Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Eurovision Song Contest 1997 explained

Year:1997
Broadcaster:Bosnian: [[Radiotelevision of Bosnia-Herzegovina|Radiotelevizija Bosne i Hercegovine]]|i=no (RTVBiH)
Country:Bosnia and Herzegovina
Flag Variant:1992
Preselection:Artist: Internal selection
Song: BH Eurosong 1997
Preselection Date:22 February 1997
Song:Goodbye
Final Result:18th, 22 points
Next:1999

Bosnia and Herzegovina was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 1997 with the song "Goodbye", written by Milić Vukašinović and Sinan Alimanović, and performed by Alma Čardžić. The Bosnian-Herzegovinian participating broadcaster, Bosnian: [[Radiotelevision of Bosnia-Herzegovina|Radiotelevizija Bosne i Hercegovine]]|i=no (RTVBiH), selected its entry for the contest through a national final, after having previously selected the performer internally. They finished in an 18th place out of 25 countries with 22 points, sharing this placement with, as the tie-breaking rule at the time only affected the first place.[1]

Before Eurovision

Bosnia and Herzegovina had low average score over the previous four years, and so would have to withdraw, however Israel declined to participate, as the contest was held on its Holocaust Remembrance Day, so their place was awarded to Bosnia and Herzegovina, who ultimately competed.

BH Eurosong 1997

Bosnian: [[Radiotelevision of Bosnia-Herzegovina|Radiotelevizija Bosne i Hercegovine]]|i=no (RTVBiH) held the national final on 22 February 1997 at its television Studios in Sarajevo. Alma Čardžić sang all the songs and the winner was chosen by an "expert" jury.[2]

Final – 22 February 1997
DrawSongSongwriter(s)
1"Godine"Igor Karača, Safet-Sajo Selimović
2"Zbog tebe"Jasmina Kapić
3"Još uvijek te volim"Faruk Hasanbegović, Safet Plakalo
4"Interpol"Suad Jukić, Esad Purić
5"SOS"Suad Jukić, Milić Vukašinović
6"U tvojim očima"Eldin Huseinbegović, Omar Krasnić
7"Goodbye"Milić Vukašinović, Sinan Alimanović
8"Ostani"Milić Vukašinović
9"Oprosti mi"Milić Vukašinović
10"Baybe-be"Jaka Osmanagić

At Eurovision

Heading into the final of the contest, RTÉ reported that bookmakers ranked the entry 22nd out of the 25 entries.[3] Alma Čardžić performed 14th on the night of the contest, following and preceding . At the close of voting it had received 22 points, placing joint 18th (with Germany) out of 25 entries.[4] Due to a low average score over the past 5 contests, Bosnia and Herzegovina was forced to sit out the . The country returned to Eurovision in .

Voting

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bosnia and Herzegovina. The official website of the Eurovision Song Contest. European Broadcasting Union. 3 July 2017. 22 January 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190122095112/https://eurovision.tv/country/bosnia-herzegovina/results. dead.
  2. Web site: BOSNIAN NATIONAL FINAL 1997.
  3. Web site: What are the Odds? . Radio Telefís Éireann . 20 November 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/19990224192111/http://events.rte.ie/eurovision97/odds.html . 24 February 1999 . dead.
  4. Web site: Final of Dublin 1997 . European Broadcasting Union . 14 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210414084557/https://eurovision.tv/event/dublin-1997/final . 14 April 2021 . live.
  5. Web site: Results of the Final of Dublin 1997 . European Broadcasting Union . 14 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210414113521/https://eurovision.tv/event/dublin-1997/final/results/bosnia-herzegovina . 14 April 2021 . live.