Russia in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2005

Russia participated in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2005 in Hasselt, Belgium. The Russian entry was selected through an internal selection. On 10 November 2005 it was revealed that Vladislav Krutskikh would represent Russia in the contest with the song "Doroga k solntsu".[1]

Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2005
Country Russia
National selection
Selection processInternal selection
Selection date(s)10 November 2005
Selected entrantVladislav Krutskikh
Selected song"Doroga k solntsu"
Finals performance
Final result9th, 66 points
Russia in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest
2005 2006►

Before Junior Eurovision

Internal selection

In May 2005, the EBU along with VRT and RTBF, announced that Russia and Russian broadcaster RTR would debut at the contest in Hasselt. A professional jury internally selected fifteen artists and selected the winner to represent Russia in the contest. The reason behind the internal selection was because the invitation to participate was sent very late in the year, and they couldn't afford to organise a televised national final.

On 10 November 2005, a press-conference devoted to the participation in the contest was held, revealing that Vladislav Krutskikh and "Street Magic" was selected to represent Russia in the 2005 contest with the song "Doroga k solntsu". The song was written by Kim Breitburg, Artyom Kavaleryan and Vlad Krutskikh himself, and was premiered on the RTR channel that day.

At Junior Eurovision

During the allocation draw, Russia was drawn to perform 7th, following Sweden and preceding Macedonia.[2] Russia placed 9th, scoring 66 points.

Vladislav Krutskikh was joined on stage by three boys and two girls from Street Magic's dance troupe: Vsevolod Tarasov, Daria Gorskaya, Denis Uskov, Maria Pestunova and Vladislav Geshele.

In Russia, show were broadcast on Russia-1 with commentary by Yuri Nikolaev. The Russian spokesperson revealing the result of the Russian vote was Roman Kerimov.

Points awarded to Russia

12 points 10 points 8 points 7 points 6 points
5 points 4 points 3 points 2 points 1 point

Points awarded by Russia

See also

References

  1. Mikheev, Andy (10 November 2005). "Junior ESC Russia 2005". esckaz.com. Retrieved 18 August 2016.
  2. Mikheev, Andy (26 November 2005). "Junior Eurovision News". esckaz.com. Retrieved 18 August 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.