Eurovision Young Dancers

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In the UK, the contest never enjoyed the kudos of Young Musician, and was often buried in a dark corner of the schedules. When the UK hosted the contest in 2001, the BBC was unable to transmit the programme live, and the 2005 competition was not broadcast until three months after it took place. Young Dancers was shelved from its scheduled 2007 edition, replaced it with a [[Eurovision Dance Contest]]; the prize was next awarded in 2011, and the BBC did not participate.
In the UK, the contest never enjoyed the kudos of Young Musician, and was often buried in a dark corner of the schedules. When the UK hosted the contest in 2001, the BBC was unable to transmit the programme live, and the 2005 competition was not broadcast until three months after it took place. Young Dancers was shelved from its scheduled 2007 edition, replaced it with a [[Eurovision Dance Contest]]; the prize was next awarded in 2011, and the BBC did not participate.
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==Trivia==
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== Champions ==
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The 1987 contest included an entry from a non-EBU member, Canada.
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==Champions==
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{|
{|
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|1995||Lausanne, Switzerland||Jesus Pastor Sauquillo and Ruth Miro Salvador||Spain
|1995||Lausanne, Switzerland||Jesus Pastor Sauquillo and Ruth Miro Salvador||Spain
|-
|-
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|1997||Gdansk, Poland||Antonio Carmena San José||Spain
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|1997||Gdynia, Poland||Antonio Carmena San José||Spain
|-
|-
|1999||Lyon, France||Katja Wunsche<br />Yohan Stegli||Germany<br />France||''(joint winners)''
|1999||Lyon, France||Katja Wunsche<br />Yohan Stegli||Germany<br />France||''(joint winners)''
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|2011||Oslo, Norway||Daniel Sarr||Norway
|2011||Oslo, Norway||Daniel Sarr||Norway
|-
|-
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|2013||Gdansk, Poland||Sedrig Verwoert||Netherlands
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|2013||Gdańsk, Poland||Sedrig Verwoert||Netherlands
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|-
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|2015||Plzeň, Czech Republic||Viktoria Nowak||Poland
|}
|}
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==See also==
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== Trivia ==
 +
 
 +
The 1987 contest included an entry from a non-EBU member, Canada.
 +
 
 +
== See also ==
[[Young Dancer|BBC Young Dancer]], a domestic competition held in 2015.
[[Young Dancer|BBC Young Dancer]], a domestic competition held in 2015.
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[[Category:Dance]]
[[Category:Dance]]
[[Category:Long-Running]]
[[Category:Long-Running]]
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[[Category:Current]]

Revision as of 11:48, 2 May 2016

Contents

Host

Produced in the UK in these years:

Deborah Bull and Wayne McGregor (2001)

Co-hosts

Commentary:
Humphrey Burton (1985-7) Annette Page (1985)
Monica Mason (1987)
Judith Mackrell and Richard Alston (1989)
Deborah Bull (1999, 2003-5)

Broadcast

BBC2, 16 June 1985, 31 May 1987 and 1 July 1989

BBC Knowledge, 1999 and 24 June 2001

BBC Four, 12 July 2003 and 24 September 2005

Synopsis

Following the success of Eurovision Young Musicians, a parallel competition for young dancers was established in 1985. As with the music contest, some countries televise their national qualifiers.

The rules specified that all genres - classical, contemporary, jazz, hybrid, hip-hop - were allowed, with the exception of folk dance. The competition was open for solo performers and couples, with performances limited to seven minutes. All performers had to be 21 or younger. Novel choreographies were encouraged, and there was sometimes a prize for best new work. On two occasions, separate prizes were awarded for classical and contemporary pieces.

There was a week-long masterclass immediately before the contest, with the best twelve or so entrants progressing to the televised final. The winners were awarded prizes to benefit their future professional careers.

In the UK, the contest never enjoyed the kudos of Young Musician, and was often buried in a dark corner of the schedules. When the UK hosted the contest in 2001, the BBC was unable to transmit the programme live, and the 2005 competition was not broadcast until three months after it took place. Young Dancers was shelved from its scheduled 2007 edition, replaced it with a Eurovision Dance Contest; the prize was next awarded in 2011, and the BBC did not participate.

Champions

YearVenueWinnerNationality
1985Reggio Emilia, ItalyArantxa ArgüellesSpain
1987Schwetzingen, SwitzerlandRose Gad PoulsenDenmark
1989Paris, FranceContemporary - Agnès Letestu
Classical - Tetsuya Kumakawa
France
United Kingdom
1991Helsinki, FinlandAmaya IglesiasSpain
1993Stockholm, SwedenZenaida YanowskySpain
1995Lausanne, SwitzerlandJesus Pastor Sauquillo and Ruth Miro SalvadorSpain
1997Gdynia, PolandAntonio Carmena San JoséSpain
1999Lyon, FranceKatja Wunsche
Yohan Stegli
Germany
France
(joint winners)
2001London, United KingdomDawid Kupinski and Marcin KupinskiPoland
2003Amsterdam, NetherlandsClassical - Jerlin Ndudi
Modern - Kristina Oom and Sebastian Michanek
Ukraine
Sweden
2005Warsaw, PolandMilou NuyensNetherlands
2011Oslo, NorwayDaniel SarrNorway
2013Gdańsk, PolandSedrig VerwoertNetherlands
2015Plzeň, Czech RepublicViktoria NowakPoland

Trivia

The 1987 contest included an entry from a non-EBU member, Canada.

See also

BBC Young Dancer, a domestic competition held in 2015.

Eurovision Dance Contest

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