OTI Festival 1994
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- 14 October 1994
- 15 October 1994
Valencia, Spain
| OTI Festival 1994 | |
|---|---|
| Dates and venue | |
| Semi-final |
|
| Final |
|
| Venue | Teatro Principal Valencia, Spain |
| Organization | |
| Organizer | Organización de Televisión Iberoamericana (OTI) |
| Production | |
| Host broadcaster | Televisión Española (TVE) |
| Director | José Luis Moreno |
| Musical director | José Fabra |
| Presenters | |
| Participants | |
| Number of entries | 24 |
| Number of finalists | 12 |
| Non-returning countries | |
| |
| Vote | |
| Voting system | Each member of a single jury awards 5–1 points to its five favourite songs in a secret vote |
| Winning song | "Canción despareja" |
The OTI Festival 1994 (Spanish: Vigésimo Tercer Gran Premio de la Canción Iberoamericana, Portuguese: Vigésimo Terceiro Grande Prêmio da Canção Ibero-Americana) was the 23rd edition of the OTI Festival. It consisted of a semi-final on 14 October and a final on 15 October 1994, held at Teatro Principal in Valencia, Spain, and presented by Ana Obregón and Francisco. It was organised by the Organización de Televisión Iberoamericana (OTI) and host broadcaster Televisión Española (TVE), who staged the event after winning the 1993 festival for Spain with the song "Enamorarse" by Ana Reverte.
Broadcasters from twenty-four countries participated in the festival. The winner was the song "Canción despareja" performed by Claudia Carenzio representing Argentina; with "Cuestión de suerte" by Ana María representing Spain placing second; and "Enfurecida" by Luis Silva representing Venezuela placing third.

For the third consecutive year, the Organización de Televisión Iberoamericana (OTI) designated Televisión Española (TVE) as the host broadcaster for the 23rd edition of the OTI Festival. TVE staged the event again in Valencia. The selected venue was the venue that hosted the two previous editions, Teatro Principal, a theatre opened in 1832 that was designed by Filippo da Pistoia.
Participants
Broadcasters from twenty-four countries participated in this edition of the OTI festival. The OTI members, public or private broadcasters from Spain, Portugal, and twenty-two Spanish and Portuguese speaking countries of Ibero-America signed up for the festival. From the countries that participated in the previous edition, only Canada was absent.
Some of the participating broadcasters, such as those representing Chile, Cuba, Ecuador, Panama, and the United States, selected their entries through their regular national televised competitions. Other broadcasters decided to select their entry internally.
Two performing artists had previously represented the same country in previous editions: Ricardo Padilla had represented Costa Rica in 1980 and 1982, and Rocky Belmonte had represented Peru in 1988 and 1990.
| Country | Broadcaster | Song | Artist | Songwriter(s) | Language | Conductor |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| "Canción despareja" | Claudia Carenzio | Bibi Albert | Spanish | |||
| "Para poder hablar de amor" | Gilka Gutiérrez | Edwin Castellanos | Spanish | |||
| "Mulher" | Zé Renato |
|
Portuguese | |||
| "La vida va" | María Inés Naveillán | Luis Poncho Venegas | Spanish | |||
| "Quiero saber" | Jorge Hernán Baena | Francesco | Spanish | |||
| "Como vino... se fue" | Ricardo Padilla | Ricardo Padilla | Spanish | |||
| ICRT | "Amor y cadenas" | Osvaldo Rodríguez | Osvaldo Rodríguez | Spanish | Guillermo Valverde | |
| "Con agua de sal" | Miriam Cruz | Manuel Jiménez | Spanish | |||
| "Temporada baja" | Felipe y Francisco Terán (Contravía) | Francisco Terán | Spanish | |||
| TCS | "Tú, sólo tú" | Claudia Basagoitia | José Balter | Spanish | ||
| "Sor Juana Inés y el ángel" | Noris | Álvaro R. Aguilar | Spanish | |||
| "Espera hasta que den las tres" | Delma Adriana Reyes | Reniery Seaman Silva | Spanish | |||
| Televisa | "Rompe el cristal" | Fuga de Goya |
|
Spanish | ||
| ATM | "Libre" | Boy Thode |
|
Spanish | ||
| "La sombra del sol" | Álvaro Villagra | Francis Leticia Boruckin | Spanish | |||
| "Mi ciudad" | Armando Valdivieso |
|
Spanish | |||
| "Tierra herida" | Cristina Vera Díaz |
|
Spanish | |||
| "Mía" | Rocky Belmonte | Armando Massé | Spanish | |||
| RTP | "Eu quero um planeta azul" | Mafalda Sacchetti | Portuguese | |||
| Telemundo Puerto Rico | "Lo que te toca vivir" | Jessica Cristina | José Luis Melendez | Spanish | Pedro Rivera | |
| TVE | "Cuestión de suerte" | Ana María | Chema Purón | Spanish | José Fabra | |
| Univision | "Ganas de gritar" | Héctor Galaz | Omar Sánchez | Spanish | ||
| Sociedad Televisora Larrañaga | "Tus sentidos" | Laura Canoura |
|
Spanish | ||
| "Enfurecida" | Luis Silva |
|
Spanish |
Festival overview
The festival consisted of a semi-final on Friday 14 October and a final on Saturday 15 October 1994. It was directed by José Luis Moreno and presented by Ana Obregón and Francisco. Francisco had presented the festival in 1993. The musical director was José Fabra, who conducted the 60-piece orchestra when required. The shows featured guest performances by Lola Flores, Sergio Dalma, Los Panchos, The Platters, José Feliciano, Emmanuel, Mireille Mathieu, El Consorcio, and María Vidal.[2]
Semi-final
The semi-final was held on Friday 14 October 1994, beginning at 22:30 CET (21:30 UTC). The twenty-four participating entries were performed in the semi-final, of which only twelve advanced to the final. The position of the entries was not revealed, only the qualifiers were announced.
| R/O | Country | Song | Artist | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "La sombra del sol" | Álvaro Villagra | N/a | |
| 2 | "Lo que te toca vivir" | Jessica Cristina | N/a | |
| 3 | "Canción despareja" | Claudia Carenzio | Qualified | |
| 4 | "Mulher" | Zé Renato | Qualified | |
| 5 | "Espera hasta que den las tres" | Delma Adriana Reyes | N/a | |
| 6 | "Rompe el cristal" | Fuga de Goya | Qualified | |
| 7 | "Mía" | Rocky Belmonte | N/a | |
| 8 | "Amor y cadenas" | Osvaldo Rodríguez | Qualified | |
| 9 | "Sor Juana Inés y el ángel" | Noris | N/a | |
| 10 | "La vida va" | María Inés Naveillán | Qualified | |
| 11 | "Ganas de gritar" | Héctor Galaz | Qualified | |
| 12 | "Quiero saber" | Jorge Hernán Baena | N/a | |
| 13 | "Mi ciudad" | Armando Valdivieso | N/a | |
| 14 | "Temporada baja" | Felipe y Francisco Terán (Contravía) | Qualified | |
| 15 | "Eu quero um planeta azul" | Mafalda Sacchetti | Qualified | |
| 16 | "Con agua de sal" | Miriam Cruz | Qualified | |
| 17 | "Libre" | Boy Thode | N/a | |
| 18 | "Como vino... se fue" | Ricardo Padilla | N/a | |
| 19 | "Para poder hablar de amor" | Gilka Gutiérrez | Qualified | |
| 20 | "Tú, sólo tú" | Claudia Basagoitia | N/a | |
| 21 | "Tierra herida" | Cristina Vera Díaz | N/a | |
| 22 | "Enfurecida" | Luis Silva | Qualified | |
| 23 | "Tus sentidos" | Laura Canoura | N/a | |
| 24 | "Cuestión de suerte" | Ana María | Qualified |
Final
The final was held on Saturday 15 October 1994, beginning at 22:30 CET (21:30 UTC).
The winner was the song "Canción despareja" performed by Claudia Carenzio representing Argentina; with "Cuestión de suerte" by Ana María representing Spain placing second; and "Enfurecida" by Luis Silva representing Venezuela placing third. The first prize was endowed with a monetary amount of US$50,000, the second prize of US$30,000, and the third prize of US$20,000. The festival ended with a reprise of the winning entry.
| R/O | Country | Song | Artist | Points | Place |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| "Canción despareja" | Claudia Carenzio | 31 | 1 | ||
| "Mulher" | Zé Renato | 0 | 11 | ||
| "Rompe el cristal" | Fuga de Goya | 9 | 5 | ||
| "Amor y cadenas" | Osvaldo Rodríguez | 3 | 9 | ||
| "La vida va" | María Inés Naveillán | 3 | 9 | ||
| "Ganas de gritar" | Héctor Galaz | 0 | 11 | ||
| "Temporada baja" | Felipe y Francisco Terán (Contravía) | 6 | 7 | ||
| "Eu quero um planeta azul" | Mafalda Sacchetti | 6 | 7 | ||
| "Con agua de sal" | Miriam Cruz | 10 | 4 | ||
| "Para poder hablar de amor" | Gilka Gutiérrez | 8 | 6 | ||
| "Enfurecida" | Luis Silva | 16 | 3 | ||
| "Cuestión de suerte" | Ana María | 28 | 2 |
Jury
The members of a single jury selected their favourite songs in a secret vote. The members of the event's orchestra acted collectively as one juror. The members of the jury were:[4]
José Feliciano – singer
Simón Díaz – singer
Rosita Amores – performer
Rafael Basurto – singer, member of Los Panchos
Jayme Marques – composer
Rafael Beltrán – composer
Marco Quelhas – composer
Event's orquestra
Detailed voting result
Each of the members of the jury awarded 5–1 points to its five favourite songs in order of preference, and wrote its vote anonymously on a ballot. In the semi-final, only the qualifiers were announced. In the final, the counting was conducted publicly, with the hosts announcing the results of each ballot, which were picked in random order.
Broadcast
The festival was broadcast in the 24 participating countries where the corresponding OTI member broadcasters relayed the contest through their networks after receiving it live via satellite.
Known details on the broadcasts in each country, including the specific broadcasting stations and commentators are shown in the tables below.
| Country | Broadcaster | Channel(s) | Show(s) | Commentator(s) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ATM | TeleCuraçao | All shows[a] | [5] | ||
| TVE | La Primera | All shows | No commentary | [6][7] |
