Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 1989

Denmark was represented by Birthe Kjær, with the song '"Vi maler byen rød", at the 1989 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 6 May in Lausanne, Switzerland. "Vi maler byen rød" was chosen as the Danish entry at the Dansk Melodi Grand Prix on 25 March, a victory for Kjær after three runner-up finishes in DMGP earlier in the 1980s.

Eurovision Song Contest 1989
Country Denmark
National selection
Selection processDansk Melodi Grand Prix
1989
Selection date(s)25 March 1989
Selected entrantBirthe Kjær
Selected song"Vi maler byen rød"
Finals performance
Final result3rd, 111 points
Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1988 1989 1990►

Before Eurovision

Dansk Melodi Grand Prix 1989

The final was held at the Bella Center in Copenhagen, hosted Jarl de Friis-Mikkelsen. Ten songs took part, with the winner being chosen by nine regional juries. Other participants included 1983 Danish representative Gry Johansen and the 2000 contest winner Jørgen Olsen.[1]

Final – 25 March 1989
Draw Artist Song Songwriter(s) Points Place
1 Birthe Kjær "Vi maler byen rød" Søren Bundgaard, Keld Heick 32 1
2 Maria Cecile "Kun dig" George Keller, Flemming Jørgensen 23 5
3 Lars Fenger "Kom i sving" Bent Hesselmann, Lars Fenger 8 9
4 Pia Cohn "Nu er jeg blot en stemme" Arne Würgler 25 4
5 Snapshot "Du og jeg" Turid Christensen 10 8
6 Keld Heick & Hilda Heick "Sommerregn" Keld Heick, Hilda Heick 11 7
7 Lecia Jønsson "Landet Camelot" Ole Bredahl, Lecia Jønsson 30 2
8 Gry Johansen "Endnu en nat" Per Meilstrup, Keld Heick 22 6
9 Peter Belli "Lyset bryder frem" Kim Helweg, Morten Nilsson 0 10
10 Jørgen Olsen "Fugle" Wolfgang Käfer, Jørgen Olsen 28 3

At Eurovision

On the night of the final Kjær performed 12th in the running order, following Luxembourg and preceding Austria. At the close of voting "Vi maler byen rød" had received 111 points (including maximum 12s from Finland, the Netherlands and Sweden), placing Denmark third of the 22 entries, the country's second consecutive third-place finish. The Danish jury awarded its 12 points to Sweden.[2]

Points awarded by Denmark

Final

12 points Sweden
10 points Yugoslavia
8 points Cyprus
7 points Germany
6 points Norway
5 points Israel
4 points Austria
3 points France
2 points  Switzerland
1 point United Kingdom

Points awarded to Denmark

Points awarded to Denmark (final)
12 points 10 points 8 points 7 points 6 points
5 points 4 points 3 points 2 points 1 point

See also

References

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