Times Colonist

Switzerlan­d wins 68th Eurovision Song Contest amid Gaza protests

- JILL LAWLESS

—Swiss singer Nemo won the 68th Eurovision Song Contest early today with The Code, an operatic pop-rap ode to the singer’s journey toward embracing a non-gender identity.

Switzerlan­d’s contestant beat Croatian rocker Baby Lasagna to the title by winning the most points from a combinatio­n of national juries and viewers around the world. Nemo, 24, is the first nonbinary winner of the contest that has long been embraced as a safe haven by the LGBT community. Nemo is the first Swiss winner since 1988, when Canadian chanteuse Celine Dion competed under the Swiss flag.

“Thank you so much,” Nemo said after the result from Saturday’s final was announced soon after midnight. “I hope this contest can live up to its promise and continue to stand for peace and dignity for every person.”

At a post-victory news conference, Nemo expressed pride in accepting the trophy for “people that are daring to be themselves and people that need to be heard and need to be understood. We need more compassion, we need more empathy.”

Nemo’s victory in the Swedish city of Malmo followed a turbulent year for the pan-continenta­l pop contest that saw large street protests against the participat­ion of Israel that tipped the feelgood musical celebratio­n into a chaotic pressure cooker overshadow­ed by the war in Gaza.

Hours before the final, Dutch competitor Joost Klein was expelled from the contest over a backstage altercatio­n that was being investigat­ed by police.

Nemo — full name Nemo Mettler — bested finalists from 24 other countries, who all performed in front of a live audience of thousands and an estimated 180 million viewers around the world. Each contestant had three minutes to meld catchy tunes and eye-popping spectacle into performanc­es capable of winning the hearts of viewers. Musical styles ranged across rock, disco, techno and rap — sometimes a mashup of more than one.

Israeli singer Eden Golan, who spent Eurovision week in Malmo under tight security, took the stage to a wall of sound — boos mixed with cheers — to perform the power ballad Hurricane. Golan shot up the odds table through the week, despite the protests that her appearance drew, and ended in fifth place behind Nemo, Baby Lasagna, Ukrainian duo alyona alyona & Jerry Heil, and French singer Slimane. Eurovision organizers ordered a change to the original title of her song, October Rain

— an apparent reference to the Oct. 7 Hamas attack that killed about 1,200 people in Israel and triggered the war in Gaza.

The show was typically eclectic Eurovision fare, ranging from the pop-zombie folk hybrid of Estonia’s 5Miinust x Puuluup to the folk-inflected power pop of Greece’s Marina Satti and Armenia’s Ladaniva and the goofy 1990s nostalgia of Finland’s Windows95m­an, who emerged from a giant onstage egg wearing very little clothing.

Britain’s Olly Alexander offered upbeat dance track Dizzy, while Ireland’s gothic Bambie Thug summoned a demon onstage and brought a scream coach to Malmo, and Spain’s Nebulossa boldly reclaimed a term used as a slur on women in Zorra.

Nemo had been a favourite going into the contest, alongside Baby Lasagna, whose song Rim Tim Tagi Dim is a rollicking rock number that tackles the issue of young Croatians leaving the country in search of a better life.

The contest returned to Sweden, home of last year’s winner, Loreen, half a century after ABBA won Eurovision with Waterloo — Eurovision’s most iconic moment. ABBA did not appear in person in Malmo, though their digital “ABBA-tars” from the ABBA Voyage stage show did.

 ?? MARTIN MEISSNER, AP ?? Nemo of Switzerlan­d celebrates after winning the Grand Final of the Eurovision Song Contest with last year’s winner Loreen of Sweden in Malmo, Sweden, on Saturday.
MARTIN MEISSNER, AP Nemo of Switzerlan­d celebrates after winning the Grand Final of the Eurovision Song Contest with last year’s winner Loreen of Sweden in Malmo, Sweden, on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada