Broadcasters from twenty-two countries submitted entries, however,Cyprus ultimately rescinded its entry after its selected song was determined to have been performed several years prior to the contest, breaking the contest rules. The winner wasSwitzerland with the song "Ne partez pas sans moi", composed byAtilla Şereftuğ, with lyrics byNella Martinetti, and performed byCéline Dion. It was Switzerland's second contest win, and remains as of 2025[update] the last winning song to be performed in French. TheUnited Kingdom,Denmark,Luxembourg, andNorway rounded out the top five positions, with the UK achieving its eleventh runner-up placing, whileAustria placed last for the sixth time, receivingnul points for the second time.
The 1988 contest took place inDublin, Ireland, following the country's victory at the1987 edition with the song "Hold Me Now", performed byJohnny Logan. It was the third time that Ireland had hosted the contest, following the1971 and1981 events also held in Dublin.[1]
The selected venue was theSimmonscourt Pavilion of theRoyal Dublin Society, a multi-purpose venue situated in theBallsbridge area of the city, which had previously hosted the 1981 contest.[2][3] RDS Simmonscourt, following construction of the stage and other technical elements, was expected to accommodate approximately 1,500 audience members.[2]
This section contains numerous links to pages onforeign language Wikipedias. They are shown asred links with the language codes in [small blue letters] in brackets. Click on the language code to see the page in that language.
Eurovision Song Contest 1988 – Participation summaries by country
Broadcasters from the same twenty-two countries that had participated theprevious year submitted entries for the 1988 contest, with the draw to determine the running order of the entries held on 11 December 1987.[4] However, a number of weeks before the event, it was discovered that the song selected to representCyprus, "Thimame", written by John Vickers and Aristos Moschovakis, and sung by Yiannis Dimitrou, had previously competed in the1984 Cypriot national selection under the title "San to rok-en-rol", and was therefore ineligible to compete at the contest.[2][5][6] TheCyprus Broadcasting Corporation (CyBC) subsequently announced on 12 March 1988 that it had nullified the selection of "Thimame" as its entry; as the rules of the national selection did not provide for a second-placed song to be declared, and as there was not enough time to stage a second selection process to determine a replacement entry, CyBC was ultimately unable to participate in the contest.[2][5][7]
Each participating delegation could nominate a separate musical director to lead the orchestra during its country's performance, with the host musical director also available toconduct for those countries that did not nominate their own conductor. All entries were accompanied by the orchestra, except forIceland andItaly, who were accompanied solely by backing track. In the case of the Italian entry, the backing track used featured the contest's firstfade-out ending.[15]
The Eurovision Song Contest 1988 was produced by the Irish public broadcasterRadio Telefís Éireann (RTÉ). Liam Miller served as executive producer,Declan Lowney served as director, Paula Farrell and Michael Grogan served as designers, andNoel Kelehan served as musical director, leading theRTÉ Concert Orchestra.[18][19][20] On behalf of the contest organisers, theEuropean Broadcasting Union (EBU), the event was overseen by Frank Naef asexecutive supervisor.[21][22][23] The presenters of the contest were broadcasterPat Kenny, and television announcer andMiss Ireland 1980Michelle Rocca; the duo were announced by RTÉ in February 1988 following auditions held in the previous weeks.[24][25] It was the first time since1979 that more than one person had presented the contest.[26]
Several technical innovations and improvements were introduced with the 1988 contest, spearheaded by Miller and Lowney, whose goal was to increase the contest's appeal among a younger audience.[27][28] The traditional physicalscoreboard was replaced by a computer-generated version, displayed on twovideo walls provided byPhilips and constructed on either side of the stage.[18][27][29] These video walls also displayed the performances and footage of the artists in the green room during the voting sequence, allowing the audience in the arena to see the televised footage within the venue for the first time.[28] Similar to the previous year's edition, the 1988 contest implemented a modern feel within both the stage design by Paula Farrell and Michael Grogan, and the graphic design by Maria Quigley.[27][30] The stage, at over 40 metres (130 ft) in length, was the largest ever built for the contest at that point, and took up almost a third of the 18,000 m2 (190,000 sq ft) space within the Simmonscourt Pavilion.[2][18][28] The stage design, which created an illusion of depth, alongside tight camera shots of the audience and creative lighting use, resulted in an overall impression that the contest was being held in a vast and packed arena, rather than the modest space of the Simmonscourt Pavilion.[18][28]
Rehearsals for the participating artists began on 25 April 1988. Two technical rehearsals were conducted for each participating delegation in the week approaching the contest, with countries rehearsing in the order in which they would perform. The first rehearsals, comprising a 15-minute stage call and 35-minute performance, were held on 25 and 26 April, followed by a press conference for each delegation and the accredited press. Each country's second rehearsals were held on 27 and 28 April, with a 10-minute stage call and 25 minutes for performances. On 28 April, the contest venue received a visit from theTaoiseachCharles Haughey.[31] Three dress rehearsals were held with all artists, held in the afternoon and evening of 29 April and in the afternoon of 30 April; the second rehearsal was filmed with a live audience present as a production stand-by in case the live event was disrupted.[4] During the contest week,Sweden'sTommy Körberg had been suffering from a throat infection; although he was able to perform during the event-proper, the songwriter of the Swedish entry,Py Bäckman, performed the entry in his stead at the 29 April evening dress rehearsal.[32][33]
Each participating country submitted one song limited to three minutes or less and performed in the language, or one of the languages, of the country which it represented.[34][35] Up to six performers were allowed on stage during each entry, accompanied by the orchestra and/or abacking track; any backing tracks had to include all the instruments featured on stage beingmimed by the performers and could not contain vocals of any kind.[34][36][37]
The results of the 1988 contest were determined through the scoring system introduced in1975: each country awarded twelve points to its favourite entry, followed by ten points to its second favourite, and then awarded points in decreasing value from eight to one for the remaining eight songs in the country's top ten, with countries unable to vote for their own entry.[38] The points awarded by each country were determined by an assembled jury of sixteen individuals, who were all required to be members of the public with no connection to the music industry, split evenly between men and women and across four age groups: 15–25, 26–35, 36–45, and 46–60. Each jury member voted in secret and awarded between one and ten votes to each participating song, excluding that from their own country and with no abstentions permitted; these votes were placed at the end of each country's performance and collected and tallied by the non-voting jury chairperson, who determined the points distribution after all countries had performed. When two or more songs in the top ten received the same number of votes, a show of hands by all jury members was used to determine the final placing.[39] The jury composition and voting process were modified slightly compared to the 1987 contest, due to the increase in the number of participating countries in recent years, expanding from eleven members who awarded between one and five votes for each song.[39][40]
As established at the1970 contest, in the event that two or more countries finished in first place with the same number of points after all countries had awarded their points, the artists representing these countries would perform their entries again, and the juries in all countries not involved in the tie-break would determine the winner, with each country's jury selecting their favourite of the entries by a show of hands of all jurors. If after all countries had determined their favourites and there was still a tie for first place, the countries involved in this tie would be declared joint winners.[41][42][43]
The contest took place on 30 April 1988 at 20:00 (IST) with a duration of 2 hours and 50 minutes.[18][44] Had Cyprus participated as planned, the country had been drawn to perform in position number two.[2][44]
The contest was opened by a video montage highlightingancient Celtic structures, items andmythology pertaining toprehistoric Ireland, transitioning to footage of modern-day Ireland and Dublin. This was followed by a performance of the previous year's winning entry, "Hold Me Now", byJohnny Logan.[45] The interval act was the Irish rock groupHothouse Flowers, with a music video of their song "Don't Go"; the group's lead singerLiam Ó Maonlaí also appeared on stage before the music video played to explain the meaning behind the song – first in Irish, then in English – while playing piano.[28][45][46] The music video, featuring the Hothouse Flowers performing the song in eleven European countries, received funding from theEuropean Economic Community as part of the organisation's goal of advancingEuropean integration.[28][47] The trophy awarded to the winners was presented at the end of the broadcast by Johnny Logan.[48]
Each participating broadcaster appointed a spokesperson, connected to the contest venue viatelephone lines and responsible for announcing, in English or French, the votes for its respective country.[34][57] Known spokespersons at the 1988 contest are listed below.
Jury voting was used to determine the points awarded by all countries.[64] The results were announced in the order of performance, with the spokespersons announcing their country's points in English or French in ascending order.[45][64] The detailed breakdown of the points awarded by each country is listed in the tables below.
The 1988 contest has become notable for its tense voting sequence right until the final jury announced its points. With three countries left to vote, the United Kingdom had a fifteen-point lead over Switzerland, however, this gap was closed to only five points going into the final jury. When the Yugoslav jury awarded Switzerland 6 points, it appeared that victory was within reach for the UK as the camera cut to a crestfallen Céline Dion in the green room. However, the British entry received no points from Yugoslavia, leading Switzerland to win the contest by one point.[27][64] It remains one of the closest margins of victory in the contest's history, and the closest result since1969, when there was a four-way tie for first place. It also marked the second time that the UK had come in second place with only one point separating it from the winner, following the1968 contest.[64]
Detailed voting results of the Eurovision Song Contest 1988[65][66]
The below table summarises how the maximum 12 points were awarded from one country to another. The winning country is shown in bold. Denmark, Luxembourg, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and Yugoslavia received the maximum score of 12 points from three of the voting countries, the Netherlands received two sets of 12 points, and France, Ireland, Norway and Sweden each received one maximum score.[65][66]
Distribution of 12 points awarded at the Eurovision Song Contest 1988[65][66]
Each participating broadcaster was required to relay the contest via its networks. Non-participating EBU member broadcasters could also relay the contest as "passive participants".[36] Broadcasters were able to provide commentary, enabling coverage of the contest in their own native language and to relay information about the artists and songs to their viewers,[36][67][68] with 33 booths constructed in the contest venue to accommodate commentators on-site in Dublin covering the event.[69] Over 40 television and radio broadcasters were expected to relay the event, with an estimated audience of 600 million viewers.[69][70] The contest was also reportedly broadcast in the countries of Eastern Europe viaIntervision, and in Australia and South Korea.[71]
Known details on the broadcasts in each country, including the specific broadcasting stations and commentators are shown in the tables below.
Broadcasters and commentators in participating countries
Francophone artistsCéline Dion(left; pictured in 2013) andLara Fabian(right; pictured in 2022) both achieved global success following the contest.
The 1988 contest is considered to be the launchpad for Switzerland's winning artistCéline Dion and Luxembourg'sLara Fabian, contributing to their global notability and success.[18]
Although Dion's winning song "Ne partez pas sans moi" was not a major commercial success in singles charts across Europe, winning the contest provided a sizeable boost to her global platform, and reportedly allowed her manager and future husbandRené Angélil to successfully negotiate a four-fold budget increase for her first English-language album,Unison.[27][132] This album sold over four million copies upon its release in 1990 and has since beencertified gold in France and the UK,[133][134] platinum in the United States,[135] and seven-times platinum in Canada.[136] Dion performed the album's lead single, "Where Does My Heart Beat Now", as an opening act at thefollowing year's contest.[51] It became her first global hit, peaking at number four on theBillboard Hot 100 in the US in addition to hitting the top 20 in Norway, Ireland and France.[137][138][139][140] Dion has since become one of theworld's best-selling music artists, with more than 200 million total global album sales.[141]
Belgian-born Fabian moved to Quebec in the years following the contest, where she embarked on a career in French-speaking North America, gaining success with herself-titled debut album in 1991 and breaking through further with follow-up albumCarpe diem in 1994.[142] English-language success would soon follow, with the release of the albumLara Fabian and her first English-language single "I Will Love Again", which charted within the top 40 on theBillboard Hot 100 and topped the magazine'sDance Club Songs chart, in 2000.[142][143][144] With over 20 million album sales worldwide, Fabian is considered thebest-selling Belgian-born female artist of all time and among the best-selling Belgian-born artists in general.[145][146]
"Ne partez pas sans moi" was subsequently nominated in 2005 to compete inCongratulations: 50 Years of the Eurovision Song Contest, a special broadcast organised as a part of the contest's anniversary celebrations to determine the contest's most popular entry of its first 50 year run. One of 14 entries chosen to compete, the song ultimately finished in tenth place.[147][148][149]
In the UK, entertainerBruce Forsyth, whose daughter Julie wrote "Go", nominatedYugoslavia on the TV showRoom 101, where celebrities nominate things to be banished from the world. Forsyth said that Yugoslavia needed to give the UK one point in order to win the contest, but they gave them nothing, leading to Dion's victory. Dion later appeared onThe National Lottery Live when Forsyth was hosting, during which Forsyth made reference to Dion beating his daughter, but blamed Yugoslavia for the loss. Yugoslavia was not banished.[150]
^"Ξεκαθαρίζει σήμερα το θέμα με Γιουροβίζιον" [Clarifies the issue with Eurovision today].Mesimvrini (in Greek). Nicosia, Cyprus. 28 February 1988. p. 2. Retrieved31 October 2024 – via Cyprus Press and Information Office.
^"Η Κύπρος δεν μετέχει στη 'Γιουροβίζιον'" [Cyprus does not participate in Eurovision].Haravgi (in Greek). Nicosia, Cyprus. 13 March 1988. p. 16. Retrieved31 October 2024 – via Cyprus Press and Information Office.
^abc"How it works". European Broadcasting Union (EBU). 18 May 2019.Archived from the original on 31 May 2022. Retrieved2 November 2022.
^"Jerusalem 1999". European Broadcasting Union (EBU).Archived from the original on 21 June 2022. Retrieved29 June 2022.
^abc"The Rules of the Contest". European Broadcasting Union (EBU). 31 October 2018.Archived from the original on 4 October 2022. Retrieved24 October 2023.
^"Euroviisut Dublinista" [Eurovision from Dublin].Helsingin Sanomat (in Finnish). Helsinki, Finland. 30 April 1988. p. 53.Archived from the original on 26 May 2024. Retrieved23 December 2022.
^RTL Télévision Eurovision 1988promo. April 1988.C'est en direct du Royal Dublin Society que Valérie Sarn assurera les commentaires de cette grande soirée. [It's live from the Royal Dublin Society that Valérie Sarn will provide the commentary for this great evening.]
^"P2 – Kjøreplan lørdag 30. april 1988" [P2 – Timetable Saturday 30 April 1988] (in Norwegian).NRK. 30 April 1988. p. 3. Retrieved15 January 2023 – via National Library of Norway.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
^"Televisão" [Television].Diário de Lisboa (in Portuguese).Lisbon, Portugal. 30 April 1988. p. 27.Archived from the original on 26 May 2024. Retrieved15 January 2023 – via Casa Comum.
^"TV-programmen" [TV programmes].Svenska Dagbladet (in Swedish). Stockholm, Sweden. 30 April 1988. p. 23.
^"Radioprogrammen" [Radio programmes].Svenska Dagbladet (in Swedish). Stockholm, Sweden. 30 April 1988. p. 23.
^"Samedi TV – 30 avril" [Saturday TV – 30 April].Radio TV8 (in French). Vol. 66, no. 16. Lausanne, Switzerland. 21 April 1988. pp. 60–63. Retrieved15 January 2023 – viaScriptorium.
^"Televizyon" [Television].Cumhuriyet (in Turkish). Istanbul, Turkey. 30 April 1988. p. 4.Archived from the original on 15 January 2023. Retrieved15 January 2023.
"Televizió" [Television].Magyar Szó (in Hungarian).Novi Sad, Yugoslavia. 30 April – 2 May 1988. p. 32. Retrieved18 June 2024 – viaVajdasági Magyar Digitális Adattár.
^"Το αποψινο προγραμμα" [Tonight's programme].I Simerini (in Greek). Nicosia, Cyprus. 30 April 1988. p. 4.Archived from the original on 26 May 2024. Retrieved4 March 2024 – via Press and Information Office.
^"Ραδιόφωνο" [Radio].O Phileleftheros (in Greek). Nicosia, Cyprus. 30 April 1988. p. 2.Archived from the original on 26 May 2024. Retrieved4 March 2024 – via Press and Information Office.
^ab"neděle 29.5" [Sunday 29/05].Rozhlas [cs] (in Czech). Vol. 66, no. 22.Prague, Czech Socialist Republic, Czechoslovakia. 16 May 1988. p. 15. Retrieved21 June 2024 – viaKramerius [cs].
^ab"KNR-TV".Atuagagdliutit (in Kalaallisut and Danish).Nuuk, Greenland. 2 May 1988. p. 16. Retrieved15 July 2024 – via Timarit.is.
^"Szombat" [Saturday].7 Nap [hu] (in Hungarian). Vol. 43, no. 18.Subotica, Yugoslavia. 29 April 1988. pp. 56–57. Retrieved8 December 2024 – viaVajdasági Magyar Digitális Adattár.
^ab"L. 28. V" [S. 28/05].Televisioon (in Estonian). No. 22.Tallinn, Soviet Union. 23–29 May 1988. pp. 6–7. Retrieved21 June 2024 – viaDIGAR [et].
^ab"Телевидение, программа на неделю" [Television, weekly programme](PDF).Pravda (in Russian). Moscow, Soviet Union. 28 May 1988. p. 6.Archived(PDF) from the original on 19 February 2018. Retrieved15 January 2023.
Thorsson, Leif; Verhage, Martin (2006).Melodifestivalen genom tiderna : de svenska uttagningarna och internationella finalerna [Melodifestivalen through the ages: the Swedish selections and international finals] (in Swedish). Stockholm, Sweden: Premium Publishing.ISBN91-89136-29-2.