Got Talent España
Created bySimon Cowell
Presented bySanti Millán
JudgesEdurne
Risto Mejide
Dani Martínez
Jesús Vázquez
Jorge Javier Vázquez
Eva Hache
Eva Isanta
Paz Padilla
Paula Echevarría
Joaquin Sabina
Production
ProducerFremantleMedia
Running time180 minutes
Production companiesFremantleMedia
Syco TV
Original release
NetworkTelecinco
Release13 February 2016 (2016-02-13)–present

Got Talent España (English: Got Talent Spain), is the Spanish version of the international Got Talent series. It is hosted by Santi Millán and broadcast on Spanish Telecinco channel. The idea behind the programme is to search for the most talented and promising entertainment. The series premiered on 13 February 2016.[1] The new show is a continuation of an original series Tienes Talento (English: You've Got Talent) that had seen one season starting 25 January 2008 on Cuatro, hosted by Nuria Roca and Eduardo Aldán and was discontinued after one season. On 15 June 2015, Mediaset España announced the revival of the series for the group's main channel Telecinco.[2] The judges were Edurne, Eva Hache, Jesús Vázquez, and Jorge Javier Vázquez.

Tienes Talento

The original series was hosted by Nuria Roca (also the host of Factor X), with Eduardo Aldán as backstage host. Actress Natalia Millán, music conductor Josep Vicent, and singer-songwriter David Summers were the three original judges. Summers appeared only in the first episode and left the show prematurely due to pneumonia; he was replaced by singer and musician Miqui Puig (also a judge on Factor X) for the rest of the season.[3] On 21 April 2008, 16-year-old flamenco singer Salva Rodríguez won the finale with 23 percent of the televote.[4] Got Talent España: All-Stars

Got Talent España seasons

Summary

Season Start Finish Winner's prize Winner Runner-up Third place Presenter Judges
1 2 3 4
1 13 February 2016 27 April 2016 €25,000 Cristina Ramos Alberto de Paz María Mendoza Santi Millán Jesús Vázquez Edurne Eva Hache Jorge Javier Vázquez
2 21 January 2017 21 March 2017 Antonio "El Tekila" Samuel Martí Progenyx Risto Mejide
3 17 January 2018 11 April 2018 César Brandon Taekwondo Tao Tomás Sanjuán
4 28 January 2019 29 April 2019 Murga Zeta Zetas Juan San Juan Nazaret Natera Eva Isanta Paz Padilla
5 16 September 2019 16 December 2019 Hugo Molina Magodelucasss Ismailah Dani Martínez
6 15 January 2021 30 April 2021 Celia Muñoz Chus Serrano Elsa Tortonda
7 10 September 2021 17 December 2021 Dúo Turkeev Rey Enigma Jorge Pineda
8 5 September 2022 20 December 2022 Jordi Caps Dakota & Nadia Joaquín Matas Paula Echevarría
9 9 September 2023 16 December 2023 Lil Kids Nikol Taranenko Carlos Prieto "El Jilguerillo" Florentino Fernandez

Seasons 1 (2016)

Telecinco opened auditions for Got Talent España on 15 Ju2015. On 5 August 2015, Telecinco announced the panel of judges: television presenter Jesús Vázquez; television presenter Jorge Javier Vázquez; actress, comedian and television presenter Eva Hache; and singer, actress and television presenter Edurne.[5] On 26 August 2015, actor and showman Santi Millán was announced as host.[6] The series premiered on 13 February 2016.[1] On 27 April 2016, versatile opera and rock music singer Cristina Ramos Pérez won the finale of the season.[7] The pianist Alberto de Paz was runner-up and singer María Mendoza came third. There were also participations from other countries including Brazil, China, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Italy and the Philippines.

Host and judges

NamePositionAgeOriginProfession
Santi Millán Host 47 Barcelona Actor and TV host
Jorge Javier Vázquez Judge 45 Barcelona TV host, theatre director and producer
Eva Hache 44 Segovia Comedian, actress and TV host
Edurne 30 Madrid Singer, Spain's representative in Eurovision 2015
Jesús Vázquez 50 A Coruña TV host

Finalists

Contestants Talent Age Information
Cristina Ramos Pérez Singer 37 years Winner
Alberto de Paz Pianist 38 years Runner-up
María Mendoza Singer 22 years Third
Marco Aurelio Motta Contortionist and acrobat 23 years Eliminated from third group
Gabriel Fonty Dancer 31 years
Ballet Kebanna Ballet dancers Between 20 and 40 years
Gabriela Gutiérrez-Colomer Singer 16 years
David Pereira Acrobats and dancers 24 years
Arianna Moia Opera singer 15 years Eliminated from second group
Bichiswaag Urban and breakdance dancers Between 10 and 14 years
Javi Lin Chen Violinist 28 years
Celia y Marco Acrobats 32 and 30 years
Sergio Ordóñez Acrobat 19 years
Dianne Jacob Ico Singer 14 years Eliminated from first group
David Tejada Popping dancer 12 years
Zistarlity Dancers Between 14 and 25 years
Robin Dee Singer 32 years
Donet Collazo Acrobatic dancer 32 years

Season 2 (2017)

On 23 April 2016, Telecinco renewed the series for another season.[8] On 27 July 2016, it was announced that publicist and media personality Risto Mejide would be a judge on the second season.[9] It was later confirmed that Mejide would be replacing Jesús Vázquez.[10] The series premiered on 21 January 2017. On 22 March 2017, rock and roll dancer Antonio Garrido "El Tekila" won the season finale.[11] The dancer Samuel Martí Pérez was runner-up. There were also participations from Algeria, Argentina and Cuba.

Host and judges

NamePositionAgeOriginProfession
Santi Millán Host 48 years Barcelona Actor and TV host
Jorge Javier Vázquez Judge 46 years Barcelona TV host, theatre director and producer
Eva Hache 45 years Segovia Comedian, actress and TV host
Edurne 31 years Madrid Singer, Spain's representative in Eurovision 2015
Risto Mejide 42 years Barcelona TV host, writer and publicist

Finalists

Contestants Talent Age Information Percentage
Antonio "El Tekila" Rock’n’roll dancer 45 years Winner 26,05%
Samuel Martí Pérez Dancer 19 years Runner-up 20,12%
Progenyx Dancers Between 14 and 20 years Third 10,88%
Joel Armando Hernández Magician and illusionist 35 years Fourth 9,50%
Madrid Frao Dancers Between 20 and 28 years Fifth 7,44%
Marina Marlo Singer 16 years Sixth 5,12%
Solange Freyre Singer and musical theatre stage actress 43 years Seventh 4,44%
Kader Adjel Singer 20 years Eighth 4,09%
The Roker Contemporary magician 16 years Ninth 3,58%
Mar Gabarre Singer 23 years Tenth 2,36%
Ibán Velacoracho Imitator and singer 33 years Eleventh 1,95%
Abdel Luna Drag and contortionist 18 years Twelfth 1,80%
Kanga y Tania Dancers 47 and 12 years Thirteenth 1,60%
Acheron Delacroix Illusionist 28 years Fourteenth 1,08%

Season 3 (2018)

The third season premiered on 17 January 2018.[12] On 11 April 2018, poet César Brandon from Equatorial Guinea won the season finale.[13] This was the first time in the history of the show that a non-Spaniard won the title. The Spanish taekwondo show band Taekwondo Tao were runners-up.

Host and judges

NamePositionAgeOriginProfession
Santi Millán Host 49 Barcelona Actor and TV host
Jorge Javier Vázquez Judge 47 Barcelona TV host, theatre director and producer
Eva Hache 46 Segovia Comedian, actress and TV host
Edurne 32 Madrid Singer, Spain's representative in Eurovision 2015
Risto Mejide 43 Barcelona TV host, writer and publicist

Season 4 (2019)

The fourth season premiered on 28 January 2019.[14] On 27 July 2018, it was announced that actress Eva Isanta would replace Eva Hache in the panel.[15] On 3 September 2018, it was announced that comedian, actress and television presenter Paz Padilla would replace Jorge Javier Vázquez in the panel.[16] On 29 April 2019, the murga group Murga Zeta Zetas won the season finale.[17]

Season 5 (2019)

The fifth season premiered on 16 September 2019, less than five months after the finale of the fourth season.[18] On 11 June 2019, it was announced that comedian and television presenter Dani Martínez would replace Eva Isanta in the panel.[19] On 16 December 2019, 3-year-old drummer Hugo Molina won the season finale, becoming the second youngest winner to date in any of the Got Talent franchises; the youngest winner being Arinka Shuhalevych from Ukraine in the 2016 Kid's Version.[20]

Season 6 (2021)

The sixth season premiered on 15 January 2021.[21] Paz Padilla was only present for the semi-final and final, due to the death of her husband. On 30 April 2021, ventriloquist Celia Muñoz won the season finale.[22]

Season 7 (2021)

Season 9 recording in València.

The seventh season featured three judges instead of four, after the exit of Paz Padilla.[23] It premiered on 10 September 2021.[24] Acrobats Dúo Turkeev won the finale on 17 December 2021.[25]

Season 8 (2022)

The eighth season of Got Talent España premiered on 5 September 2022. Paula Echevarría joined as judge, completing a panel of four judges again.

References

  1. 1 2 "Se confirma 'Got Talent España' para los nuevos sábados de Telecinco". Vertele. February 6, 2016. Archived from the original on April 9, 2016. Retrieved February 6, 2016.
  2. "Mediaset recupera 'Tienes talento' para Telecinco y lo rebautiza como 'Got Talent España'". FormulaTV. June 15, 2015. Retrieved July 7, 2015.
  3. "David Summers se cae de "Tienes talento" (Cuatro)". Diario Siglo XXI. January 22, 2008. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
  4. Pérez-Lanzac, Carmen (April 23, 2008). "Salva, un fan de Camarón, gana 'Tienes talento'". El País. Retrieved July 7, 2015.
  5. "Jesús Vázquez, Jorge Javier, Eva Hache y Edurne serán jurado de 'Got Talent España'". Telecinco.es. August 5, 2015. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
  6. "Santi Millán, presentador sorpresa de 'Got Talent' en Telecinco". Vertele.com. August 26, 2015. Retrieved August 26, 2015.
  7. "Una 'Voz' gana 'Got Talent España' y el jurado pierde la compostura". Vertele.com. April 28, 2016. Retrieved April 28, 2016.
  8. "TELECINCO RENUEVA 'GOT TALENT ESPAÑA' POR UNA SEGUNDA TEMPORADA". El Huffington Post. April 24, 2016. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
  9. "Risto Mejide será jurado de 'Got Talent'". La Vanguardia. July 27, 2016. Retrieved July 28, 2016.
  10. "Risto Mejide sustituye a Jesús Vázquez en 'Got talent'". El Periódico de Catalunya. August 31, 2016. Retrieved September 20, 2016.
  11. "Sorpresa en la final: ¡El Tekila gana 'Got Talent 2'!". telecinco. Retrieved 2017-03-29.
  12. "Esta noche, estreno 3ª edición de 'Got Talent España' en Telecinco". La Vanguardia. Retrieved 2018-01-17.
  13. "El poeta César Brandon, ganador de 'Got Talent'". El País (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2018-04-12.
  14. "Duelo de talents: Telecinco enfrentará 'Got Talent 4' contra 'La Voz' en Antena 3". El Periódico de Catalunya (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2019-01-25.
  15. "'Got Talent España 4': Eva Isanta sustituirá a Eva Hache en la mesa del jurado". FórmulaTV (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2018-07-27.
  16. "'Got Talent España 4': Paz Padilla sustituirá a Jorge Javier Vazquéz en la mesa del jurado". Telecinco (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2018-09-03.
  17. "La Murga Zeta Zetas gana 'Got Talent' con sus potentes mensajes". Telecinco (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2019-06-11.
  18. Redacción Yotele (13 September 2019). "Duelo de estrenos: Telecinco decide enfrentar 'Got Talent' contra 'La voz kids'". El Periódico de Catalunya (in European Spanish). Retrieved 14 September 2019.
  19. "'Got Talent España 5': Dani Martínez sustituirá a Eva Isanta como jurado". FórmulaTV (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2019-06-11.
  20. "La Murga Zeta Zetas gana 'Got Talent' con sus potentes mensajes". La Vanguardia (in European Spanish). 2019-12-17. Retrieved 2019-12-17.
  21. Ignacio Herruzo Martínez (15 January 2021). "'Got Talent España': el estreno más espectacular del programa en Telecinco". Diez Minutos (in European Spanish). Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  22. Redacción Yotele (1 May 2021). "Celia Muñoz, ganadora de la sexta edición de 'Got Talent' con su muñeco Joselito". El Periódico de Catalunya (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  23. Redacción Bluper (10 September 2021). "Por qué Paz Padilla ya no está en el jurado de 'Got Talent España'". El Español (in European Spanish). Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  24. Redacción (8 September 2021). "'Got Talent 7' ya tiene fecha de estreno en Telecinco con la primera de sus diez galas de 'Audiciones'". eldiario.es (in European Spanish). Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  25. "Así fue la actuación del 'Dúo Turkeev' que le valió para ganar la séptima edición de 'Got Talent'" (in European Spanish). Cadena SER. 19 December 2021. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
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