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=== ''Jugovizija 1965'' ===
=== ''Jugovizija 1965'' ===
The [[Yugoslavian selection for the Eurovision Song Contest|Yugoslavian national final]] to select their entry, was held on 6 February at the Radnički Dom in [[Zagreb]]. The host was Željka Marković. There were 8 songs in the final, from five subnational public broadcasters. The subnational public broadcaster [[Macedonian Radio-Television | RTV Skopje]] made a comeback. The winner was chosen by the votes of a eight-member jury of experts, one juror for each of the six republics and the two autonomous provinces. </s>{{efn| According to Eurovision Song Contest National Finals´ Homepage, the winning song was chosen by the votes of 5 regional juries.}} The winning entry was "[[Čežnja]]" performed by Croatian singer [[Vice Vukov]], composed by Julijo Marić and written by Žarko Roje. Vice Vukov had already won the National final two years earlier and had represented Yugoslavia on the [[1963 Eurovision Song Contest]]. <ref>{{cite web|url=http://free-st.t-com.hr/eurodalmatia/gotovo_za_web/jugovizije/results/1965.htm |title=Yugoslavian National Final 1965 at Eurodalmatia official ESC club |accessdate=25 May 2020 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080226123356/http://free-st.t-com.hr/eurodalmatia/gotovo_za_web/jugovizije/results/1965.htm|archivedate=3 April 2008 }}</ref>
The [[Yugoslavian selection for the Eurovision Song Contest|Yugoslavian national final]] to select their entry, was held on 6 February at the Radnički Dom in [[Zagreb]]. The host was Željka Marković. There were 8 songs in the final, from five subnational public broadcasters. The subnational public broadcaster [[Macedonian Radio-Television | RTV Skopje]] made a comeback. The winner was chosen by the votes of a eight-member jury of experts, one juror for each of the six republics and the two autonomous provinces. </s>{{efn| According to Eurovision Song Contest National Finals´ Homepage, the winning song was chosen by the votes of 5 regional juries.}} The winning entry was "[[Čežnja]]" performed by Croatian singer [[Vice Vukov]], composed by Julijo Marić and written by Žarko Roje. Vice Vukov had already won the National final two years earlier and had represented Yugoslavia on the [[1963 Eurovision Song Contest]]. <ref>{{cite web|url=http://free-st.t-com.hr/eurodalmatia/gotovo_za_web/jugovizije/results/1965.htm |title=Yugoslavian National Final 1965 at Eurodalmatia official ESC club |accessdate=25 May 2020 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080226123356/http://free-st.t-com.hr/eurodalmatia/gotovo_za_web/jugovizije/results/1965.htm|archivedate=3 April 2008 }}</ref>



{| class="sortable wikitable"""
{| class="sortable wikitable"""
|- bgcolor="#CCCCCC"
|- bgcolor="#CCCCCC"
! colspan="6" |'''Final – 6 February 1965'''
|-
! Draw !! Broadcaster !! Artist !! Song !! Points !! Place
! Draw !! Broadcaster !! Artist !! Song !! Points !! Place
|--bgcolor = "#FFD700"
|--bgcolor = "#FFD700"

Revision as of 18:12, 17 June 2020

Eurovision Song Contest 1965
Country Yugoslavia
National selection
Selection processJugovizija 1965
Selection date(s)6 February 1965
Selected entrantVice Vukov
Selected song"Čežnja"
Finals performance
Final result12th, 2 points
Yugoslavia in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1964 1965 1966►

Yugoslavia was present at the Eurovision Song Contest 1965, held in Naples, Italy.

Before Eurovision

Jugovizija 1965

The Yugoslavian national final to select their entry, was held on 6 February at the Radnički Dom in Zagreb. The host was Željka Marković. There were 8 songs in the final, from five subnational public broadcasters. The subnational public broadcaster RTV Skopje made a comeback. The winner was chosen by the votes of a eight-member jury of experts, one juror for each of the six republics and the two autonomous provinces. [a] The winning entry was "Čežnja" performed by Croatian singer Vice Vukov, composed by Julijo Marić and written by Žarko Roje. Vice Vukov had already won the National final two years earlier and had represented Yugoslavia on the 1963 Eurovision Song Contest. [1]

Final – 6 February 1965
Draw Broadcaster Artist Song Points Place
1 Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina RTV Sarajevo [b] Vice Vukov "Čežnja" 16 1
2 Socialist Republic of Slovenia RTV Ljubljana Marjana Deržaj "Škrat pri klavirju" 0 12
3 Socialist Republic of Macedonia RTV Skopje Đorđe Marjanović "Proletni vetre" 6 4
4 Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina RTV Sarajevo Mara Popović & Trio Ivanović "Osjećam se sam" 0 12
5 Socialist Republic of Serbia RTV Belgrade Vice Vukov "Putuju dani i reke" 5 7
6 Socialist Republic of Croatia RTV Zagreb Gabi Novak "Prvi snijeg" 9 2
7 Socialist Republic of Slovenia RTV Ljubljana Marjana Deržaj "To je moj zlati sin" 3 10
8 Socialist Republic of Serbia RTV Belgrade Đorđe Marjanović "Stari kraj" 6 4
9 Socialist Republic of Croatia RTV Zagreb Lado Leskovar "Sonata" 0 12
10 Socialist Republic of Serbia RTV Belgrade Lado Leskovar "Vetar s planine" 5 7
11 Socialist Republic of Macedonia RTV Skopje Vice Vukov "Leni" 5 7
12 Socialist Republic of Macedonia RTV Skopje Vice Vukov "O, drugar moj" 3 10
13 Socialist Republic of Slovenia RTV Ljubljana Marjana Deržaj "Vzemi moj nasmeh" 6 4
14 Socialist Republic of Serbia RTV Belgrade Krsta Petrović "U moru bih spavao" 8 3

At Eurovision

Vice Vukov performed 17th on the night of the Contest following Finland and preceding Switzerland. At the close of the voting the song had received 2 points, coming 12th in the field of 18 competing countries. [2]


Points awarded by Yugoslavia

5 points  France
3 points  Ireland
1 point  Monaco

Points awarded to Yugoslavia

1 point

Notes

  1. ^ According to Eurovision Song Contest National Finals´ Homepage, the winning song was chosen by the votes of 5 regional juries.
  2. ^ According to Eurodalmatia official ESC club, the winning song was submitted by Radio Titograd

References

  1. ^ "Yugoslavian National Final 1965 at Eurodalmatia official ESC club". Archived from the original on 3 April 2008. Retrieved 25 May 2020. {{cite web}}: |archive-date= / |archive-url= timestamp mismatch; 26 February 2008 suggested (help)
  2. ^ "Eurovision Song Contest 1965". EBU. Retrieved 25 May 2020.