Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest 1975

Norway was represented by Ellen Nikolaysen, with the song '"Touch My Life (With Summer)", at the 1975 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 22 March in Stockholm. "Touch My Life (With Summer)" was chosen as the Norwegian entry at the Melodi Grand Prix on 25 January. Nikolaysen had previously sung for Norway as a member of the Bendik Singers in 1973 and had also provided backing vocals for Anne-Karine Strøm in 1974.

Eurovision Song Contest 1975
Country Norway
National selection
Selection processMelodi Grand Prix 1975
Selection date(s)25 January 1975
Selected entrantEllen Nikolaysen
Selected song"Touch My Life (With
Summer)
"
Finals performance
Final result18th, 11 points
Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1974 1975 1976►

Before Eurovision

Melodi Grand Prix 1975

The final was held at the studios of broadcaster NRK in Oslo, hosted by Bergljot Engeset. Five songs were presented in the final with each song sung twice by different singers, once with a small combo and once with a full orchestra. The winning song was chosen by voting from a 10-member "expert" jury. "Touch My Life (With Summer)" was performed in Norwegian at MGP and was translated into English before going to Stockholm.[1]

Final – 25 January 1975
Draw Artist Song Points Place
Combo Orchestra
1 Øystein Sunde Benny Borg "En enkel sang" (A simple song) 30 3
2 Stein Ingebrigtsen Ellen Nikolaysen "Det skulle ha vært sommer nå" (It's should been Summer now) 39 1
3 Maj-Britt Andersen Anne-Karine Strøm "1+1=2" 23 4
4 Jahn Teigen Jan Høiland "Kjærlighetens under" (The Wonder of Love) 32 2
5 Brit Elisabeth Haagensli Gro Anita Schønn "Ah, du gjør meg så glad" (Oh, You make me so happy) 16 5

At Eurovision

During the preparation of the contest, the song Det skulle ha vært sommer nå was translated as Touch My Life (With Summer).

On the night of the final Nikolaysen performed 6th in the running order, following Luxembourg and preceding Switzerland. At the close of voting, Norway picked up only 11 points (7 from Italy and 2 each from Monaco and the Netherlands), placing Norway 18th of the 19 entries, ahead only of Turkey. The Norwegian jury awarded its 12 points to contest winners the Netherlands.[2]

Points awarded to Norway

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

Points awarded by Norway

12 points Netherlands
10 points Finland
8 points Sweden
7 points United Kingdom
6 points Italy
5 points Israel
4 points Ireland
3 points Spain
2 points Malta
1 point  Switzerland

See also

References

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