Russia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2014

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Eurovision Song Contest 2014
Country Russia
National selection
Selection processInternal selection
Selection date(s)Artist: 15 March 2014
Song: 19 March 2014
Selected entrantTolmachevy Sisters
Selected song"Shine"
Selected songwriter(s)
Finals performance
Semi-final resultQualified (6th, 63 points)
Final result7th, 89 points
Russia in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄2013 2014 2015►

Russia-1 (RTR). The Tolmachevy Sisters, winners of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2006
, represented Russia with the song "Shine", which qualified from the first semi-final and placed 7th in the final, scoring 89 points.

Before Eurovision

Internal selection

On 1 September 2013, RTR announced that a national final, titled Kto?, would take place on 31 December 2013 to select the Russian entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 2014. RTR opened a submission period for interested artists and composers to submit their entries and a jury panel was to evaluate the received submissions and select 25 entries for the competition, however RTR announced in December 2013 that the national final would be postponed until March 2014 and the submission deadline would be extended until 28 February 2014.[1][2] Plans for the national final were later abandoned by the broadcaster due to the poor quality of submitted songs.[3]

On 15 March 2014, RTR announced that they had internally selected the

Hold Me.[7]

Competing entries

Internal selection – Known submitted entries
better source needed
]
Artist Song
23:45 feat. Fidel Wicked "Dance With Me"
Alex Jaysen "Mysterious"
Alex Malinovsky Unknown
Alexander Elovskih "One Picture of My Life"
Alexander Project feat. Victoria-Viera "Give Me Your Hand"
Alexey Serov "I Am"
Boris Dyakov Unknown
Buranovskiye Babushki "Breeze"[9]
D-Bosch Unknown
DaKi "Criminal"
Daniel Pride "Black Heart"
Denesh Unknown
Dima Lutfullin "Neon"
Egor Lutsenko "Emotsiya lyubvi" (Эмоция любви)
Elya Chavez "Ty so mnoy, ya s toboy" (Ты со мной, я с тобой)
Ilya Gurov "Beautiful"
"Lose Control"
Ivan-da-Marya "Igray garmon" (Играй гармонь)
Katya Volkova "Otkroy svoye serdtse" (Открой свое сердце)
Marina Sudas "Dusha" (Душа)
Metodie Bujor Unknown
Natanika "As I Desired"
Nelly Turchina "Zoe"
Oleg Sidorov and Point Charlie "Playing With a Life"
Olga Makovetskaya "Proydyot" (Пройдёт)
Olstan van Guard "How Do You Feel"
Payushchie Trusy "Moo-Moo"
Polina Smolova "Sometimes"
Sergey Savin "Fearless Loving"
Shinshilli "We Could Try"
Sofi "Paris"
Sofya and Alyona Kankur "Rour Is Ap"
Soprano 10 Unknown
Svetlana Surganova Unknown
Syostry Syo Unknown
Tim Chikovani and Sergey Ashihmin "Ne zabyt'" (Не забыть)
Tolmachevy Sisters "Shine"
Vadim Simonov "Iyeroglif" (Иероглиф)
Vahtang Unknown
Vasilina Kee and Funky Fraers "Tvoy den'" (Твой день)
Victoria Petryk
Unknown
Vlad Tarkovsky "You Are My Revolution"
Zetandel feat. Victoria Ray "Never Say Never"
Zlat Khabibulin Unknown

At Eurovision

The Tolmachevy Sisters presenting their song
The Tolmachevy Sisters at the first semi-final dress rehearsal
The Tolmachevy Sisters with their moving platform stage prop

During the semi-final allocation draw on 20 January 2014 at the Copenhagen City Hall, Russia was drawn to compete in the first half of the first semi-final on 6 May 2014.[10] In the first semi-final, the producers of the show decided that Russia would perform 7th, following Albania and preceding Azerbaijan.[11] Russia qualified from the first semi-final and competed in the final on 10 May 2014.[12] During the winner's press conference for the first semi-final qualifiers, Russia was allocated to compete in the second half of the final.[13] In the final, the producers of the show decided that Russia would perform 15th, following France and preceding Italy.[14] Russia placed 7th in the final, scoring 89 points.[15]

At the contest, the Tolmachevy Sisters were joined on stage by four backing vocalists: Anna Nilsson, Jenny Tärneberg, Anna Strandberg and Rui Andrade.

better source needed] The Russian performance featured the Tolmachevy Sisters performing with long translucent sticks and interacting with a platform that moved like a balance and eventually opened into a white sun-like canvas.[17]

Following the revelation of Russia's qualification into the final during the broadcast of the first semi-final, the announcement was met by an audible booing from the venue audience . The negative reaction was believed to be a response to Russia's involvement in the

In Russia, both the semi-finals and the final were broadcast on Russia-1 with commentary by Olga Shelest and Dmitriy Guberniev.[19][20] The Russian spokesperson revealing the result of the Russian vote in the final was 2000 Russian contest entrant and Eurovision Song Contest 2009 final co-presenter Alsou.[21]

Voting

Points awarded to Russia

Points awarded by Russia

Detailed voting results

The following five members comprised the Russian jury:[24]

Detailed voting results from Russia (Semi-final 1)[25]
Draw Country S. Zhilin M. Mitrofanova L. Rudenko D. Joker Y. Nachalova Jury Rank Televote Rank Combined Rank Points
01  Armenia 4 1 4 2 3 3 1 1 12
02  Latvia 14 8 15 10 8 11 11 12
03  Estonia 2 7 10 7 5 5 14 11
04  Sweden 11 11 11 6 9 9 6 5 6
05  Iceland 15 13 13 12 11 15 10 13
06  Albania 13 14 8 11 15 13 15 15
07  Russia
08  Azerbaijan 3 2 3 1 2 2 3 2 10
09  Ukraine 7 5 5 5 6 4 2 4 7
10  Belgium 8 10 2 8 4 7 9 7 4
11  Moldova 5 4 9 4 10 6 12 10 1
12  San Marino 9 15 12 9 12 12 5 8 3
13  Portugal 12 9 14 13 13 14 13 14
14  Netherlands 10 6 7 15 14 10 7 9 2
15  Montenegro 6 12 6 14 7 8 8 6 5
16  Hungary 1 3 1 3 1 1 4 3 8
Detailed voting results from Russia (Final)[26]
Draw Country S. Zhilin M. Mitrofanova L. Rudenko D. Joker Y. Nachalova Jury Rank Televote Rank Combined Rank Points
01  Ukraine 9 5 7 8 2 6 4 4 7
02  Belarus 2 1 3 2 1 1 2 1 12
03  Azerbaijan 1 7 1 1 3 2 5 2 10
04  Iceland 13 17 16 16 18 13 11 10 1
05  Norway 10 18 12 3 12 10 15 11
06  Romania 19 19 24 18 20 22 21 23
07  Armenia 6 9 10 10 5 8 1 3 8
08  Montenegro 24 11 19 12 16 15 20 19
09  Poland 16 25 23 19 19 24 13 20
10  Greece 3 2 6 5 7 3 12 7 4
11  Austria 7 10 9 21 9 11 3 6 5
12  Germany 21 12 20 25 23 23 14 21
13  Sweden 14 24 11 22 13 17 6 9 2
14  France 18 21 22 13 24 21 23 24
15  Russia
16  Italy 23 22 25 20 25 25 25 25
17  Slovenia 15 14 18 14 22 16 17 17
18  Finland 22 20 14 11 14 14 16 16
19  Spain 17 23 21 15 17 19 18 22
20   Switzerland 20 15 17 24 21 20 7 12
21  Hungary 4 4 5 6 8 5 8 5 6
22  Malta 5 3 4 7 4 4 24 15
23  Denmark 11 16 2 17 10 12 22 18
24  Netherlands 8 6 8 9 6 7 10 8 3
25  San Marino 25 13 15 23 11 18 9 13
26  United Kingdom 12 8 13 4 15 9 19 14

References

  1. ^ Jiandani, Sanjay (1 September 2013). "Russia: Rossija 1 announce national final on December 31". Esctoday.com. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
  2. ^ Vranis, Michalis (12 December 2013). "Russia: National final date change". Esctoday.com. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
  3. ^ "Russia 2014: Internal Decision on March 8". 4 March 2014.
  4. ^ "Eurovision 2014 - Russia". ESCKaz. Retrieved 8 March 2014.
  5. ^ Omelyanchuk, Olena (15 March 2014). "Russia sends the Tolmachevy Twins to Copenhagen". Eurovision.tv. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  6. ^ Romero Hidalgo, Rodrigo (19 March 2014). "Russia: 'Shine' is presented". escXtra. Retrieved 19 March 2014.
  7. ^ "About The Tolmachevy Sisters". Eurovision.tv. Retrieved 17 March 2014.
  8. ^ Mikheev, Andy. "Eurovision 2014 Russia". ESCKaz. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  9. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Eurovision 2014 Russia. Бурановские Бабушки (Buranovskiye Babushki) | Ветерок (Official video)". YouTube.
  10. ^ Escudero, Victor M. (20 January 2014). "Allocation Draw results: Who's in which Semi-Final?". Eurovision.tv. Retrieved 20 January 2014.
  11. ^ Siim, Jarmo (24 March 2014). "Running order for Eurovision Semi-Finals decided". Eurovision.tv. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
  12. ^ "First Semi-Final of Copenhagen 2014". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 4 May 2021. Retrieved 4 May 2021.
  13. ^ Brey, Marco (7 May 2014). "First Semi-Final: Meet the winners at the press conference!". Eurovision.tv. Retrieved 7 May 2014.
  14. ^ Storvik-Green, Simon (9 May 2014). "Running order for the Grand Final revealed!". Eurovision.tv. Retrieved 9 May 2014.
  15. ^ "Grand Final of Copenhagen 2014". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 4 May 2021. Retrieved 4 May 2021.
  16. ^ "ESCKAZ - Eurovision 2014 - Tolmachevy Sisters (Russia)". ESCKaz. 11 April 2014. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
  17. ^ Brey, Marco (28 April 2014). "Russia: A balanced performance by the youngest artists". Eurovision.tv. Retrieved 1 May 2014.
  18. ^ "Russia booed at Eurovision semi-final". BBC News. 7 May 2014. Retrieved 7 May 2014.
  19. ^ "ЕВРОВИДЕНИЕ-2014" НА ТЕЛЕКАНАЛЕ "РОССИЯ". Russia-1 (in Russian). 5 May 2014. Retrieved 30 April 2014.
  20. ^ Egorov, Dmitriy (7 April 2014). Дмитрий Губерниев: Киркоров интересуется спортом (in Russian). Sovetskiy Sport. Retrieved 6 May 2014.
  21. ^ "Eurovision Song Contest 2014: ecco l'elenco degli spokesperson" (in Italian). Eurofestival News. 8 May 2014. Retrieved 8 May 2014.
  22. ^ a b "Results of the First Semi-Final of Copenhagen 2014". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 6 May 2021. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
  23. ^ a b "Results of the Grand Final of Copenhagen 2014". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 6 May 2021. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
  24. ^ Brey, Marco (1 May 2014). "Who will be in the expert juries?". Eurovision.tv. Retrieved 1 May 2014.
  25. ^ "Full Split Results | First Semi-Final of Copenhagen 2014". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 12 May 2014. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
  26. ^ "Full Split Results | Grand Final of Copenhagen 2014". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 12 May 2014. Retrieved 6 May 2021.