Intervision Song Contest
| Intervision Song Contest | |
|---|---|
| Genre | Music competition |
| Created by | International Radio and Television Organisation |
| No. of episodes | 10 contests |
| Production | |
| Production locations |
|
| Production companies | International Radio and Television Organisation 1965–68: Czechoslovak Television 1977–80: Telewizja Polska |
| Original release | |
| Release | 12 June 1965 – 22 June 1968[1] |
| Release | 24 August 1977 – 23 August 1980 |
| Release | 28 August – 31 August 2008 |
| Release | 20 September 2025 – present |
| Related | |
| Sopot International Song Festival | |
The Intervision Song Contest (ISC) is an international song competition originally organized by the International Radio and Television Organisation (OIRT) and broadcast live via the Intervision network. Launched in 1965 as the Eastern Bloc equivalent to the Eurovision Song Contest, its first phase was staged in various cities across Czechoslovakia until 1968. From 1977 to 1980, the contest was held at Sopot's Forest Opera in Poland, followed by a one-off revival in Sochi in 2008. After a lengthy hiatus, the contest was relaunched in 2025 under an annual rotating-host model, with each edition staged in a different country.
The ISC replaced the long-running Sopot International Song Festival (Sopot ISF), which had been held in Sopot since 1961, when it moved there for its second phase from 1977 to 1980.[1][2][3] In 1981 the unified ISC/Sopot ISF was cancelled because of the rise of the independent trade union movement, Solidarity, which was judged by other Eastern bloc communist governments to be "counter-revolutionary". In 1984, Polish broadcaster TVP revived the Sopot ISF under its original name.
In 2008, a one-off revival contest took place in Sochi, as an attempt to revive the contest, though subsequent editions planned in both 2014 and 2015 did not materialise.[4][5] After the Russian broadcasters withdrew from the European Broadcasting Union upon being excluded from the Eurovision Song Contest 2022, another revival was announced by the Russian Ministry of Culture in 2023, with Russian president Vladimir Putin signing a decree for it to be held in Moscow.[6][7] Intervision 2025 was held on 20 September at the Live Arena in Novoivanovskoye, Moscow. The next edition is scheduled to be held in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia in 2026.
History
[edit | edit source]1965–1968: Golden Clef Intervision Contest
[edit | edit source]The first series of Intervision Song Contest, officially called Golden Clef Intervision Contest (Czech: Zlatý klíč Intervize)[3][8] ran from 1965 to 1968 in Czechoslovakia.[2][9] The inaugural contest was held at the Musical Theatre Karlín in Prague, with subsequent editions held in Bratislava and Karlovy Vary.[10]
1977–1980: Sopot
[edit | edit source]The first Sopot International Song Festival was initiated and organised in 1961 by Władysław Szpilman, assisted by Szymon Zakrzewski from Polish Artists Management (PAGART).[11] The first three editions were held in the Shipyard hall of Gdańsk (1961–1963), after which the festival moved to the Forest Opera in Sopot. The main prize has been Amber Nightingale for most of its history.
Between 1977 and 1980 the Sopot International Song Festival was replaced by the Intervision Song Contest, which was still held in the same venue. Unlike the Eurovision Song Contest, the Sopot International Music Festival often changed its formulas to pick a winner and offered many different contests for its participants. For example, at the 1980 contest two competitions were organised: one for artists representing television companies, the other for those representing record companies. In the first competition, the jury considered the artistic merits of the songs entered, while in the second, it judged the performers' interpretation.[12] The festival has always been open to non-European acts, and countries like Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Mongolia, New Zealand, Nigeria, Peru, South Africa, and many others have been represented in the event.
The festival lost popularity in Poland and abroad in the 1980s. Telewizja Polska (TVP)'s unconvincing attempts at organising several of the contests led to the authorities of Sopot giving the organisation of the 2005 festival to a private broadcaster, TVN. Since 1999, there had been no competition. TVP chose to invite well-known artists instead, featuring the likes of Whitney Houston or The Corrs. In 2005, TVN was expected to bring the competition back. In 2006 TVN invited Elton John. In 2010 and 2011, the festival did not take place due to renovation of the Forest Opera. Since 2012, it has been called Sopot Top of the Top Festival and is broadcast annually by Polsat. The festival also provided opportunity to listen to international stars. It featured Charles Aznavour, Boney M, Johnny Cash, and more recently: Chuck Berry, Vanessa Mae, Annie Lennox, Vaya Con Dios, Chris Rea, Tanita Tikaram, La Toya Jackson, Whitney Houston, Kajagoogoo, as well as Goran Bregovic and Anastacia.
2008: Five Stars - Intervision
[edit | edit source]In 2008, Five Stars: Intervision was organised where eleven countries participated and was won by Tajikistan.[13] In 2009, the then Prime Minister of Russia, Vladimir Putin, proposed restarting the competition, this time between Russia, China and the Central Asian member states of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation.[14][15]
In May 2014, it was announced that the contest would return, featuring countries from the Commonwealth of Independent States and the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation.[16] Russian singer and producer Igor Matvienko, announced that the contest would take place in October 2014 in the coastal city of Sochi, which played host to the 2014 Winter Olympics.[16][17] Seven countries had declared their interest to compete prior to the event's cancellation: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, China, and Uzbekistan.[18][19] Russia had also selected Alexander Ivanov as its representative.[20] The contest was scheduled to take place in October 2014, ostensibly due to "Russian anger at the moral decay of the West", particularly in response to the Eurovision Song Contest 2014 winner Conchita Wurst. Moreover, the revival was seen as part of "Putin's broader cultural diplomacy agenda".[21] Despite plans to stage the contest in both 2014 and 2015, a revival has not taken place.[22][23] Ivanov later represented Belarus in the Eurovision Song Contest 2016 with the song "Help You Fly", but failed to qualify for the final.[24]
2025–present
[edit | edit source]In November 2023, Russian Minister of Culture Olga Lyubimova and Channel One Russia's Director General Konstantin Ernst revealed at St. Petersburg's International Cultural Forum that the broadcaster planned to produce a revival of the Intervision Song Contest featuring the member countries of BRICS.[6] This occurred after the broadcaster's membership in the European Broadcasting Union was suspended, upon the exclusion of Russia from the Eurovision Song Contest 2022 due to its invasion of Ukraine.[25] On 8 June 2024, Russian government official Mikhail Shvydkoy told RIA Novosti that "more than 16 countries" would take part in the competition, naming Azerbaijan, Belarus, Brazil, China, Cuba, and Kazakhstan.[26]
On 3 February 2025, president Putin signed a decree formalising the revival of the competition. Intervision 2025 was held in the Moscow area on 20 September 2025. Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Chernyshenko was appointed as chair of the event's organizing committee, while domestic policy chief Sergey Kiriyenko was installed as chair of its supervisory board.[27] 23 countries competed in the event, which was won by Vietnam.[28] The 2026 edition is planned to be held in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, organised by the country's culture ministry.[29]
Winners
[edit | edit source]| Year | Date | Host City | Winner | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Country[3][30] | Song[3][30] | Artist[3][30] | Language | |||
| 1965–1968: Golden Clef Intervision Contest | ||||||
| 1965 | 12 June[8] | "Tam, kam chodí vítr spát" | Karel Gott | Czech | ||
| 1966 | 25 June[31] | File:Flag of Bulgaria.svg Bulgaria | "Adagio" (Адажио) | Lili Ivanova | Bulgarian | |
| 1967 | 17 June[32] | "Rekviem" | Eva Pilarová | Czech | ||
| 1968 | 22 June[8] | "Proč ptáci zpívají?" | Karel Gott | |||
| 1977–1980: Sopot | ||||||
| 1977 | 24–27 August | Error creating thumbnail: Sopot | "Malovaný džbánku" | Helena Vondráčková | Czech | |
| 1978 | 23–26 August | "Patrik" | Václav Neckář | |||
| File:Flag of the Soviet Union.svg Soviet Union | "Vsyo mogut koroli" (Всё могут короли) | Alla Pugacheva | Russian | |||
| 1979 | 22–25 August | Error creating thumbnail: Poland | "Nim przyjdzie wiosna" | Czesław Niemen | Polish | |
| 1980 | 20–23 August | "Chcem sa s tebou deliť" | Marika Gombitová | Slovak | ||
| File:Flag of Finland.svg Finland | "Hyvästi yö" | Marion Rung | Finnish | |||
| File:Flag of the Soviet Union.svg Soviet Union | "Na vstrechu oseni" (На встречу осени) | Mykola Hnatyuk | Russian | |||
| 2008: Five Stars - Intervision | ||||||
| 2008 | 28–31 August | Russia Sochi | File:Flag of Tajikistan.svg Tajikistan | ''Zangi Telefon'' "Tsvety Pod Snegom" "Hero" |
Tahmina Niyazova | English |
| 2025–present | ||||||
| 2025 | 20 September | Russia Moscow | File:Flag of Vietnam.svg Vietnam | "Phù Đổng Thiên Vương" | Đức Phúc | Vietnamese, English, Russian |
Winners by country
[edit | edit source]| Wins | Country | Years |
|---|---|---|
| 6 | 1965, 1967, 1968, 1977, 1978, 1980 | |
| 2 | File:Flag of the Soviet Union.svg Soviet Union | 1978, 1980 |
| 1 | File:Flag of Bulgaria.svg Bulgaria | 1966 |
| Error creating thumbnail: Poland | 1979 | |
| File:Flag of Finland.svg Finland | 1980 | |
| File:Flag of Tajikistan.svg Tajikistan | 2008 | |
| File:Flag of Vietnam.svg Vietnam | 2025 |
Winners by language
[edit | edit source]| Wins | Language | Years |
|---|---|---|
| 5 | Czech | 1965, 1967, 1968, 1977, 1978 |
| 4 | Russian | 1978, 1980, 2008, 2025 |
| 2 | English | 2008, 2025 |
| 1 | Bulgarian | 1966 |
| Polish | 1979 | |
| Finnish | 1980 | |
| Slovak | ||
| Vietnamese | 2025 |
Participation
[edit | edit source]Active
[edit | edit source]Countries that have participated in the latest edition of the contest:
Inactive
[edit | edit source]Countries that participated in the past, but not in the latest edition of the contest:
| ‡ | Former – countries which previously participated but no longer exist |
Invited
[edit | edit source]Countries that expressed interest, were invited, or even "confirmed" by the organisers, but ended up not participating:
- File:Flag of Bolivia.svg Bolivia[33]
- File:Flag of Iran.svg Iran[34][35][36][37][38]
- File:Flag of Mexico.svg Mexico[39]
- File:Flag of North Korea.svg North Korea[40][41]
- File:Flag of Pakistan.svg Pakistan[42][43][44]
- File:Flag of Slovakia.svg Slovakia[45]
- File:Flag of Thailand.svg Thailand[46][47]
References
[edit | edit source]- Notes
- ^ BRT and RTBF alternate responsibilities for the contest.
- References
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- ^ Intervision: The Russian proposed song contest with China, Central Asia (Shanghaiist: Shanghai News, Food, Arts & Events)
- ^ Putin mulls Intervision Song Contest (BBC World Service)
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External links
[edit | edit source]Error creating thumbnail: File missing Media related to Lua error in Module:Commons_link at line 62: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). at Wikimedia Commons
- BBC Magazine: The Cold War rival to Eurovision, Steve Rosenberg, 13 May 2012
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