OTI Festival 1973
The OTI Festival 1973 was the second edition of the OTI Festival, held on 10 November 1973 at the in Belo Horizonte, Brazil, and presented by Walter Forster and. It was organised by the Organização da Televisão Ibero-americana and host broadcaster TV Itacolomi on behalf of Rede Tupi, who staged the event after winning the 1972 festival for Brazil with the song "Diálogo" by Claudia Regina and Tobías.
Broadcasters from fourteen countries took part, with Mexico competing for the first time and joining the original thirteen participating countries from the previous contest. Ecuador, who was also going to join for the first time, made a late withdrawal. The winner was the song "Qué alegre va María" performed by representing Mexico. A tie for the first place occurred at the end of the jury voting, with the entry from Mexico tying on points with "El mundo gira por tu amor" by Gabriela de Jesús representing Peru, and winning after applying the tiebreaker procedure.
Location
According to the rules of the OTI Festival at the time, the winning broadcaster of the previous edition would host the festival the following year. The Organização da Televisão Ibero-americana designated Rede Tupi, which was the winning broadcaster of the first edition with the song "Diálogo" performed by Claudia Regina and Tobías representing Brazil, as the host broadcaster of the second edition.The Rede Tupi hosting committee decided that Belo Horizonte was the most suitable city to host the OTI Festival. This decision was made because of the city's good infrastructure and its readiness for exposition and exhibition purposes. The venue of the festival was the, a very modern and vanguardist auditorium which was designed by Oscar Niemeyer and was inaugurated in 1971, two years before the festival took place. The palace, which was one of the biggest concert halls in Brazil and Latin America, had a seating capacity for over 2,000 people, which makes it bigger than the venue of the previous edition in Madrid. Rede Tupi delegated the production of the festival to its local affiliate TV Itacolomi, which staged the event as part of its 18th anniversary celebrations.
Participants
Broadcasters from fourteen countries participated in this edition of the OTI Festival. The OTI members, public or private broadcasters from Spain, Portugal, and twelve Spanish and Portuguese speaking countries of Ibero-America signed up for the festival. Televisa, which represented Mexico and did not participate the previous year, made its debut at the festival selecting its entry through its 2nd National OTI Festival. The winner of this national festival was "La canción del hombre", written by Felipe Gil and performed by Gualberto Castro, but since it was later proven that it had been broadcast on the radio before the permitted date, it became ineligible and the runner-up was sent instead. The broadcasters from other countries also used national festivals in order to select their entries for the festival. Ecuador, who was also going to participate for the first time, made a late withdrawal.One performing artist had previously represented the same country in the previous edition: Arturo Quesada had represented Bolivia in 1972. The festival featured two international well-known artist, Camilo Sesto representing Spain, and Sergio Esquivel, who was the lyricist of the Mexican entry.
| Country | Broadcaster | Artist | Song | Language | Songwriter | Conductor | ||||||||
Argentina|1861lang\|es|Televisión Argentina|i=nohlist|Juan Eduardo|Elo SantosFestival overviewThe festival was held on Saturday 10 November 1973, beginning at 20:00 BRT. It was presented by Walter Forster and. This was the first time that the festival was hosted in a Portuguese-speaking country, so the festival was mainly presented in Portuguese for the first time. The musical director was Ivan Paulo who conducted the 30-piece Rede Tupi Symphonic Orchestra when required. The draw to determine the running order was held a few days before the festival. The interval act consisted in a performance by.The winner was the song "Qué alegre va María" performed by representing Mexico. Its performer received a trophy, while its songwriter received two, one for composer and another for lyricist. The trophies were delivered by Guillermo Cañedo, president of OTI; Edmundo Reina, president of the OTI programs committee; and José de Almeida Castro, president of the Ibero-American Broadcasting Association. The festival ended with a reprise of the winning entry.
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Argentina|1861lang\|es|
Panama
Brazil|1968N/A|