United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest 1978

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The United Kingdom was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 1978 with the song "The Bad Old Days", written by Stephanie de Sykes and Stuart Slater, and performed by the band Co-Co. The British participating broadcaster, the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), selected its entry through a national final.

Before Eurovision

A Song for Europe 1978

The national final was held on Friday 31 March 1978 at the Royal Albert Hall, presented by Terry Wogan. The songs were backed by the Alyn Ainsworth Orchestra.<ref name="Song" />

Fourteen regional juries voted on the songs: Bristol, Bangor, Leeds, Norwich, Newcastle, Aberdeen, Birmingham, Manchester, Belfast, Cardiff, Plymouth, Glasgow, Southampton, and London. Each jury voted internally and ranked the songs 1–12, awarding 12 points for their highest scoring song, down to 1 point for the lowest scoring entry.

"The Bad Old Days" won the national and came 11th in the contest. Broadcast on the Friday after the Easter weekend in the United Kingdom, A Song for Europe 1978 was watched by 13.7 million viewers and was the 16th-most watched programme of the week – the show's highest ever rating.<ref name="Song">Television's Greatest Hits, Network Books, Paul Gambaccini and Rod Taylor, 1993. Template:ISBN</ref>

A Song for Europe 1978Template:Snd31 March 1978<ref name="Roxburgh">Template:Cite book</ref>
Draw Artist Song Songwriter(s) Points Place
1 Christian "Shine It On" Bill Martin & Phil Coulter 114 3
2 Brown Sugar "Oh No, Look What You've Done" Wayne Bickerton & Tony Waddington 49 11
3 Fruit Eating Bears "Door in My Face" Neville Crozier & Chris Crash 49 11
4 Jacquie Sullivan "Moments" Jacquie Sullivan 106 6
5 Sunshine "Too Much in Love" Wayne Bickerton & Tony Waddington 81 8
6 Ronnie France "Lonely Nights" Paul Curtis 68 9
7 The Jarvis Brothers "One Glance" Paul Curtis 114 3
8 Co-Co "The Bad Old Days" Stephanie de Sykes & Stuart Slater 135 1
9 Bob James "We Got It Bad" Bob James & Labi Siffre 66 10
10 Midnight "Don't Bother to Knock" Kenny Lynch, Steve O'Donnell & Colin Horton-Jennings 116 2
11 Babe Rainbow "Don't Let Me Stand in Your Way" Irving Martin & Peter Morris 84 7
12 Labi Siffre "Solid Love" Labi Siffre 110 5

Both groups Co-Co and Sunshine had participated in Template:Esccnty, albeit with different line-ups. Co-Co would return to Template:Esccnty with another line-up, under the name The Main Event. Co-Co's member Cheryl Baker would eventually win the Eurovision Song Contest 1981 with the group Bucks Fizz.

Regional jury votes<ref name="Roxburgh" />
Draw Song scope="col" Template:Vert header scope="col" Template:Vert header scope="col" Template:Vert header scope="col" Template:Vert header scope="col" Template:Vert header scope="col" Template:Vert header scope="col" Template:Vert header scope="col" Template:Vert header scope="col" Template:Vert header scope="col" Template:Vert header scope="col" Template:Vert header scope="col" Template:Vert header scope="col" Template:Vert header scope="col" Template:Vert header Total
1 "Shine It On" 12 11 9 10 5 4 11 12 12 7 9 3 5 4 114
2 "Oh No, Look What You've Done" 7 2 2 1 3 2 2 9 5 2 3 1 4 6 49
3 "Door in My Face" 2 1 7 2 1 7 3 3 2 3 1 2 10 5 49
4 "Moments" 8 8 11 7 8 3 9 6 10 8 10 6 3 9 106
5 "Too Much in Love" 9 3 5 4 2 6 10 7 9 5 6 7 6 2 81
6 "Lonely Nights" 1 4 1 8 4 5 1 2 1 10 7 11 12 1 68
7 "One Glance" 6 7 3 5 9 12 6 11 11 9 12 4 11 8 114
8 "The Bad Old Days" 11 12 12 11 10 11 7 4 3 11 11 12 8 12 135
9 "We Got It Bad" 3 6 10 3 12 1 4 1 8 1 4 5 1 7 66
10 "Don't Bother to Knock" 4 9 8 6 11 10 8 5 7 12 8 10 7 11 116
11 "Don't Let Me Stand in Your Way" 5 5 4 9 7 8 5 10 6 6 5 9 2 3 84
12 "Solid Love" 10 10 6 12 6 9 12 8 4 4 2 8 9 10 110
Regional jury spokespersons<ref name="Roxburgh" />
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At Eurovision

The contest was broadcast on BBC1, with commentary by Terry Wogan,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and on radio stations BBC Radio 1 and BBC Radio 2, with commentary by Ray Moore.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The contest was watched by 21 million viewers.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

The BBC appointed Colin Berry as its spokesperson to announce the British jury results.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Voting

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Points awarded to the United Kingdom<ref name="1978detailed">Template:Cite web</ref>
Score Country
12 points
10 points
8 points Template:Esc
7 points Template:Esc
6 points Template:Unbulleted list
5 points Template:Unbulleted list
4 points Template:Esc
3 points Template:Unbulleted list
2 points Template:Unbulleted list
1 point

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Points awarded by the United Kingdom<ref name="1978detailed" />
Score Country
12 points Template:Esc
10 points Template:Esc
8 points Template:Esc
7 points Template:Esc
6 points Template:Esc
5 points Template:Esc
4 points Template:Esc
3 points Template:Esc
2 points Template:Esc
1 point Template:Esc

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References

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Template:United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest Template:Eurovision Song Contest 1978