Denmark in the Eurovision Dance Contest

Denmark took part in the Eurovision Dance Contest in 2007 and 2008.

Denmark
Member stationDR
National selection events
Participation summary
Appearances2
First appearance2007
Best result6th, 2008
Worst result9th, 2007
External links
Denmark's page at Eurovision.tv

History

The couple representing the country in the first Eurovision Dance Contest in 2007, Mette Skou Elkjær and David Kim Ehlers Jørgensen, were chosen on a live national selection event on 24 August 2007. The dances they performed at the contest were a Rumba to "Love Fool" by Olivia Ong, and a freestyle, to "LoveStoned/I Think She Knows" by Justin Timberlake.[1] Denmark came ninth after receiving 38 points from 10 countries.

In 2008, Denmark were represented by Patrick Spiegelberg and Katja Svensson, who were selected internally. Their routine was a lyrical jazz dance with elements of samba, tango and pasodoble. They danced to the Twin Peaks theme by Angelo Badalamenti, which was performed by The Daniel Caine orchestra and "Igen & Igen" by Nephew.[2] Denmark came sixth; despite receiving no 12 points, Denmark received the full 48 points from the jury.

The Third Eurovision Dance Contest has been cancelled indefinitely.[3]

Contestants

Table key
  Winner
  Second place
  Third place
  Last place
Year Couple Dances Place Points
2007 Mette Skou Elkjær & David Kim Ehlers Jørgensen Rumba & Showdance 9 38
2008 Patrick Spiegelberg & Katja Svensson Samba/Tango/Paso Doble/Jazz Dance 6 102

Voting history

Denmark has received the most points from...

Rank Country Points
1 Sweden 16
2 Lithuania 13
3 Finland 12
4 Portugal 11
5 Austria 8

Denmark has given the most points to...

Rank Country Points
1 Finland 16
= Ireland 16
= Poland 16
4 Sweden 15
5 Ukraine 14

Commentators and spokespersons

Year(s) Television commentator Dual television commentator Spokesperson
2007Sisse FiskerClaus LarsenLouise Wolff
2008Jens Blauenweldt
gollark: Truth is things I say, as opposed to other people.
gollark: Communism is just a monoid in the category of endofunctors.
gollark: But it seems quite obvious that not giving people an incentive to do more things is bad, and that central control also runs into horrible problems.
gollark: I mean, people obviously quite like the idea of central economic planning for various fairly good reasons (not that communism means that now to a lot of people!).
gollark: It does not sound good "on paper" if you think about it for more than 5 seconds.

See also

References


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