Lithuania in the Eurovision Song Contest 2002

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Happy You
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Eurovision Song Contest 2002
Country Lithuania
National selection
Selection process"Eurovizijos" dainų konkurso nacionalinė atranka
Selection date(s)14 February 2002
Selected entrantAivaras
Selected song"Happy You"
Selected songwriter(s)Aivaras Stepukonis
Finals performance
Final result23rd, 12 points
Lithuania in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄2001 2002 2004►

Lithuania participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 2002 with the song "Happy You" written and performed by Aivaras. The Lithuanian broadcaster Lithuanian National Radio and Television (LRT) organised the national final "Eurovizijos" dainų konkurso nacionalinė atranka (Eurovision Song Contest national selection) in order to select the Lithuanian entry for the 2002 contest in Tallinn, Estonia. The national final involved 15 competing entries and "We All" performed by B'Avarija was selected as the winner following the combination of votes from a jury panel, votes from the venue audience and a public vote, however the entry was later disqualified due to a Lithuanian version of the song being released on CD at the end of 2001 and replaced by runner-up "Happy You" performed by Aivaras.

Lithuania competed in the Eurovision Song Contest which took place on 25 May 2002. Performing as the closing entry during the show in position 24, Lithuania placed twenty-third out of the 24 participating countries, scoring 12 points.

Background

Prior to the 2002 contest, Lithuania had participated in the Eurovision Song Contest three times since its first entry in 1994.[1] The nation’s best placing in the contest was thirteenth, which it achieved in 2001 with the song "You Got Style" performed by Skamp. For the 2002 contest, the Lithuanian national broadcaster, Lithuanian National Radio and Television (LRT), broadcast the event within Lithuania and organised the selection process for the nation's entry. Lithuania has selected their debut entry in 1994 through an internal selection, while a national final procedure selected the Lithuanian entries in 1999 and 2001. LRT confirmed their intentions to participate at the 2002 Eurovision Song Contest on 24 October 2001 and announced the organization of "Eurovizijos" dainų konkurso nacionalinė atranka, which would be the national final to select Lithuania's entry for Tallinn.[2]

Before Eurovision

"Eurovizijos" dainų konkurso nacionalinė atranka

"Eurovizijos" dainų konkurso nacionalinė atranka (Eurovision Song Contest national selection) was the national final format developed by LRT in order to select Lithuania's entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 2002. The competition took place on 14 February 2002 at the Palace of Sports and Culture in Vilnius, hosted by Gabija Vitkevičiūtė and Neringa Skrudupaitė and was broadcast on LTV and LTV2.[3][4]

Competing entries

LRT opened a submission period on 24 October 2001 for artists and songwriters to submit their entries with the deadline on 31 December 2001.[2] On 8 January 2002, LRT announced the 15 entries selected for the competition from 45 submissions received.[5][6] The 13-member jury panel that selected the competing entries consisted of Jonas Vilimas (LRT music producer), Nerijus Maliukevičius (Head of LRT's foreign department), Gytis Daugėla (President of the Music Culture Support Fund), Darius Užkuraitis (Lietuvos Radijas music producer), Andrius Kairaitis (Lietuvos Radijas music editor), Daiva Rinkevičiūtė (TV Antena journalist), Simona Jansonaitė (Respublika journalist), Asta Gujytė (M-1 program director), Gintaras Zdebskis (Lietus general director), Donatas Bučelis (Radiocentras program director), Algirdas Klova (composer), Gediminas Zujus (composer) and Eugenijus Butvydas (President of the Association of Lithuanian Concert Managers).[7] On 30 January 2002, the final changes to the list of 15 competing acts were made with the disqualification of the song "Grace" performed by Aistė Pilvelytė due to it being a modification of the song "Love by Grace" by Dave Loggins and Wayne Tester. The entry was replaced with the song "Don't Ever Stop" performed by Kosmo.[8]

Artist Song Songwriter(s)
Adoms
"Q-Ba-Ba" Linas Adomaitis
Agnė "Feelings" Artūras Gaidelias
Aivaras "Happy You" Aivaras Stepukonis
B'Avarija "We All" Deivydas Zvonkus, Juozas Liesis
IF "If You Can" Vytautas Miškinis, IF
Iris "Find Your Song" Kersti Kuus, Imre Sooäär
Jolanta Tubinytė and King Lion "I Wanna Hold You" Host & Snor, King Lion
La Vita "Never" Vytautas Lebednykas, Andrius Katkus, Domas Bajorūnas, Mantas Jankavičius
Kosmo "Don't Ever Stop"
Vaidotas Valiukevičius
, Vilius Lukauskas
Markas "You're the Biggest Star of My Life" Mariaus Salynas
Naktinės Personos "I'm So in Love" Audrius Balsevičius, Alanas Chošnau
Ramūnas Difartas and Dreams "You'll Be Waiting" Ramūnas Difartas, Aras Žvirblys
Rūta Lukoševičiūtė "Hello" Dalius Pletniovas, Rūta Lukoševičiūtė
Saulės kliošas "Singing in the Night" Saulės kliošas, Jonas Jurkūnas
Simona
"Fantasy" Salim Lundquist

Final

The final of the competition took place on 14 February 2002 and featured the 15 competing entries. "We All" performed by B'Avarija was selected as the winner following the combination of votes from a jury panel (50%), the audience in the venue (25%) and public televoting (25%). The members of the jury consisted of Nijolė Ruzgienė (Head of Advertising and Information at the Vilnius Palace of Sports and Culture), Donatas Bučelis (Radiocentras program director), Linas Rimša (composer and producer), Daiva Rinkevičiūtė (Lietuvos rytas journalist), Žilvinas Žvagulis (singer), Neringa Čereškevičienė (composer), Gintaras Sodeika (Chairman of the Lithuanian Composers' Union), Jonas Vilimas (LRT music producer), Giedrius Puskunigis (composer), Gintaras Zdebskis (Lietus program director) and Darius Užkuraitis (Lietuvos Radijas music producer).[9]

Final – 14 February 2002
Draw Artist Song Jury Public Total Place
Audience Televote
1
Simona
"Fantasy" 15
2 Markas "You're the Biggest Star of My Life" 14
3 Kosmo "Don't Ever Stop" 13
4 Iris "Find Your Song" 8
5 B'Avarija "We All" 16 12 12 40 1
6 Saulės kliošas "Singing in the Night" 24 5 4 33 3
7 Jolanta Tubinytė and King Lion "I Wanna Hold You" 13 7
8 Naktinės Personos "I'm So in Love" 10 4
9 IF "If You Can" 12
10
Adoms
"Q-Ba-Ba" 9 9
11 Aivaras "Happy You" 20 8 10 38 2
12 Rūta Lukoševičiūtė "Hello" 8 5
13 Ramūnas Difartas and Dreams "You'll Be Waiting" 21 6
14 La Vita "Never" 6 10
15 Agnė "Feelings" 11

Replacement entry selection

Following B'Avarija's win during the Lithuanian national final, it was reported that "We All" had broken the Eurovision Song Contest rules as the Lithuanian version of the song, "Mes čia", was released on CD at the end of 2001.[10] On 22 March, the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) confirmed the disqualification of the song.[11] After an unsuccessful appeal made by LRT, runner-up of the national final, "Happy You" performed by Aivaras, was announced as the new Lithuanian Eurovision entry on 27 March.[12][13]

At Eurovision

Saku Suurhall
in Tallinn, Estonia.

The Eurovision Song Contest 2002 took place at

Big Four" countries, consisting of France, Germany, Spain and the United Kingdom, any eligible countries which did not compete in the 2001 contest, and countries which had obtained the highest average points total at the previous year's contest, up to 24 total participants.[15] According to Eurovision rules, all nations with the exceptions of the bottom six countries in the 2001 contest competed in the final. On 9 November 2001, an allocation draw was held which determined the running order and Lithuania was set to close the show and perform in position 24, following the entry from Latvia.[15]

The show was broadcast in Lithuania on LTV with commentary by Darius Užkuraitis.[16][17] At the end of the event, "Happy You" finished in 23rd place with 12 points, receiving points from three of the 24 participating countries.[18]

Voting

Voting during the show involved each country awarding points from 1-8, 10 and 12 as determined by either 100% televoting or a combination of 50% televoting and 50% national jury. In cases where televoting was not possible, only the votes of the eight-member national juries were tabulated.[15] The nation awarded its top 12 points to Latvia, while the highest point award it received was eight points from Latvia.[19] The Lithuanian spokesperson, who announced the Lithuanian votes during the final, was Loreta Tarozaitė. Below is a breakdown of points awarded to Lithuania and awarded by Lithuania in the contest.

References

  1. ^ "Lithuania Country Profile". EBU. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  2. ^ a b "Prasideda Nacionalinis atrankos turas į 2002 metų Euroviziją". Eurovizija.lt (in Lithuanian). 24 October 2001. Archived from the original on 30 April 2002.
  3. ^ "Lithuanian National Final 2002". Webuda. Retrieved 10 March 2019.
  4. ^ ""Eurovizija" 2002. Nacionalinė atranka" (in Lithuanian). Lithuanian National Radio and Television (LRT). 17 August 2017. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  5. ^ "Paaiškėjo 15 dainų, pretenduojančių atstovauti Lietuvai Eurovizijoje". eurovizija.lt (in Lithuanian). 8 February 2002. Archived from the original on 30 April 2002.
  6. ^ "Komisija, atrinkusi dainas 2002 m. Eurovizijos Nacionalinio turo finalui". eurovizija.lt (in Lithuanian). 21 June 2002. Archived from the original on 21 June 2002. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  7. ^ "Komisija, atrinkusi dainas 2002 m. Eurovizijos Nacionalinio turo finalui". eurovizija.lt (in Lithuanian). 30 April 2002. Archived from the original on 30 April 2002. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  8. ^ "Pranešimas spaudai". eurovizija.lt (in Lithuanian). 21 June 2002. Archived from the original on 21 June 2002. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  9. ^ "Kaip nustatytas Eurovizijos dainų konkurso Lietuvos nacionalinio turo nugalėtojas vasario 14 d." eurovizija.lt (in Lithuanian). 2 May 2002. Archived from the original on 2 May 2002. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  10. ^ "Eurovizija > Atranka > Naujienos". Eurovizija.lt (in Lithuanian). 21 June 2002. Archived from the original on 21 June 2002. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  11. ^ ""Eurovizija" išbrokavo lietuvių dainą (papildyta)". Eurovizija.lt (in Lithuanian). 21 June 2002. Archived from the original on 21 June 2002. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  12. ^ Bakker, Sietse (28 November 2002). "Lithuanian broadcaster made appeal to committee". ESCToday. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  13. ^ ""Eurovizija" atmetė "B'avarijos" apeliaciją, Lietuvai atstovaus Aivaras". DELFI (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  14. ^ "Tallinn 2002–Eurovision Song Contest". European Broadcasting Union (EBU). Archived from the original on 2 January 2021. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  15. ^ a b c "Rules of the Eurovision Song Contest 2002" (PDF). European Broadcasting Union (EBU). 28 September 2001. Retrieved 30 August 2022 – via myledbury.co.uk.
  16. ^ "Lithuania – Tallinn 2002". European Broadcasting Union (EBU). Archived from the original on 13 May 2018. Retrieved 7 December 2022.
  17. ^ Meškinytė, Adelė. ""Eurovizijos" balsas D.Užkuraitis: smagi atsiradimo konkurse istorija ir atsakymas, ką išties mano apie šou". 15min (in Lithuanian). Archived from the original on 3 December 2022. Retrieved 6 December 2022.
  18. ^ "Final of Tallinn 2002". European Broadcasting Union (EBU). Archived from the original on 8 April 2021. Retrieved 8 April 2021.
  19. ^ a b c "Results of the Final of Tallinn 2002". European Broadcasting Union (EBU). Archived from the original on 8 April 2021. Retrieved 8 April 2021.