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  2. Eurovision Song Contest 1956 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurovision_Song_Contest_1956

    The contest, originally titled the Gran premio Eurovisione 1956 della canzone europea [1] (English: Grand Prix of the Eurovision song competition 1956; [2] French: Grand prix Eurovision 1956 de la chanson européenne [3]), was held on 24 May 1956 at the Teatro Kursaal in Lugano, Switzerland, and hosted by Swiss television presenter Lohengrin ...

  3. History of the Eurovision Song Contest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Eurovision...

    Eurovision Song Contest's Greatest Hits featured live performances from fifteen previous Eurovision acts from thirteen countries, video montages of past editions of the contest and footage of former entries, and a performance by the cast of Riverdance, originally conceived as the interval performance for the 1994 contest before being developed ...

  4. Refrain (Lys Assia song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Refrain_(Lys_Assia_song)

    On 28 April 1956, "Refrains" [a] was one of the five songs with which Lys Assia competed in the Grand Prix Européen de la Chanson: Finale suisse, the eleven-song national final organized by the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation (SRG SSR) to select its two songs and performers for the first edition of the Eurovision Song Contest.

  5. List of Eurovision Song Contest winners - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Eurovision_Song...

    71 songs written by 147 songwriters have won the Eurovision Song Contest, an international song competition organised annually by the European Broadcasting Union.The contest, which has been broadcast every year since its debut in 1956 (with the exception of 2020), is one of the longest-running television programmes in the world.

  6. List of Eurovision Song Contest entries (1956–2003) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Eurovision_Song...

    Ireland's Johnny Logan has won the contest three times as a performer and composer, and was the first performer to win multiple contests.. Since the Eurovision Song Contest began in 1956 and until semi-finals were introduced in 2004, a total of 917 entries were submitted, comprising songs and artists which represented thirty-eight countries. [1]

  7. Lys Assia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lys_Assia

    Rosa Mina Schärer (3 March 1924 – 24 March 2018), [1] [2] known by her stage name Lys Assia, was a Swiss singer who won the first Eurovision Song Contest in 1956.Assia was born in Rupperswil, Aargau, and began her stage career as a dancer, but changed to singing in 1940 where she met her first musical success in 1950 with "O mein Papa".

  8. Jetty Paerl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jetty_Paerl

    Henriette Nanette "Jetty" Paerl (27 May 1921 – 22 August 2013) was a Dutch singer and resistance member of Jewish origin. She is known for being one of the Netherlands' representatives in the Eurovision Song Contest 1956 with the song "De vogels van Holland", and for being the first singer ever to perform in the Eurovision Song Contest.

  9. Eurovision Song Contest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurovision_Song_Contest

    [241] [242] The video for "Occidentali's Karma" by Francesco Gabbani, which placed sixth for Italy in 2017, became the first Eurovision song to reach more than 200 million views on YouTube, [243] while "Soldi" by Mahmood, the Italian runner-up in 2019, was the most-streamed Eurovision song on Spotify until it was overtaken by that year's winner ...