Poland in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest

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Poland in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest
Poland
Participating broadcasterTelewizja Polska (TVP)
Participation summary
Appearances10
First appearance2003
Highest placement1st: 2018, 2019
Host2019, 2020
Participation history
Related articles
Szansa na Sukces
External links
Poland's page at JuniorEurovision.tv Edit this at Wikidata
For the most recent participation see
Poland in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2023

Poland has entered the Junior Eurovision Song Contest nine times, competing in the first contest in 2003. The Polish broadcaster Telewizja Polska (TVP) decided to withdraw from the contest after coming last in both 2003 and in 2004, despite TVP signing a 3-year contract with the European Broadcasting Union (EBU). In 2016, it was announced that Poland would return after an 11-year break. Poland is the first country in the history of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest to win twice in a row: in 2018 with Roksana Węgiel and her song "Anyone I Want to Be" and then in 2019 with Viki Gabor and her song "Superhero".

There was some debate on whether Poland could return to Junior Eurovision in 2008. TVP stated that the contestant could be chosen through the existing program Mini szansa, and would be broadcast on the secondary channel TVP2. This however did not materialise, and Poland remained out of the contest. On 14 June 2016, the Head of Music at TVP announced that Poland was considering a return to the Junior Eurovision Song Contest in 2016, after an 11-year absence from the contest. He stated that an invitation was issued to potential participants to submit songs to the broadcaster, but reaffirmed that they had not made a complete decision on whether they would actually be participating. On 30 August 2016, TVP officially confirmed that Poland would return and launched its national selection.[1]

History

Olivia Wieczorek performing at the 2016 Polish National Final.

Poland made their debut at the inaugural Junior Eurovision Song Contest in 2003. The Polish broadcaster, Telewizja Polska (TVP), were in charge of organising their entrants into the contest. Thirteen participants took part in the first national selection which was held on 28 September 2003. The winner who went on to represent Poland at the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2003 was Katarzyna Żurawik with her song "Coś mnie nosi".[2] Żurawik performed in position 7 at the contest. She finished in last place scoring 3 points. In 2004, girl group Kwadro represented country with song "Łap życie"; however, Poland again came last scoring 3 points.[2] Despite TVP signing a 3-year contract with the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), they later decided to withdraw from the contest.[3]

Poland had considered returning to Junior Eurovision in 2008, as TVP stated that the contestant could be chosen through the existing program Mini szansa, and would be broadcast on the secondary channel TVP2.[4] However, Poland decided to remain absent from the contest.[5] On 14 June 2016, the Head of Music at TVP announced that Poland was considering a return to the Junior Eurovision Song Contest in 2016, after a 12-year absence from the contest. He stated that an invitation was issued to potential participants to submit songs to the broadcaster, but reaffirmed that they had not made yet a complete decision on whether they would actually be participating.[6] On 30 August 2016, TVP officially confirmed that Poland would return and launched its national selection.[1] In 2018, the form of choosing a representative and song changed - the person representing Poland was selected internally based on the viewers' votes in the previously performed program The Voice Kids and the song was fully internally. Roksana Węgiel was as the Polish representative, competing with the song "Anyone I Want to Be". She won the contest and gave Poland its first victory in the competition. In 2019 in Gliwice, the host country used a children's talent show format, Szansa na sukces, as the selection method for their artist. Viki Gabor and her song "Superhero" represented Poland and won with 278 points. It is the second time Poland won and the first time a country won on home soil. As hosts, they finished 9th being represented by Ala Tracz and the song "I'll Be Standing", which is their worst result since 2016. In the following year, Poland achieved its third podium result by finishing in 2nd place with Sara James.

Participation overview

Roksana Węgiel in Minsk (2018)
Viki Gabor in Gliwice (2019)
Table key
1 First place
2 Second place
Last place
Upcoming event
Year Artist Song Language Place Points
2003 Kasia Żurawik "Coś mnie nosi" Polish 16 ◁ 3
2004 Kwadro "Łap życie" Polish 17 ◁ 3
2016 Olivia Wieczorek "Nie zapomnij" Polish, English 11 60
2017 Alicja Rega "Mój dom" Polish 8 138
2018 Roksana Węgiel "Anyone I Want to Be" Polish, English 1 215
2019 Viki Gabor "Superhero" Polish, English 1 278
2020 Ala Tracz "I'll Be Standing" Polish, English 9 90
2021 Sara James "Somebody" Polish, English 2 218
2022 Laura "To the Moon" Polish, English 10 95
2023 Maja Krzyżewska "I Just Need a Friend" Polish, English 6 124
2024 Confirmed intention to participate [7]

Commentators and spokespersons

The contests are broadcast online worldwide through the official Junior Eurovision Song Contest website junioreurovision.tv and YouTube. In 2015, the online broadcasts featured commentary in English by junioreurovision.tv editor Luke Fisher and 2011 Bulgarian Junior Eurovision Song Contest entrant Ivan Ivanov.[8] The Polish broadcaster, TVP, sent their own commentators to the contest in order to provide commentary in the Polish language. Spokespersons were also chosen by the national broadcaster in order to announce the awarding points from Poland. The table below list the details of each commentator and spokesperson since 2003.

Year Channel(s) Commentator Spokesperson Ref.
2003 TVP2 Jarosław Kulczycki [pl] Astrar
2004 Artur Orzech Jadwiga Jaskulski
2016 TVP1 and TVP Polonia Nicoletta Włodarczyk
2017 TVP2 Dominika Ptak
2018 TVP ABC, TVP Polonia, TVP HD Grace
2019 TVP1, TVP Polonia, TVP ABC Marianna Józefina Piątkowska
2020
2021 Marek Sierocki [pl] and Aleksander Sikora [pl] Matylda
2022 Aleksander Sikora Viki Gabor
2023 Gabriela Wojciechowicz

Hostings

Year Location Venue Presenters
2019 Gliwice Gliwice Arena[26] Ida Nowakowska, Aleksander Sikora and Roksana Węgiel[27]
2020 Warsaw Studio 5, TVP Headquarters[28] Ida Nowakowska, Małgorzata Tomaszewska and Rafał Brzozowski[29]

See also

References

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  2. ^ a b "About Kasia Zurawik". junioreurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 15 June 2016.
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  4. ^ Kuipers, Michael (20 April 2008). "Junior Eurovision 2008: Poland returns to JESC?". ESCToday. Retrieved 10 June 2009.
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  20. ^ "NIEDZIELA 19.12.2021 TV Polonia". TVP (in Polish). Archived from the original on 2021-11-22. Retrieved 2021-11-22.
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  23. ^ "Eurowizja Junior – premiera teledysku Mai Krzyżewskiej" [Junior Eurovision – premiere of Maja Krzyżewska's music video]. Telewizja Polska (in Polish). 2023-10-20. Retrieved 2023-10-21.
  24. ^ Błażewicz, Maciej (2023-10-29). "Eurowizja Junior 2023: Znamy wszystkie piosenki! Pierwsze typowania fanów. Kto wygra, które miejsce zajmie Maja Krzyżewska? Zmiany w polskiej ekipie – na scenie będzie skromniej" [Junior Eurovision 2023: We know all the songs! First fan predictions. Who will win, which place will Maja Krzyzewska take? Changes in the Polish team – the stage will be more modest]. Dziennik Eurowizyjny (in Polish). Retrieved 2023-11-24.
  25. ^ Błażewicz, Maciej (2023-11-24). "Eurowizja Junior: To ona poda punkty z Polski! Będzie to jej trzeci konkurs na żywo • Głosowanie online: Wspieramy swoich faworytów! Maja Krzyżewska walczy o jak najlepszy wynik • Sobotnie próby i relacje" [Junior Eurovision: She will be the one to give the points from Poland! This will be her third live contest • Online voting: Support your favourites! Maja Krzyzewska fights for the best possible result • Saturday's rehearsals and coverage]. Dziennik Eurowizyjny (in Polish). Retrieved 2023-11-24.
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