List of Eurovision Song Contest presenters
The Eurovision Song Contest is an annual international song competition, held every year by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) since 1956. This page is a list of people who have acted as presenters of the contest.
Since 1988, it has been the norm to have at least two presenters for the contest. All contests before 1978, while only three after 1988 (i.e. the 1993, 1995 and 2013 contests), have had one presenter. The 1999 contest was the first to feature three presenters, a method that has been used most often since 2010. The contests from 2018 to 2021 all had four presenters each.
Katie Boyle holds the record for the highest number of contests hosted, with four editions (in 1960, 1963, 1968 and 1974),[1][2] followed by Petra Mede with three editions (2013, 2016 and 2024) and a special (Eurovision Song Contest's Greatest Hits in 2015).[2] The only other person to have hosted the contest more than once is Jacqueline Joubert (1959 and 1961).[2]
Presenters
[edit]Green room hosts
[edit]Year | Presenter(s) | Ref |
---|---|---|
1976 | Hans van Willigenburg | |
1980 | ||
2002 | Tiina Kimmel and Kirke Ert | |
2003 | Ilze Jaunalksne and Dīvs Reiznieks | |
2004 | Sertab Erener (final) | |
2005 | Ruslana and Wladimir Klitschko (final) | |
2007 | Krisse Salminen (final) | |
2008 | Kristina Radenković and Branislav Katić | |
2009 | Dmitry Shepelev | [72] |
2013 | Eric Saade (final) | [73] |
2015 | Conchita Wurst | |
2017 | Timur Miroshnychenko | |
2018 | Filomena Cautela | [74] |
Online host
[edit]Year | Presenter(s) | Ref |
---|---|---|
2020 | Nikkie de Jager | [75] |
2021 | Nikkie de Jager | [76] |
Special events
[edit]Year | Event | Presenter(s) | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
1981 | Songs of Europe | Rolf Kirkvaag and Titten Tei | [77] |
1993 | Kvalifikacija za Millstreet | Tajda Lekše | [78][79] |
2005 | Congratulations: 50 Years of the Eurovision Song Contest | Katrina Leskanich and Renārs Kaupers | [80] |
2015 | Eurovision Song Contest's Greatest Hits | Petra Mede and Graham Norton | [81] |
2020 | Eurovision: Europe Shine a Light | Chantal Janzen, Edsilia Rombley and Jan Smit | [82] |
Presenters born outside the host country
[edit]- Katie Boyle, born in Florence, Italy to an Italian-Russian father and a British-Australian mother
- Mireille Delannoy, born in France
- Helga Guitton, born in Königsberg, East Prussia, Germany (now Kaliningrad, Russia)[83]
- Léon Zitrone, born in Petrograd, Russian Empire (now Saint Petersburg, Russia)
- Lill Lindfors, born in Helsinki, Finland
- Åse Kleveland, born in Stockholm, Sweden to a Norwegian father and a Swedish mother
- Viktor Lazlo, born in Lorient, France
- Fionnuala Sweeney, born in Belfast, United Kingdom
- Ulrika Jonsson, born in Sollentuna, Sweden
- Terry Wogan, born in Limerick, Ireland
- Maria Menounos, born in Medford, Massachusetts, United States to Greek parents
- Nadia Hasnaoui, born in Morocco to a Moroccan father and a Norwegian mother
- Anke Engelke, born in Montréal, Quebec, Canada to German parents
- Katrina Leskanich, born in Topeka, Kansas, United States
- Graham Norton, born in Clondalkin, Ireland
- Daniela Ruah, born in Boston, Massachusetts, United States to Portuguese parents
- Mika, born in Beirut, Lebanon
- Julia Sanina, born in Kyiv, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union (now Ukraine)
Presenters who had formerly competed at Eurovision
[edit]- Corry Brokken, winner of the 1957 contest for the Netherlands, also represented the country in 1956 and 1958
- Yardena Arazi, represented Israel in 1976 as part of Chocolate, Menta, Mastik and 1988
- Lill Lindfors, represented Sweden in 1966 alongside Svante Thuresson
- Åse Kleveland, represented Norway in 1966
- Gigliola Cinquetti, winner of the 1964 contest and runner-up of the 1974 contest for Italy
- Toto Cutugno, winner of the 1990 contest for Italy
- Dafna Dekel, represented Israel in 1992
- Katrina Leskanich, winner of the 1997 contest for the United Kingdom as part of Katrina and the Waves
- Renārs Kaupers, represented Latvia in 2000 as part of Brainstorm
- Marie N, winner of the 2002 contest for Latvia
- Sakis Rouvas, represented Greece in 2004 and 2009
- Željko Joksimović, represented Serbia and Montenegro in 2004 alongside the Ad Hoc Orchestra, and Serbia in 2012
- Alsou, represented Russia in 2000
- Stefan Raab, represented Germany in 2000
- Eldar Gasimov, winner of the 2011 contest for Azerbaijan
- Måns Zelmerlöw, winner of the 2015 contest for Sweden
- Edsilia Rombley, represented the Netherlands in 1998 and 2007
Presenters who resigned
[edit]- Chaim Topol (1979)[84]
- Rene Medvešek and Dubravka Marković (1990)
- Alison Doody (1995)[85]
- Ruslana, winner of the 2004 contest (2005)[86]
- Yana Churikova (2009)[87]
Presenters' costume designers
[edit]Year | Costume designers | Ref. |
---|---|---|
1969 | Carmen Mir | |
1984 | Thomas Heurich | |
1985 | Christer Lindarw | |
1987 | Thierry Mugler | |
2001 | Isabell Kristensen | |
2002 | Aarne Niit and Katrin Kuldma | |
2007 | Erika Turunen | |
2013 | Jean-Paul Gaultier | |
2014 | Ole Yde | |
2015 | Ariane Rhomberg | |
2016 | Lars Wallin, Ida Lanto and Valerie Aflalo | |
2017 | Luvi, Indposhiv, Lake Studio and Burenina | |
2019 | Alon Livne, Galia Lahav, Vivi Bellaish, Inbal Dror and Dana Harel | |
2020 | Diek Pothoven | |
2021 | Diek Pothoven | |
2022 | Pierpaolo Piccioli, Alberta Ferretti, Rebecca Baglini, Alessandro Vigilante, Giorgio Armani and Donatella Versace |
Running order and allocation draw presenters
[edit]Prior to each year's contest, a series of draws have been held to determine differing facets of the contest's production, which typically are presided over by one or more presenters. Historically, a random drawing of lots was held prior to each year's contest to determine the order in which participating countries would perform in the final, and since 2004 in the semi-finals; this was abolished in 2013, when the running order began to be determined by the contest producers.[105]
A semi-final allocation draw has been held since 2008, to determine which countries perform in which of the two semi-finals, as well as in which semi-final the automatic finalists have voting rights. The semi-finalist countries are divided into pots based on historical voting patterns, and countries in each pot are then split equally between the two semi-finals.[106] During this draw, the countries are also assigned to perform in either the first or second half of the show; the exact running order is then determined at a later date.[107]
Opening ceremony presenters
[edit]Year | Presenter(s) | Ref |
---|---|---|
2006 | Zeta Makrypoulia and Giorgos Kapoutzidis | [136] |
2012 | Leyla Aliyeva and Nargiz Birk-Petersen | [137] |
2013 | Pernilla Månsson Colt and Kodjo Akolor | [138] |
2014 | Bryan Rice, Abdel Aziz Mahmoud , Ulla Essendrop and Peter Falktoft | [139] |
2015 | Kati Bellowitsch and Andi Knoll | [140] |
2016 | Jovan Radomir and Catarina Rolfsdotter-Jansson | [141] |
2017 | Tetyana Terekhova, Slava Varda, Andriy Kishe, Amy Grace, Neyba Traore, Hanna Butkevych and Andriy Dzhedzhula | [142] |
2018 | Cláudia Semedo , Inês Lopes Goncalves , Pedro Granger and Pedro Penim | [143] |
2019 | Noa Tishby, Shani Nachshoni, Leon Rosenberg and Nadav Abukasis | [144] |
2021[b] | Koos van Plateringen and Fenna Ramos | [146] |
2022 | Gabriele Corsi , Carolina Di Domenico, Mario Acampa and Laura Carusino | [147] |
2023 | Timur Miroshnychenko and Sam Quek[c] | [149] |
2024 | Elecktra and Tia Kofi | [150] |
Press conferences presenters
[edit]This section is missing information about previous years' press conference hosts.(May 2024) |
Year | Presenter(s) | Ref |
---|---|---|
2014 | Ulla Essendrop | |
2015 | Katharina Bellowitsch | |
2016 | Jovan Radomir and Catarina Rolfsdotter | |
2017 | Nika Konstantinova, Tetiana Terekhova and Igor Posypayko | |
2018 | Pedro Granger and Pedro Penim | [151] |
2021 | Koos van Plateringen , Hila Noorzai and Samya Hafsaoui | [152] |
2022 | Carolina Di Domenico, Mario Acampa and Laura Carusino | [153][154] |
2023 | Timur Miroshnychenko, Jermaine Foster and Mariia Vynogradova | [155] |
2024 | Jovan Radomir |
Gallery
[edit]-
1960, 1963, 1968 and 1974 hostess: Katie Boyle
-
1979 hostess: Yardena Arazi
-
1983 hostess: Marlene Charell
-
1994 host: Gerry Ryan, pictured in March 2010, one month before his death
-
2000 hostess: Kattis Ahlström
-
2003 host: Renārs Kaupers
-
2006 hostess: Maria Menounos
-
2007 hosts: Jaana Pelkonen and Mikko Leppilampi
-
2008 hosts: Jovana Janković and Željko Joksimović
-
2016 hosts: Måns Zelmerlöw and Petra Mede
-
2024 hosts: Malin Åkerman and Petra Mede
See also
[edit]Notes and references
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ The semi-final allocation draw for the cancelled 2020 contest was retained for the 2021 contest.[131]
- ^ No Opening Ceremony event was held in 2021 due to COVID-19 restrictions, only the "Turquoise Carpet" event was held.[145]
- ^ Richie Anderson provided off-screen commentary for the "Turquoise Carpet" event.[148]
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Further reading
[edit]- Roxburgh, Gordon (2020). Songs for Europe: The United Kingdom at the Eurovision Song Contest. Vol. Four: The 1990s. Prestatyn: Telos Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84583-163-9.