À force de prier
"À force de prier" is a song recorded by Greek singer Nana Mouskouri, with music composed by Raymond Bernard and French lyrics written by Pierre Delanoë. It in the Eurovision Song Contest 1963, held in London.
Background
Conception
"À force de prier" was composed by Raymond Bernard with French lyrics by Pierre Delanoë. It is a ballad with the singer telling the object of her affections that she intends to have him love her "by persistently praying" for this to occur.National selection
The Compagnie Luxembourgeoise de Télédiffusion internally selected "À force de prier" performed by Nana Mouskouri as for the of the Eurovision Song Contest. She recorded the song also in German –as "Die Worte dieser Nacht" with lyrics by Hans Bradtke–, English –as "The One That Got Away" with lyrics by Lewis–, and Italian – as "La notte non lo sa"–.Mouskouri had had her international breakthrough with the German language single "Weiße Rosen aus Athen" in 1961, a song originally adapted from a Greek folk melody. The song was later translated into several different languages and went on to become one of Mouskouri's signature tunes. When she received the offer to represent Luxembourg at Eurovision in early 1963 she and her family had recently relocated from Athens, Greece, to Paris, France, where she was signed to the Philips-Fontana label.
Eurovision
On 23 March 1963, the Eurovision Song Contest was held at the BBC Television Centre in London hosted by the British Broadcasting Corporation and broadcast live throughout the continent. Mouskouri performed "À force de prier" sixteenth and last on the evening, following 's "L'amour s'en va" by Françoise Hardy. Eric Robinson conducted the event's live orchestra in the performance of the Luxembourgian entry. This was the second appearance of a Greek artist on the Eurovision stage after Jimmy Makulis in the for. would not join until the.At the close of voting, the song had received 13 points, placing eighth in a field of sixteen. It was succeeded as Luxembourgian representative at the by "Dès que le printemps revient" by Hugues Aufray.