OTI Festival 1978
The OTI Festival 1978 was the seventh edition of the OTI Festival, held on 2 December 1978 at the Municipal Theatre in Santiago, Chile, and presented by Raúl Matas and Raquel Argandoña. It was organised by the Organización de Televisión Iberoamericana and host broadcasters Televisión Nacional de Chile, Universidad Católica de Chile Televisión, Universidad de Chile Televisión, and Universidad Católica de Valparaíso Televisión. This was the first edition of the festival in which the winning broadcaster of the previous edition didn't host the following year.
Broadcasters from nineteen countries participated in the festival. The winner was the song "El amor... cosa tan rara" performed by representing Brazil, with "Ha vuelto ya" by Susy Lemán representing the United States placing second, and "Como tú " by Lupita D'Alessio representing Mexico placing third. This year's edition saw several important changes to the festival's format.
Location
The Organización de Televisión Iberoamericana opened a selection process to choose the host broadcaster for the seventh edition of the OTI Festival, to which all its member broadcasters were eligible to apply.Televicentro de Nicaragua, which had won the 1977 festival for Nicaragua with the song "Quincho Barrilete" performed by Eduardo González, had the intention to host the contest at the Rubén Darío National Theatre in Managua, according to an internal committee of the company. However, the Nicaraguan Revolution was boosted by the Sandinistas in order to topple the dictatorship of Anastasio Somoza Debayle. The outcome of the revolution was a violent civil war which caused a human and economical catastrophe in the country, which prevented the broadcaster from submitting his candidacy. This was the first time that the winning broadcaster of the previous edition didn't host the following year.
In March 1978, the OTI accepted at its 7th General Assembly the proposal of the Chilean broadcasters, among the applications it had received, and designated them as the host broadcasters of the 1978 festival. Four Chilean national television networks joined forces in order to host the festival. Televisión Nacional de Chile organized the event together with Universidad Católica de Chile Televisión, Universidad de Chile Televisión, and Universidad Católica de Valparaíso Televisión. They agreed to allocate a budget of US$240,000 for the event. The Teleton 1978, which was originally scheduled to take place on the day chosen for the festival, was pushed one week to 8–9 December, since TVN and UCTV had already made agreements with the OTI.
The Chilean broadcasters staged the OTI Festival 1978 in Santiago. The venue selected was the Municipal Theatre, which is the most important stage theatre and opera house in the country, and can seat more than 1,500 spectators. It was opened in 1857 and was designed by Claudio Brunet des Baines. The building was built in French Neoclassical style and its entrance has been preserved despite the frequent fires, reforms, and reconstructions. They had full access to the venue from 24 November.
Right after the festival, a farewell dinner for the participating delegations was held at the Club de la Unión 's pergola.
Participants
Broadcasters from nineteen countries participated in this edition of the OTI Festival. The OTI members, public or private broadcasters from Spain and eighteen Spanish and Portuguese speaking countries of Ibero-America signed up for the festival. From the countries that participated in the previous edition, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and Portugal didn't return. On the other hand, Paraguay made its debut at the festival.It was not the first time that some countries decided to withdraw, but the broadcasters always justified their decision because of economical problems or disappointing placings. In this edition, for the first time, some of the non returning broadcasters cited political reasons for taking that decision. Portugal decided to be absent as a protest of the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet in Chile. Nicaragua had to withdraw from the contest for two years because of the catastrophic situation created by the civil war, making this the first and only time that the winning country of the previous festival would not participate in the following edition. Guatemala decided to withdraw the event bitterly disappointed by the previous year's result. In addition, Bolivia, whose broadcaster was preparing its return, decided to rule out because the new military government that emerged from the coup d'état that led to the overthrow of the president Hugo Banzer decided to break all diplomatic relationships with neighboring Chile.
Some of the participating broadcasters, such as those representing Chile, Mexico, and the Netherlands Antilles, selected their entries through their regular national selections. Other broadcasters, decided to select their entry internally.
One performing artist had previously represented the same country in previous editions: had represented Brazil in 1976. The festival featured the OTI entry with the longest title ever "" representing Chile. As was the case of the 1976 festival, all the competing songs were performed in Spanish.
| Country | Broadcaster | Artist | Song | Language | Songwriter | Conductor | ||
Argentina|1861lang\|es|Canal Once|i=nolang\|es|Dijeron que era un niño|i=noFestival overviewThe festival was held on Saturday 2 December 1978, beginning at 20:00 CLST. It was directed by Fernando Leighton, and presented by Raquel Argandoña and Raúl Matas. Matas had previously presented the inaugural OTI Festival back in 1972 in Madrid. The musical director was, who conducted the 41-piece orchestra and the mixed backing choir of six voices when required. The draw to determine the running order was held on 31 October at the TVN headquarters located in Providencia.The opening act consisted of a recorded performance by the on location at the doors of the theater. During the show, there were twelve two-minute segments featuring footage of places, people, and landscapes of Chile, filmed by the Tourism Board. Before the voting began, a demonstration was held using the stage set itself, which was designed by Ricardo Moreno. It began with the opening of the backdrop, then the stage floor lifted, revealing the national flag of Chile, while a panel lifted revealing the electronic scoreboard, finally showing the flags of each participating country on both sides of the scoreboard. The winner was the song "El amor... cosa tan rara" performed by representing Brazil, with "Ha vuelto ya" by Susy Lemán representing the United States placing second, and "Como tú " by Lupita D'Alessio representing Mexico placing third. There was a plaque for each of the first three places. The first prize plaque was delivered by Eduardo Reina, vice-president of OTI; the second prize plaque by Nicanor González, president of the OTI programs committee; and the third prize plaque by Hernán García Barzelatto, vice-president of the OTI programs committee. The festival ended with a reprise of the winning entry.
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Argentina|1861lang\|es|
Puerto Rico|1952lang\|es|Háblame|i=no