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Italy in the Eurovision Song Contest 2023

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Eurovision Song Contest 2023
Country Italy
National selection
Selection processSanremo Music Festival 2023
Selection date(s)11 February 2023
Selected artist(s)Marco Mengoni
Selected song"Due vite"
Selected songwriter(s)
Finals performance
Final result4th, 350 points
Italy in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄2022 2023 2024►

Italy participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 2023 in Liverpool, United Kingdom. Italian broadcaster RAI announced in June 2022 that the winning performer(s) of the Sanremo Music Festival 2023, later revealed to be Marco Mengoni with "Due vite", would earn the right to represent the nation at the contest.[1]

Background

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Prior to the 2023 contest, Italy has participated in the Eurovision Song Contest forty-six times since its first entry at the inaugural contest in 1956.[2] Since then, Italy 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. Italy has withdrawn from the Eurovision Song Contest a number of times, with their most recent absence spanning from 1998 until 2010. Italy made its return in 2011, and their entry "Madness of Love", performed by Raphael Gualazzi, placed second—their highest result, to that point, since their victory in 1990. A number of top 10 placements followed in the next editions, culminating with their victory in 2021. As hosts in 2022, Italy placed sixth with "Brividi" by Mahmood and Blanco.[3]

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.

Before Eurovision

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Sanremo Music Festival 2023

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Italian broadcaster RAI confirmed that the performer that would represent Italy at the Eurovision Song Contest 2023 would be selected from the competing artists at the Sanremo Music Festival 2023, the 73rd edition of the event. According to the rules of Sanremo 2023, the winner of the festival will earn the right to represent Italy at the Eurovision Song Contest, but in case the artist is not available or refuses the offer, the organisers of the event reserve the right to choose someone else via their own criteria.[4] The competition took place between 7 and 11 February 2023, with the winner being selected on the last day of the festival.

For the fourth year in a row, Amadeus served as the artistic director and presenter of Sanremo,[5] alongside Eurovision 1970 participant Gianni Morandi, and was joined on stage by Chiara Ferragni, Francesca Fagnani [it], Paola Egonu and Chiara Francini, each on a different night. 28 artists, six of which directly qualifying from the newcomers' section Sanremo Giovani (held on 16 December 2022), competed in the festival. This took place over the course of five consecutive nights, articulated as follows:

  • On each of the first two nights, half of the entrants performed their songs, and were judged by three separate panels from a jury of journalists.
  • On the third night, all of the songs were performed and voted through a 50/50 split system by means of televoting and a demoscopic jury. The results were combined with those of the previous nights.
  • On the fourth night, the contestants each performed a cover of a song, and were voted by the same system used on the first three nights.
  • On the last night, the 28 entries once again performed, going through the same system used on the first four nights, to be added up to the results obtained that far; ultimately, a final voting round (again a sum of televoting and the two juries) was held among the top 5, which determined the winner.

The first 22 competing artists were announced on 4 December 2022.[6] On 16 December, the six artists qualifying from the Sanremo Giovani section were announced, alongside the titles of all 28 competing songs.[7] Two former Eurovision Song Contest entrants were among the competing artists: Anna Oxa (1989) and Marco Mengoni (2013). Additionally, Mara Sattei's song was written by Damiano David, who won the 2021 contest as the vocalist and frontman of Måneskin.

Final

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The 28 Big Artists each performed their entry again for a final time on 11 February 2023. A combination of public televoting, press jury voting and demoscopic jury voting selected the top five to face a superfinal vote, then the winner of Sanremo 2023 was decided by a combination of public televoting (34%), demoscopic jury voting (33%) and press jury voting (33%). Marco Mengoni was declared the winner of the contest with the song "Due vite".[8]

Final – 11 February 2023
Draw Artist Song Place
1 Elodie "Due" 9
2 Colla Zio "Non mi va" 20
3 Mara Sattei "Duemilaminuti" 19
4 Tananai "Tango" 5
5 Colapesce Dimartino "Splash" 10
6 Giorgia "Parole dette male" 6
7 Modà "Lasciami" 11
8 Ultimo "Alba" 4
9 Lazza "Cenere" 2
10 Marco Mengoni "Due vite" 1
11 Rosa Chemical "Made in Italy" 8
12 I Cugini di Campagna "Lettera 22" 21
13 Madame "Il bene nel male" 7
14 Ariete "Mare di guai" 14
15 Mr. Rain "Supereroi" 3
16 Paola e Chiara "Furore" 17
17 Levante "Vivo" 23
18 LDA "Se poi domani" 15
19 Coma_Cose "L'addio" 13
20 Olly "Polvere" 24
21 Articolo 31 "Un bel viaggio" 16
22 Will "Stupido" 26
23 Leo Gassmann "Terzo cuore" 18
24 Gianmaria "Mostro" 22
25 Anna Oxa "Sali (Canto dell'anima)" 25
26 Shari "Egoista" 27
27 Gianluca Grignani "Quando ti manca il fiato" 12
28 Sethu "Cause perse" 28
Superfinal – 11 February 2023
Draw Artist Song Demoscopic jury
(33%)
Press jury
(33%)
Televote
(34%)
Total Place
1 Ultimo "Alba" 4th 5th 20.39% 12.25% 4th
2 Tananai "Tango" 5th 3rd 11.15% 11.15% 5th
3 Lazza "Cenere" 3rd 2nd 18.28% 16.64% 2nd
4 Marco Mengoni "Due vite" 1st 1st 32.31% 45.53% 1st
5 Mr. Rain "Supereroi" 2nd 4th 17.87% 14.43% 3rd

At Eurovision

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According to Eurovision rules, all nations with the exceptions of the host country and the "Big Five" (France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom) are required to qualify from one of two semi-finals in order to compete in the final; the top ten countries from each semi-final progress to the final. As a member of the "Big Five", Italy automatically qualified to compete in the final on 13 May 2023. In addition to its participation in the final, Italy was also required to broadcast and vote in one of the two semi-finals. This was decided via a draw held during the semi-final allocation draw on 31 January 2023, when it was announced that Italy would be voting in the first semi-final.[9]

Voting

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Points awarded to Italy

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Points awarded by Italy

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Detailed voting results

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The following members comprised the Italian jury:

  • Carlo Massarini
  • Fabrizio D'Alessio
  • Maria Grazia Fontana
  • Stefania Zizzari
  • Tiziana Donati (Tosca)
Detailed voting results from Italy (Semi-final 1)[11]
Draw Country Televote
Rank Points
01  Norway 2 10
02  Malta 12
03  Serbia 10 1
04  Latvia 11
05  Portugal 9 2
06  Ireland 14
07  Croatia 6 5
08   Switzerland 7 4
09  Israel 5 6
10  Moldova 1 12
11  Sweden 8 3
12  Azerbaijan 15
13  Czech Republic 3 8
14  Netherlands 13
15  Finland 4 7
Detailed voting results from Italy (Final)[10]
Draw Country Jury Televote
Juror 1 Juror 2 Juror 3 Juror 4 Juror 5 Rank Points Rank Points
01  Austria 10 6 11 8 14 12 19
02  Portugal 13 11 12 18 12 16 21
03   Switzerland 16 12 8 2 9 7 4 10 1
04  Poland 15 24 13 17 25 19 13
05  Serbia 9 4 14 7 11 10 1 15
06  France 8 13 15 11 13 15 16
07  Cyprus 17 21 5 12 4 11 11
08  Spain 3 9 16 16 19 13 22
09  Sweden 14 3 6 3 3 3 8 8 3
10  Albania 22 22 17 25 23 24 4 7
11  Italy
12  Estonia 7 20 2 13 2 5 6 20
13  Finland 21 23 18 20 24 23 5 6
14  Czech Republic 2 5 7 4 8 4 7 9 2
15  Australia 20 19 9 19 16 18 23
16  Belgium 18 10 4 6 10 9 2 12
17  Armenia 6 18 3 5 5 6 5 24
18  Moldova 23 25 19 23 20 25 1 12
19  Ukraine 1 2 20 9 1 2 10 3 8
20  Norway 24 17 21 21 17 21 2 10
21  Germany 19 14 22 24 18 20 14
22  Lithuania 5 8 10 14 6 8 3 17
23  Israel 4 1 1 1 15 1 12 6 5
24  Slovenia 12 7 23 15 7 14 18
25  Croatia 25 16 24 22 21 22 7 4
26  United Kingdom 11 15 25 10 22 17 25

References

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  1. ^ Rossini, Federico (13 June 2022). "Sanremo 2023: il vincitore all'Eurovision per l'Italia" (in Italian). Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  2. ^ "Italy Country Profile". Eurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union (EBU). Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  3. ^ "Italy – Eurovision Song Contest". Eurovision.tv. EBU. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  4. ^ Dammacco, Beppe (13 June 2022). "Sanremo 2023: il regolamento. In gara 25 cantanti" (in Italian). Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  5. ^ "Amadeus al timone del Festival di Sanremo anche nel 2023 e 2024". tg24.sky.it (in Italian). Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  6. ^ Granger, Anthony (4 December 2022). "Italy: Festival di Sanremo 2023 Participants Revealed". Eurovoix. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  7. ^ Granger, Anthony (17 December 2022). "Italy: Sanremo Giovani 2022 Qualifiers & Sanremo Song Titles Revealed". Eurovoix. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  8. ^ "Italy: Marco Mengoni wins Sanremo 2023". Eurovisionworld. 12 February 2023. Retrieved 12 February 2023.
  9. ^ Groot, Evert (31 January 2023). "Eurovision 2023: Allocation Draw results". Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  10. ^ a b c "Results of the Grand Final of Liverpool 2023". Eurovision.tv. EBU. Retrieved 8 August 2023.
  11. ^ a b "Results of the First Semi-Final of Liverpool 2023". Eurovision.tv. Retrieved 21 November 2023.