France in the Eurovision Song Contest 1983

France was represented by Guy Bonnet, with the song '"Vivre", at the 1983 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 23 April in Munich. Bonnet had previously represented France in the 1970 contest in Amsterdam.

Eurovision Song Contest 1983
Country France
National selection
Selection processNational Final
Selection date(s)20 March 1983
Selected entrantGuy Bonnet
Selected song"Vivre"
Finals performance
Final result8th, 56 points
France in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1981 1983 1984►

Before Eurovision

National final

Broadcaster Antenne 2 took over responsibility for French Eurovision participation in 1983, after the country had been absent from the 1982 contest when previous broadcaster TF1 opted out, citing the facile nature of the music on offer in Eurovision as they perceived it. Antenne 2 decided to choose their first entry via a broadcast national final.

The national final was held on 20 March 1983, hosted by Jean-Pierre Foucault and 1977 contest winner Marie Myriam. Fourteen songs took part with the winner chosen by a panel of TV viewers who were telephoned and asked to vote on the songs. Other participants included previous and future French representatives Isabelle Aubret (1962 & 1968) and Joël Prévost (1978).[1]

Draw Artist Song Place
1 Philippe Houbert "Les manèges de l'amour" 12
2 Joël Prévost "Je t'aime" 9
3 Claude Merlebois "Je reviendrai" 8
4 Jean-Marc Courtois "L'homme est un mobile" 7
5 Joséphine Coppola "Passionément" 14
6 Kali "Je vous oublie" 13
7 Guy Bonnet "Vivre" 1
8 Rebecca "Mais où est l'amour" 11
9 Isabelle Aubret "France France" 3
10 Nicolas Leyani "Quand je vois le soleil" 6
11 Jean-Paul Cara "À Chantefrance" 5
12 Christine Fontane "Avec" 10
13 La Compagnie Créole "Vive le Douanier Rousseau" 2
14 Anne-Marie Gancel "J'en appelle à la vie" 4

At Eurovision

On the night of the final Bonnet performed first in the running order, preceding Norway. At the close of voting "Vivre" had received 56 points (the highest being 10s from Italy and Switzerland), placing France 8th of the 20 entries. The French jury awarded its 12 points to contest winners Luxembourg.[2]

Points awarded to France

Points awarded to France
12 points 10 points 8 points 7 points 6 points
5 points 4 points 3 points 2 points 1 point

Points awarded by France

12 points Luxembourg
10 points Germany
8 points Israel
7 points Italy
6 points Sweden
5 points United Kingdom
4 points Portugal
3 points Greece
2 points Netherlands
1 point Finland

See also

References

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