Peter, Sue and Marc


Peter, Sue and Marc were a Swiss music group from Bern, consisting of,, and . They represented Switzerland at the Eurovision Song Contest four times, singing in four languages: French in with "Les Illusions de nos vingt ans", English in with "Djambo, Djambo", German in with "Trödler und Co", and Italian in with "Io senza te", which they also published in German. They sold over two million records in Switzerland. They held concerts in many countries including Germany, Austria, and Japan. Their greatest hit was "Cindy" in 1976. The song "Birds of paradise" became a hit in Slovakia in 2006. Initially the song was played at the funeral of 42 military plane crash victims. Following that people flooded radio stations across the country with requests for this song.
During their career, Peter Sue and Marc made many other attempts to sing at Eurovision. They came third in the 1973 Swiss national final with "Es kommt ein Tag". In 1974, they again missed out on a place, this time with the song "Frei". 1975 saw them finish in second place in the Swiss national final with "Lève-toi le soleil". In 1978, they took part in the German national final, and their entry, "Charlie Chaplin", placed third. In 1987, Dietrich attempted to represent Switzerland solo with the song "Nostradamus", finishing second behind Carol Rich.
In addition to his participations alongside Schell and Dietrich, Reber also composed, co-wrote, and conducted the, "Cinéma" performed by Paola del Medico. It also makes him one of a few performers to have also participated at Eurovision as a conductor.