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Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest 1970

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Eurovision Song Contest 1970
Participating broadcasterTelevisión Española (TVE)
Country Spain
National selection
Selection process2º Festival de la Canción Española
Selection date(s)Semi-finals
12 February 1970
13 February 1970
Final
14 February 1970
Selected artist(s)Julio Iglesias
Selected song"Gwendolyne"
Selected songwriter(s)Julio Iglesias
Finals performance
Final result4th, 8 points
Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1969 1970 1971►

Spain was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 1970 with the song "Gwendolyne", written and performed by Julio Iglesias. The Spanish participating broadcaster, Televisión Española (TVE), selected its entry through a national final.

Before Eurovision

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2º Festival de la Canción Española

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To select its entry, Televisión Española (TVE) organised the 2º Festival de la Canción Española at the Palau Nacional in Barcelona on 12–14 February 1970, hosted by Laura Valenzuela and Joaquín Prat. It was the second and final edition of the Festival. Twenty songs competed over three shows, with the winner song being decided upon through regional jury voting.

Competing entries

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Twenty compositions were selected to compete in the national final by the broadcaster, with two designated acts per song. As regulations only allowed a maximum of three performers and three backing vocalists, groups were able to compete by designating one or two vocalists, with the rest of the group featuring as backing vocalists. Some performers that had been initially selected withdrew or were replaced before the live shows.[1]

Artist 1
(Credited singer)
Artist 2
(Credited singer)
Song Songwriter(s)
Johnny Valentino Ángela Escribano "Balada de invierno" María José de Ceratto
Los Dos Los 80 Centavos (Asunción) "Balada del maderero" Rafael García Loza, Julio Mengod
Elena Ernesto "Bienvenido" Vicente Roca, Joan Solé Tutusaus
Karlo y las Hermanas Ros Los Musicales (Beatriz y Ester) "Carrusel" Joan Serracant, Vicente Sabater
Jaime Morey Maya[a] "De pronto, tú" Aurora Sánchez-Sousa, José Luís Pecker
Los Mismos (Helena) Gaby Berger "Don Juan" Lucía Graves, Ramón Farrán
Franciska Nino Bravo "Esa será mi casa" Enrique Carnicer, Carmen Fons, Álvaro Sebastián
Rafaleón Los Valldemosa (Margaluz y Rafael) "Fiesta" Lucía Graves, Ramón Farrán
Julio Iglesias[b] Rosy Armen[b][c] "Gwendolyne" Julio Iglesias
Karolyne Albert Band (Albert) "Hoy quiero cantar" Joan Solé Tutusaus, Vicente Roca
Manolo, de Los Catiros[d] Rosalía "Igual que yo" Luisa Margarita Girón
Basilio Voces Amigas (Javier de Miguel) "Jamás la olvidaré" Pablo Herrero, Carlos Fernández-Prida
Los Gritos (Manolo Galván) Cristina "Me gusta, me gusta" Ramón Simó, José Solá
Julio Ramos Tuset 31 (Jordi y José María) "Novia para Miguel" Juan Carlos Calderón
Luisita Tenor[e] Rosa Mary y Javier "Sí, después" Javier Vidal
Donna Hightower[f] Julián Granados "Soy feliz" Alfonso Sainz
Errol y Los Tops Altamira 3 "Tal vez mañana" Carlos Bermúdez
Luciana Wolf Vicente Pizarro "Un manantial de barro" José Ángel Cardona, Miguel Ángel Tapia
Voces Amigas (Tony) Mocedades (Sergio y Estíbaliz) "Un mundo mejor" José Luís Armenteros, Pablo Herrero
Mocedades (Rafael Blanco) Tuset 31 (Javier) "Viejo marino" Pedro Iturralde, Alberto Bourbon

Semi-finals

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The semi-finals took place on 12 and 13 February 1970. On both shows, ten songs were first performed by one of its assigned singers, and then again by the other singer. After the second semi-final, ten songs qualified for the final through jury voting from 15 regional Radio Nacional de España, TVE, and Radio Peninsular studios, each distributing five votes among their favourite songs. The number of votes received by each song was announced, but were not reflected in the official TV excerpts from semi-final 2, or in contemporary reports.

Semi-final 1 – 12 February 1970
Draw Artist Song Result
First act Second act
1 Elena Ernesto "Bienvenido" Eliminated
2 Karlo y las Hermanas Ros Los Musicales "Carrusel" Eliminated
3 Jaime Morey Maya "De pronto, tú" Qualified
4 Franciska Nino Bravo "Esa será mi casa" Eliminated
5 Rafaleón Los Valldemosa "Fiesta" Qualified
6 Rosalía Manolo, de Los Catiros "Igual que yo" Qualified
7 Luisita Tenor Rosa Mary y Javier "Sí, después" Qualified
8 Los Dos Los 80 Centavos "Balada del maderero" Qualified
9 Voces Amigas Mocedades "Un mundo mejor" Qualified
10 Basilio Voces Amigas "Jamás la olvidaré" Qualified
Semi-final 2 – 13 February 1970
Draw Artist Song Result
First act Second act
1 Julio Iglesias Rosy Armen "Gwendolyne" Qualified
2 Cristina Los Gritos "Me gusta, me gusta" Qualified
3 Mocedades Tuset 31 "Viejo marino" Eliminated
4 Luciana Wolf Vicente Pizarro "Un manantial de barro" Eliminated
5 Julio Ramos Tuset 31 "Novia para Miguel" Eliminated
6 Donna Hightower Julián Granados "Soy feliz" Qualified
7 Johnny Valentino Ángela Escribano "Balada de invierno" Eliminated
8 Los Mismos Gaby Berger "Don Juan" Eliminated
9 Karolyne Albert Band "Hoy quiero cantar" Eliminated
10 Errol y Los Tops Altamira 3 "Tal vez mañana" Eliminated

Final

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The final took place on 14 February 1970. As in the semi-finals, each song was performed twice by its different performers. In the event that the winner song had two Spanish singers, the juries would vote again to decide which artist would perform the song at the Eurovision Song Contest; if the song was shared with a foreign artist, the Spanish singer would become the Eurovision representative. 15 regional juries, each distributing five votes among their favourite songs, selected "Gwendolyne" as the winning song. As Rosy Armen was a French singer, Julio Iglesias was automatically chosen as the Spanish artist for Eurovision.[2][3]

Final – 14 February 1970
Draw Artist Song Points Place
First act Second act
1 Manolo, de Los Catiros Rosalía "Igual que yo" 0 8
2 Los Dos Los 80 Centavos "Balada del maderero" 6 4
3 Jaime Morey Maya "De pronto, tú" 5 5
4 Rafaleón Los Valldemosa "Fiesta" 7 3
5 Basilio Voces Amigas "Jamás la olvidaré" 13 2
6 Voces Amigas Mocedades "Un mundo mejor" 4 6
7 Luisita Tenor Rosa Mary y Javier "Sí, después" 0 8
8 Julio Iglesias Rosy Armen "Gwendolyne" 37 1
9 Los Gritos Cristina "Me gusta, me gusta" 0 8
10 Donna Hightower Julián Granados "Soy feliz" 3 7
Detailed Regional Jury Results
Draw Song
Las Palmas
Cuenca
Tenerife
La Coruña
Barcelona (RNE)
Málaga
Oviedo
Murcia
Sevilla
San Sebastián
Zaragoza
Barcelona (TVE)
Madrid (RNE)
Valencia
Madrid (TVE)
Total
1 "Igual que yo" 0
2 "Balada del maderero" 1 1 1 1 1 1 6
3 "De pronto, tú" 1 1 1 1 1 5
4 "Fiesta" 1 3 3 7
5 "Jamás la olvidaré" 5 1 1 2 2 2 13
6 "Un mundo mejor" 1 3 4
7 "Sí, después" 0
8 "Gwendolyne" 4 3 1 3 5 2 2 1 4 1 3 4 4 37
9 "Me gusta, me gusta" 0
10 "Soy feliz" 2 1 3

At Eurovision

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The Eurovision Song Contest 1970 was held on 21 March 1970 at the RAI Congrescentrum in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Julio Iglesias performed "Gwendolyne" ninth in the running order, following Luxembourg and preceding Monaco. Augusto Algueró conducted the event's orchestra performance of the Spanish entry. The song received 8 points, tying for the fourth place with France and Switzerland.

Voting

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Notes

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  1. ^ Replacement for Henry Stephen, who was originally selected.
  2. ^ a b "Trio La La La" provided the backing vocals and were credited by the hosts.
  3. ^ Replacement for Andee Silver, who was originally selected.
  4. ^ Replacement for Victoriano Ortiz, who was originally selected.
  5. ^ Replacement for J. Thomas, who was originally selected.
  6. ^ Replacement for Tony Ronald, who was originally selected.

References

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  1. ^ "Edición del domingo, 01 febrero 1970, página 9 - Hemeroteca - Lavanguardia.es". hemeroteca.lavanguardia.com. Retrieved 26 December 2021.
  2. ^ del Amor Caballero, Reyes (20 May 2004). "Segunda parte de las preselecciones españolas, 1970-2004". eurovision-spain.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 1 March 2008.
  3. ^ "Spain National Final 1970". natfinals.50webs.com.
  4. ^ a b "Results of the Final of Amsterdam 1970". Eurovision Song Contest. Archived from the original on 8 April 2021. Retrieved 8 April 2021.