Estonia in the Eurovision Song Contest 1998

Estonia was represented by Koit Toome, with the song "Mere lapsed", at the 1998 Eurovision Song Contest which took place on 9 May in Birmingham. "Mere lapsed" was chosen as the Estonian entry at the national final, Eurolaul, on 24 January.

Eurovision Song Contest 1998
Country Estonia
National selection
Selection processEurolaul 1998
Selection date(s)24 January 1998
Selected entrantKoit Toome
Selected song"Mere lapsed"
Finals performance
Final result12th, 36 points
Estonia in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1997 1998 1999►

Before Eurovision

Eurolaul 1998

The final was held at the studios of broadcaster ETV in Tallinn, hosted by Marko Reikop and Anu Välba. Ten songs took part with the winner being chosen by an "expert" international jury. Other participants included former Estonian representatives Janika Sillamaa and Ivo Linna, and the following year's Evelin Samuel. "Mere lapsed" was an unexpected winner and had never been ahead in the voting until the final juror's votes enabled it to snatch an unpredicted last minute victory.[1]

Final – 24 January 1998
Draw Artist Song Songwriter(s) Points Place
1 Koit Toome "Mere lapsed" Peeter Pruuli, Maria Rahula, Tomi Rahula 97 1
2 Kaire Vilgats & Lauri Liiv "Kristallid" Argo Kasela, Kalle Erm 47 8
3 Kate "Tulepuuhuulte luule" Villu Kangur, Aivar Joonas 79 3
4 Evelin Samuel "Unistus igavesest päevast" Kaari Sillamaa, Priit Pajusaar, Glen Pilvre 94 2
5 Rumal Noorkuu "Säravad tähed" Villu Olesk, Ivar Must 65 5
6 Tõnis Mägi "Mõni mägi" Tõnis Mägi 36 10
7 Siiri Sisask "Tagareas" Lauri Saatpalu 53 7
8 Janika Sillamaa "Viimne valge kuu" Kaari Sillamaa, Koit Toome 69 4
9 Mona & Karl Madis "Maailm kahele" Sven Lõhmus 42 9
10 Evelin Samuel & Ivo Linna "Andesta" Kaari Sillamaa, Priit Pajusaar, Glen Pilvre 56 6

At Eurovision

On the night of the final Toome performed 23rd in the running order, following Norway and preceding Turkey. At the close of voting "Mere lapsed" had picked up 36 points (over half of which comprised a maximum 12 from Finland and 8 from Slovakia), placing Estonia joint 12th (with Portugal) of the 25 entries. The 12 points from the Estonian televote were awarded to Sweden.[2]

Points awarded by Estonia

12 points Sweden
10 points Finland
8 points United Kingdom
7 points Israel
6 points Belgium
5 points Malta
4 points Norway
3 points Croatia
2 points Ireland
1 point Germany
Points awarded to Estonia (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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