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Eurovision Young Dancers

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Eurovision Young Dancers
Also known asEurovision Competition for Young Dancers
GenreDance contest
Country of originList of countries
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodes15 contests
Production
Production locationsList of host cities
Running time90 minutes (2011–2017)
Production companyEuropean Broadcasting Union
Original release
Release16 June 1985 (1985-06-16) –
16 December 2017 (2017-12-16)
Related
Eurovision Song Contest
Eurovision Young Musicians

Eurovision Young Dancers (French: L'Eurovision des Jeunes Danseurs), often shortened to EYD, or Young Dancers, was a biennial dance competition, organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and is broadcast on television throughout Europe. Thirty-seven countries have taken part since the inauguration of the contest in 1985; including Kosovo (a non-EBU member) and Canada (a North American country).

Performers between the ages of 16 and 21, from member countries of the European Broadcasting Union, compete as solo of couples to dance routines of their choice. Professional jury members each representing the elements of ballet, contemporary, and modern dancing, score each of the performances. The two participants which receive the most overall points advance to a televised 'dance-off' final, where the winner is decided by the jury.

Spain is the most successful country in the Young Dancers competition, having won five times 1985, 1991, 1993, 1995, and 1997 respectively but has never hosted. On 16 December 2017, the fifteenth and most recent edition took place in Prague, Czech Republic and was won by Paulina Bidzińska of Poland, with Patricija Crnkovič of Slovenia placing second (runner-up).

History

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French-born ballet dancer Zenaida Yanowsky won the fifth contest for Spain in 1993.

Young Dancers takes place every two-years, in parallel to its counterpart, Eurovision Young Musicians (another EBU biennial youth competition).[1] The inaugural Eurovision Young Dancers contest, then known as Eurovision Competition for Young Dancers, took place in Reggio Emilia, Italy, on 16 June 1985.[2] Eleven countries who are members of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) competed in the début contest. Spain won the first edition in 1985, represented by Arantxa Argüelles. Norway, represented by Arne Fagerholt, and Sweden, represented by Mia Stagh and Göran Svalberg, came second and third respectively.[3]

A total of thirty-seven countries have competed at least once since 1985.[4] Canada is the only non-European country to have taken part in the contest (as well as the only country in North America to have ever participated in a Eurovision event), although their broadcaster, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), is an associate member of the EBU.[5] Eurovision Young Dancers is also the only Eurovision event to feature a country whose broadcaster is neither a full nor associate member of the EBU, as Kosovo made their sole appearance in 2011 (although they have broadcast other Eurovision events for many years). Bulgaria's debut and only appearance in 1991 also marked the first participation of a former Warsaw Pact country in a Eurovision event, as well as the longest gap between a country's debut at another Eurovision event prior to appearing at the Eurovision Song Contest (with fourteen years separating their Young Dancers debut and their Song Contest debut).

In the entire history of the event, only three contests (2007, 2009 and 2019) have never occurred. The 2007 Eurovision Young Dancers competition was cancelled to allow the Prix de Lausanne, a similar event organised by Swiss broadcaster SRG SSR idée suisse to take place at the same venue. The decision to cancel the contest was mutually agreed between the host broadcaster and the EBU.[6] The following contest was due to be held on 19 June 2009 at the Dance House in Oslo, however was eventually cancelled due to a lack of interest from broadcasters.[7] The contest would eventually be held again in 2011 when the format was revived as a prime time show.[8]

On 23 January 2017, the EBU announced that Maltese broadcaster Public Broadcasting Services (PBS), who agreed to host the event in July 2015, had been forced to cancel their staging of the competition. The EBU also stated it was looking for another host broadcaster but should one not be found in time the competition would not take place this year and is expected to return in 2019.[9] On 18 May 2017, Czech broadcaster Česká televize (ČT) confirmed that they would host the contest for a second time.[10]

On 20 December 2018, the contest was cancelled due to the absence of a broadcaster willing to host the competition. As of that time, Malta and Poland were the only eligible countries to have confirmed their intention to participate in the contest.[11] In October 2020, the EBU ruled out bringing the contest back until further notice.[12]

Format

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The generic logo used for the 2011, 2013 and 2015 editions of the contest.

The format has been roughly the same since the 1985 inauguration of the competition. All competing dancers are to be non-professional and between the ages of 16–21. Participants may consist of solo or couples, with each performing a dance routine of their choice, which they have prepared in advance of the competition. All of the acts then take part in a choreographed group dance during 'Young Dancers Week'.[13]

From 1989 to 2003, a semi-final round took place a few days before the Contest, and the jury decided as well which countries qualified for the televised final. In the 2003 contest, the professional jury voted electronically, immediately following each act, awarding points for technique and artistry. For the 2005 contest, the traditional format was changed. A week of dance master classes replaced the semi-final round. Florence Clerc, Irek Mukhamedow, Christopher Bruce and Piotr Nardelli were the dance teachers selected to work with the participants and tasked to select the 10 finalists out of the 13 participating countries.

In 1989 and 2003, the contest awarded two sets of first prize, one for classical and one for contemporary dance. An additional "Youth Jury" prize was awarded in 2003 chosen by a panel of dance enthusiasts in the audience.

The format is revamped in 2011 to include a 'final duel' round and the semi-finals are removed due to the low number of participating countries. Jury members of a professional aspect and representing the elements of ballet, contemporary, and modern dancing styles, score each of the competing individual and group dance routines. Once all the jury votes have been counted, the two participants which received the highest total of points progress to a final round. The final round consists of a 90-second 'dual', were each of the finalists perform a 45-second random dance-off routine. The overall winner upon completion of the final dances is chosen by the professional jury members.[13]

Participation

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Eligible participants include primarily active members (as opposed to associate members) of the EBU. Active members are those who are located in states that fall within the European Broadcasting Area, or are member states of the Council of Europe.[14]

The European Broadcasting Area is defined by the International Telecommunication Union:[15]

The "European Broadcasting Area" is bounded on the west by the western boundary of Region 1, on the east by the meridian 40° East of Greenwich and on the south by the parallel 30° North so as to include the northern part of Saudi Arabia and that part of those countries bordering the Mediterranean within these limits. In addition, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia and those parts of the territories of Iraq, Jordan, Syrian Arab Republic, Turkey and Ukraine lying outside the above limits are included in the European Broadcasting Area.[a]

The western boundary of Region 1 is defined by a line running from the North Pole along meridian 10° West of Greenwich to its intersection with parallel 72° North; thence by great circle arc to the intersection of meridian 50° West and parallel 40° North; thence by great circle arc to the intersection of meridian 20° West and parallel 10° South; thence along meridian 20° West to the South Pole.[16]

Active members include broadcasting organisations whose transmissions are made available to at least 98% of households in their own country which are equipped to receive such transmissions. If an EBU active member wishes to participate, they must fulfil conditions as laid down by the rules of the contest (of which a separate copy is drafted annually).[14]

Eligibility to participate is not determined by geographic inclusion within the continent of Europe, despite the "Euro" in "Eurovision" – nor does it have any relation to the European Union. Kosovo, a partially recognised state in Southeastern Europe, is the only country in Europe who does not yet have EBU members, but has participated once in 2011.[17] Several countries geographically outside the boundaries of Europe have competed: Cyprus and Armenia, in Western Asia (both are members of the Council of Europe with Cyprus as a member state of the European Union). Each made their début at Young Dancers in 1989 and 2013 respectively.[18][19] In addition, several transcontinental countries with only part of their territory in Europe have competed: Russia, since 1995;[20] Canada in the North America continent, despite only being an associate member of the EBU, have competed twice, in 1987 and 1989.[5]

Thirty-six countries have participated at least once. These are listed here alongside the year in which they made their début:[4]

Participation since 1985:
  Entered at least once
  Never entered, although eligible to do so
  Competed as a part of another country (Yugoslavia), but never as a sovereign nation
Year Country making its début entry
1985
1987
1989
1991
1993
1995
1997
1999
2001
2003
2011
2013
2015

Hosting

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Most of the expenses of the contest are covered by commercial sponsors and contributions from the other participating nations. The contest is considered to be a unique opportunity for promoting the host country as a tourist destination. The table below shows a list of cities and venues that have hosted Eurovision Young Dancers, one or more times. Future venues are shown in italics. With three contests, Poland is the country having hosted the most editions.[21]

Host cities of the Eurovision Young Dancers
  A single contest
  Multiple contests
Contests Country City Venue Years
3  Poland Gdynia Teatr Muzyczny 1997
Warsaw National Theatre 2005
Gdańsk Baltic State Opera 2013
2  Czech Republic Plzeň New Theatre 2015
Prague Congress Centre 2017
 France Paris Palais des Congrès 1989
Lyon Opéra de Lyon 1999
1  Italy Reggio Emilia Teatro Municipale 1985
 Germany Schwetzingen Schwetzingen Palace Theatre 1987
 Finland Helsinki Helsinki City Theatre 1991
 Sweden Stockholm Dance House 1993
  Switzerland[b] Lausanne[b] Palais de Beaulieu 1995
 United Kingdom London Linbury Studio Theatre 2001
 Netherlands Amsterdam Stadsschouwburg 2003
 Norway Oslo Dance House 2011

Winners

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Sixteen performances have won the Eurovision Young Dancers competition. There have been fourteen editions, with each having a winner, second, and third places for all dance styles combined, with exception to the 1989 edition which awarded first place for contemporary and classical dance categories; and the 2003 edition which gave first place prizes for ballet, modern dance, and a 'Youth Jury Choice' categories. From 2011 onwards, there have only been prizes awarded to the winner and runner-up.[4] Below is a breakdown of those winners, by individual event and number of wins per country.

Winners by year

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Year Date Host City Countries Winner(s) Performer(s) Dance
1985 16 June Italy Reggio Emilia 11  Spain Arantxa Argüelles [es] Unknown
1987 31 May Germany Schwetzingen 14  Denmark Rose Gad Poulsen and Nikolaj Hübbe Divertissement from "La Sylphide"
1989 28 June France Paris 17  France[c] Agnès Letestu (Contemporary dance) Unknown
 United Kingdom[c] Tetsuya Kumakawa (Classical ballet)
1991 5 June Finland Helsinki 15  Spain Amaya Iglesias Variations from "La Grisi"
1993 15 June Sweden Stockholm 15 Zenaida Yanowsky "Esmeralda"
1995 6 June Switzerland Lausanne 15 Jesús Pastor Sahuquillo and Ruth Miró Salvador "Arrayan Daraxa"
1997 17 June Poland Gdynia 13 Antonio Carmena San José "Angelitos Locos"
1999 10 July France Lyon 16  Germany Stegli Yohan and Katja Wünsche [de] "Cinderella"
2001 23 June United Kingdom London 18  Poland David Kupinski and Marcin Kupinski "Brothers"
2003 4 July Netherlands Amsterdam 17  Ukraine[d] Jerlin Ndudi (Ballet) "Le Corsaire"
 Sweden[d] Kristina Oom and Sebastian Michanek [sv] (Modern dance) "Light Beings"
 Czech Republic[d] Monika Hejduková and Viktor Konvalinka (Youth Jury Choice) "The Twilight Of Innocence"
2005 24 June Poland Warsaw 13  Netherlands Milou Nuyens [nl] "Snakesense"
2011 24 June Norway Oslo 10  Norway Daniel Sarr "Full Force"
2013 14 June Poland Gdańsk 10  Netherlands Sedrig Verwoert [nl] "The 5th Element"
2015 19 June Czech Republic Plzeň 10  Poland Viktoria Nowak "Piece in Old Style"
2017 16 December Czech Republic Prague 8 Paulina Bidzińska "La Certa"

Winners by country

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The table below shows the top-three placings from each contest, along with the years that a country won the contest.

Map showing each country's number of Young Dancers wins up to and including 2017
Country 1st place, gold medalist(s) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Total Years won
 Spain 5 0 1 6
 Poland 3 1 0 4
 Netherlands 2 0 2 4
 Sweden 1 2 2 5
 France 1 1 1 3
 Germany 1 1 1 3
 Norway 1 1 0 2
 Denmark 1 0 1 2
 Czech Republic 1 0 0 1
 United Kingdom 1 0 0 1
 Ukraine 1 0 0 1
 Slovenia 0 3 0 3
 Belgium 0 2 2 4
  Switzerland 0 2 0 2
 Romania 0 1 0 1
 Austria 0 0 1 1
 Estonia 0 0 1 1

Presenters

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Year Presenter(s) Backstage host
1985 Carla Fracci and Gheorghe Iancu [it] Not present
1987 Margot Werner
1989 Zizi Jeanmaire and Alain Duault [fr]
1991 Taina Elg and Heikki Värtsi [fi]
1993 Anneli Alhanko and John Chrispinsson
1995 Géraldine Chaplin and Jean-Pierre Pastori [fr]
1997 Grażyna Torbicka [pl] and Bogusław Kaczyński (semi-final)
Henk van der Meulen (final)
1999 Alex Taylor
2001 Deborah Bull
2003 Aldith Hunkar [nl]
2005 Agata Konarska [pl]
2011 Erik Solbakken
2013 Tomasz Kammel [pl] Michael Nunn and William Trevitt
2015 Libor Bouček [cs] Cameron McMillan
2017 Libor Bouček and Angeé Roučková [cs] Not present

See also

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Notes and references

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Notes

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  1. ^ The European Broadcasting Area was expanded in November 2007 by the World Radiocommunication Conference (WRC-07), also to include Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia.[15][22]
  2. ^ The Eurovision Young Dancers 2007 would have taken place in Lausanne on the 4 February 2007. However, the competition was cancelled in a mutual decision between the European Broadcasting Union and Swiss broadcaster SRG SSR idée suisse, who both collaborated on the production of a similar dance competition, Prix de Lausanne, held in Lausanne. If the contest had taken place, then Lausanne and Switzerland would have hosted twice.[6]
  3. ^ The Eurovision Young Dancers 1989 event had two sets of first prize, one for contemporary dance (awarded to France) and one for classical dance (awarded to United Kingdom).[23]
  4. ^ The Eurovision Young Dancers 2003 event had three sets of first prize, one for modern dance (awarded to Sweden), one for ballet (awarded to Ukraine), and the 'Youth Jury Choice' (awarded to Czech Republic).[24]

References

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  1. ^ "Eurovision Young Dancers - Synopsis". ukgameshows.com. UK Games Shows. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  2. ^ "Eurovision Young Dancers". ebu.ch. European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  3. ^ "1st Eurovision Young Dancers 1985". youngdancers.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  4. ^ a b c "Eurovision Young Dancers - History by country". youngdancers.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  5. ^ a b "Canada in the Eurovision Young Dancers". youngdancers.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  6. ^ a b "Eurovision Young Dancers 2007". youngdancers.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  7. ^ "Eurovision Young Dancers 2009". eurovoix.com. Eurovoix. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  8. ^ "Eurovision Young Dancers revamped for prime time". Eurovision.tv. 2011-04-26. Retrieved 2015-03-05.
  9. ^ "Update on Eurovision Young Dancers 2017". youngdancers.tv. European Broadcasting Union. 23 January 2017. Retrieved 25 January 2017.
  10. ^ Granger, Anthony (18 May 2017). "Czech Republic: Confirmed as new host country of Eurovision Young Dancers 2017". eurovoix.com. Eurovoix. Retrieved 18 May 2017.
  11. ^ Granger, Anthony (20 December 2018). "Eurovision Young Dancers 2019 Cancelled Due to Lack of Host Broadcaster". eurovoix.com. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  12. ^ Grace, Emily (13 October 2020). "Eurovision Young Dancers Will Not Return Next Year". Eurovoix.
  13. ^ a b "Eurovision Young Dancers - Format". youngdancers.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 11 February 2015. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  14. ^ a b "Membership conditions". European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 3 February 2012.
  15. ^ a b "ITU-R Radio Regulations 2012-2015" (PDF). International Telecommunication Union, available from the Spectrum Management Authority of Jamaica. 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 August 2013. Retrieved 27 May 2013.
  16. ^ "Radio Regulations". International Telecommunication Union. 8 September 2005. Retrieved 18 July 2006.
  17. ^ "Kosovo in the Eurovision Young Dancers". youngdancers.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  18. ^ "Cyprus in the Eurovision Young Dancers". youngdancers.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  19. ^ "Armenia in the Eurovision Young Dancers". youngdancers.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  20. ^ "Russia in the Eurovision Young Dancers". youngdancers.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  21. ^ "Eurovision Young Dancers - History by year". youngdancers.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  22. ^ "ITU-R Radio Regulations - Articles edition of 2004 (valid in 2004-2007)" (PDF). International Telecommunication Union. 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-10-10. Retrieved 2015-03-08.
  23. ^ "Eurovision Young Dancers 1989". youngdancers.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 9 March 2015.
  24. ^ "Eurovision Young Dancers 2003". youngdancers.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 9 March 2015.
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