Eurovision Young Dancers 2003
Dates
Semi-final2 July 2003
Final4 July 2003
Host
VenueStadsschouwburg, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Presenter(s)Aldith Hunkar
Directed byRoss MacGibbon
Executive supervisorSarah Yuen
Executive producerHenk van der Meulen
Host broadcasterNederlandse Programma Stichting (NPS)
Websiteyoungdancers.tv/event/amsterdam-2003
Participants
Number of entries17
Debuting countries
Returning countriesNone
Non-returning countries
Participation map
  • frameless}}
    frameless}}
         Participating countries     Did not qualify from the semi-final     Countries that participated in the past but not in 2003
Vote
Voting systemA professional jury chose the finalists and gave points to each performance
Winning dancers
  •  Sweden
    Kristina Oom and Sebastian Michanek (contemporary dance)
  •  Ukraine
    Jerlin Ndudi (classical dance)
  •  Czech Republic
    Monika Hejduková and Viktor Konvalinka (Youth Jury Choice)

The Eurovision Young Dancers 2003 was the tenth edition of the Eurovision Young Dancers, held at the Stadsschouwburg Theatre in Amsterdam, Netherlands between 29 June and 4 July 2003.[1] Organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Nederlandse Programma Stichting (NPS), dancers from ten countries participated in the televised final. A total of seventeen countries took part in the competition therefore a semi-final was held a few days before at the same venue. Armenia and Romania made their début while Austria, Germany and Ireland decided not to participate.[1]

The semi-final took place on 2 July 2003.[2] Each country could send one or two dancers, male or female, not older than 20. All countries except the host (Netherlands) had to take part in the semi-final.[1]

The non-qualified countries were Armenia, Belgium, Cyprus, Norway, Poland, Slovenia and United Kingdom. Kristina Oom and Sebastian Michanek of Sweden won the contemporary dance prize, with Jerlin Ndudi of Ukraine winning the classical dance prize. Monika Hejduková and Viktor Konvalinka of Czech Republic won the 'Youth Jury Choice' award.[3]

Location

Stadsschouwburg Theatre

Stadsschouwburg Theatre in Amsterdam, Netherlands was the host venue for the 2003 edition of the Eurovision Young Dancers.[1] The building is in the neo-Renaissance style dating back to 1894, and is the former home of the National Ballet and Opera.[4]

Format

The format consists of dancers who are non-professional and between the ages of 16–21, competing in a performance of dance routines of their choice, which they have prepared in advance of the competition. All of the acts then take part in a choreographed group dance during 'Young Dancers Week'.[5]

Jury members of a professional aspect and representing the elements of ballet, contemporary, and modern dancing styles, score each of the competing individual and group dance routines. The overall winner upon completion of the final dances is chosen by the professional jury members.[5] All participants received a medal, designed by Dutch artist Dinie Besems.[2]

There was no interval act this year, with footage of previous contest winners and an offstage interview with Agnès Letestu, winner of the contemporary dance prize in 1989, broadcast instead.

Results

Preliminary round

A total of seventeen countries took part in the preliminary round of the 2003 contest, of which ten qualified to the televised grand final. The following countries failed to qualify.[1][6]

CountryParticipantDanceChoreographer
 United KingdomKate Lyons"The Girl"M. Baldwin
 BelgiumSébastien Tassin"Coppélia"A. Saint-Léon
 CyprusNatalia Krekou"After"A. Hatjieftychiou
 SloveniaAnže Škrube"Club Hoppin"D. Popovski
 ArmeniaAvetik Karapetyan"Rhythm of Spirit"H. Divanyan
 NorwayCaroline Roca"Afraid of Beauty"P. Touzeau
 PolandJakub Greda"Solo Hip-Hop"A. Grazul and R. Ziolkowski

Final

There were 2 prizes given this year: one for contemporary dance (awarded to Sweden) and one for classical ballet dance (awarded to Ukraine). A special "young jury" award was given as well by a group of young viewers that were in the audience, this went to contemporary runner-up Czech Republic.[1][7]

Classical category

CountryParticipantDanceChoreographerPlacePoints
 UkraineJerlin Ndudi"Le Corsaire"M. Petipa1938
 EstoniaMaria Seletskaja"Swan Lake"M. Petipa3800
 FinlandTiina Myllymäki"Paquita"Makarova and M. Petipa5745
 GreeceElenina NicolaouM. Petipa6716
 RomaniaOvidiu Matei Iancu"Swan Lake"2831
  SwitzerlandSarah-Jane Brodbeck"Don Quixote"4793

Contemporary category

CountryParticipantDanceChoreographerPlacePoints
 SwedenKristina Oom and Sebastian Michanek"Light Beings"M. Ek1907
 Czech RepublicMonika Hejduková and Viktor Konvalinka"The Twilight Of Innocence"Kodel and Vágnerová2856
 NetherlandsJoeri Dubbe"Perfect Skin"E. Wubbe3781
 LatviaLinda Siliņa"La Primavera"I. Lapsiņa4777

Jury members

The jury members consisted of the following:[1]

  •  RussiaVladimir Vasiliev
  •  GermanySusanne Linke
  •  Italy – Paola Cantalupo
  •  Netherlands – Derrick Brown
  •  United States – Liz Imperio

Broadcasting

26 national broadcasters[8] in 23 countries transmitted the 2003 event.[9] Albania, Croatia, Germany, Iceland, Puerto Rico, and Serbia and Montenegro all broadcast the contest in addition to the competing countries.

Broadcasters in participating countries
Country Broadcaster(s)
 Armenia ARMTV
 Belgium RTBF
 Cyprus CyBC
 Czech Republic ČT
 Estonia ETV
 Finland Yle
 Greece ERT
 Latvia LTV
 Netherlands NOS
NPS
 Norway NRK
 Poland TVP2
 Romania TVR 2
 Slovenia RTVSLO
 Sweden SVT1
  Switzerland DRS
TSR
TSI
 Ukraine NTU
 United Kingdom BBC
Broadcasters in non-participating countries
Country Broadcaster(s)
 Albania RTVSH
 Croatia HRT
 Germany 3sat
 Iceland RÚV
 Puerto Rico
 Serbia and Montenegro UJRT

See also

Notes and references

Notes

  1. Armenia took part for the first time in the semi-final since they did not reach the final. Their debut in a Final of the Young Dancers contest took place in 2013

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Eurovision Young Dancers 2003: About the show". European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
  2. 1 2 "10th Eurovision Young Dancers". EBU. 13 February 2013. Archived from the original on 13 February 2013. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  3. "Eurovision Young Dancers 2003: Participants". youngmusicians.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
  4. Martin Dunford (2010). The Rough Guide to The Netherlands. Penguin. p. 74. ISBN 978-1-84836-882-8.
  5. 1 2 "Eurovision Young Dancers - Format". youngdancers.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 11 February 2015. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  6. "Eurovision Young Dancers 2003". 10 October 2004. Archived from the original on 10 October 2004. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  7. "Eurovision Young Dancers Awards Ukrainian and Swedish winners". 7 July 2003. Archived from the original on 24 December 2004. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  8. "Eurovision Young Dancers 2003". 2 June 2011. Archived from the original on 2 June 2011. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  9. (PDF). young-dancers.com. 31 March 2004 https://web.archive.org/web/20040331044323/http://www.young-dancers.com:80/participate/2003_Countries_Broadcastrs.pdf. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 March 2004. Retrieved 3 May 2018. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.