Italy in the Eurovision Song Contest 2023
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Italy in the Eurovision Song Contest 2023 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eurovision Song Contest 2023 | ||||
| Participating broadcaster | Radiotelevisione italiana (RAI) | |||
| Country | ||||
| Selection process | Sanremo Music Festival 2023 | |||
| Selection date | 11 February 2023 | |||
| Competing entry | ||||
| Song | "Due vite" | |||
| Artist | Marco Mengoni | |||
| Songwriters |
| |||
| Placement | ||||
| Final result | 4th, 350 points | |||
| Participation chronology | ||||
| ||||
Italy was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 2023 with the song "Due vite", written by Marco Mengoni, Davide Petrella, and Davide Simonetta, and performed by Mengoni himself. The Italian participating broadcaster, Radiotelevisione italiana (RAI), announced in June 2022 that the winning performer(s) of the Sanremo Music Festival 2023 would earn the right to represent them at the contest.[1]
Prior to the 2023 contest, Radiotelevisione italiana (RAI) had participated in the Eurovision Song Contest representing Italy forty-six times since its first entry at the inaugural contest in 1956.[2] Since then, it has won the contest on three occasions: in 1964 with the song "Non ho l'età" performed by Gigliola Cinquetti, in 1990 with "Insieme: 1992" by Toto Cutugno, and in 2021 with "Zitti e buoni" by Måneskin. RAI has withdrawn from the Eurovision Song Contest a number of times, with its most recent absence spanning from 1998 until 2010. It made its return in 2011, and its entry "Madness of Love", performed by Raphael Gualazzi, placed second—its highest result, to that point, since its victory in 1990. A number of top 10 placements followed in subsequent editions, including its third victory in 2021. As hosts in 2022, it placed sixth with "Brividi" by Mahmood and Blanco.[3]
As part of its duties as participating broadcaster, RAI organises the selection of its entry in the Eurovision Song Contest and broadcasts the event in the country. Between 2011 and 2013 and since 2015, the Sanremo Music Festival has regularly been used to select the Italian entrant to the contest, at first through an intermediate stage of internal selection among the contestants, and after 2014 (when a full internal selection took place), the winner of the festival has always earned the right of first refusal to represent Italy in the Eurovision Song Contest.