poland14
07  Croatia112
08  Iceland13
09  Slovenia210
10  Finland11
11  Moldova83
12  Azerbaijan101
13  Australia12
14  Portugal65
15  Luxembourg38
Detailed voting results from Serbia (Final)[37]
DrawCountryJuryTelevote
Juror AJuror BJuror CJuror DJuror ERankPointsRankPoints
01  Sweden93147117565
02  Ukraine1625244611111
03  Germany10141320191822
04  Luxembourg8231223211716
05  Netherlands[a]1779536N/A
06  Israel23162525252483
07  Lithuania41111374719
08  Spain1213818171614
09  Estonia22221624242215
10  Ireland256156910247
11  Latvia19151814202123
12  Greece188171049338
13  United Kingdom131038108424
14  Norway14182316122018
15  Italy11451155674
16  Serbia
17  Finland20121912161917
18  Portugal620613141220
19  Armenia1597151514101
20  Cyprus7211017131513
21   Switzerland2241221056
22  Slovenia24192222222592
23  Croatia11221112112
24  Georgia517202181321
25  France35191838210
26  Austria21242119232312

Notes

References