Ireland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2018

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Participating broadcasterRaidió Teilifís Éireann (RTÉ)
Country Ireland
SelectionprocessInternal selection
AnnouncementdateArtist: 31 January 2018
Song: 9 March 2018
Ireland in the
Eurovision Song Contest 2018
Eurovision Song Contest 2018
Participating broadcasterRaidió Teilifís Éireann (RTÉ)
Country Ireland
Selection processInternal selection
Announcement dateArtist: 31 January 2018
Song: 9 March 2018
Competing entry
Song"Together"
ArtistRyan O'Shaughnessy
Songwriters
  • Ryan O'Shaughnessy
  • Mark Caplice
  • Laura Elizabeth Hughes
Placement
Semi-final resultQualified (6th, 179 points)
Final result16th, 136 points
Participation chronology
◄2017 2018 2019►

Ireland was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 2018 with the song "Together", written by Ryan O'Shaughnessy, Mark Caplice, and Laura Elizabeth Hughes, and performed by O'Shaughnessy himself. The Irish participating broadcaster, Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTÉ), internally selected its entry for the contest. O'Shaughnessy's internal selection was announced on 31 January 2018, while "Together" was presented on 9 March 2018.

Ireland was drawn to compete in the first semi-final of the Eurovision Song Contest which took place on 8 May 2018. Performing during the show in position 18, "Together" was announced among the top 10 entries of the first semi-final and therefore qualified to compete in the final on 12 May. It was later revealed that Ireland placed sixth out of the 19 participating countries in the semi-final with 179 points. In the final, Ireland performed in position 24 and placed sixteenth out of the 26 participating countries, scoring 136 points.

Prior to the 2018 contest, Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTÉ) and its predecessor national broadcasters have participated in the Eurovision Song Contest representing Ireland fifty times since RÉ's first entry in 1965.[1] They have won the contest a record seven times in total. Their first win came in 1970, with "All Kinds of Everything" performed by Dana. Ireland holds the record for being the only country to win the contest three times in a row (in 1992, 1993, and 1994), as well as having the only three-time winner (Johnny Logan, who won in 1980 as a singer, 1987 as a singer-songwriter, and again in 1992 as a songwriter). The Irish entries since 2014 all failed to qualify to the final, including in 2017 with "Dying to Try" performed by Brendan Murray.

As part of its duties as participating broadcaster, RTÉ organises the selection of its entry in the Eurovision Song Contest and broadcasts the event in the country. The broadcaster confirmed its intentions to participate at the 2018 contest on 4 August 2017.[2] From 2008 to 2015, RTÉ had set up the national final Eurosong to choose both the song and performer to compete at Eurovision for Ireland, with both the public and regional jury groups involved in the selection. In 2016 and 2017, RTÉ held an internal selection to choose the artist and song. For the 2018 contest, RTÉ internally selected both the artist and song.[3]

Before Eurovision

At Eurovision

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI