France in the Eurovision Song Contest 1978

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Eurovision Song Contest 1978
Country France
National selection
Selection processNational final
Selection date(s)Semi-finals:
12 March 1978
19 March 1978
Final:
26 March 1978
Selected entrantJoël Prévost
Selected song"Il y aura toujours des violons"
Selected songwriter(s)
Finals performance
Final result3rd, 119 points
France in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1977 1978 1979►

France was represented by Joël Prévost, with the song "Il y aura toujours des violons", at the 1978 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 22 April in Paris following Marie Myriam's victory for France the previous year.

Before Eurovision

National final

Broadcaster TF1 again opted for a public selection, with two semi-finals followed by the final on 26 March 1976.

Semi-finals

Each semi-final contained seven songs, with the top three in each going forward to the final. The qualifiers were chosen by public televoting. One of the successful participants in the first semi-final was 1967 French representative Noëlle Cordier.[1]

Final

The final took place on 26 March 1978, hosted by Evelyn Leclercq. The winner was chosen by public televoting. It was later rumoured that "Laisse pleurer les rivières" was the preferred option of TF1, who had given it the advantageous first performance slot, and were taken aback when it was decisively beaten into second place by a song which had not even won its semi-final.[2]

Final – 26 March 1978
Draw Artist Song Televote Place
1 Irvin and Indira "Laisse pleurer les rivières" 8,915 2
2 Malvina "Au revoir et peut-être à bientôt" 2,000 6
3 Violette Vial "Je te promets de revenir" 2,621 5
4 Jean-Paul Cara "Alors prends le soleil" 4,896 3
5 Joël Prévost "Il y aura toujours des violons" 13,791 1
6 Noëlle Cordier "Tombe l'eau" 2,870 4

At Eurovision

On the night of the final Prévost performed 6th in the running order, following Portugal and preceding Spain. "Il y aura toujours des violons" was a very traditional old-style Eurovision ballad with little relevance to contemporary music. However it had a memorable melody, and at the close of voting had picked up 119 points, placing France third of the 20 entries.[3] It achieved the distinction of becoming only the second non-winning Eurovision song – following Catherine Ferry's "Un, deux, trois" in 1976, also for France – ever to receive votes from every other national jury, completing a hat-trick of consecutive contests in which every other national jury had voted for the French song, a record which still stands. The French jury awarded its 12 points to Belgium.[4]

Voting

References

  1. ^ National Finals database 1978 Semis
  2. ^ ESC National Finals database 1978 Archived 9 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Final of Paris 1978". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 11 April 2021. Retrieved 11 April 2021.
  4. ^ ESC History - France 1978
  5. ^ a b "Results of the Final of Paris 1978". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 11 April 2021. Retrieved 11 April 2021.