Yugoslavia was the host nation of the Eurovision Song Contest 1990, held in
Zagreb,
SR Croatia, Yugoslavia. It was represented by
Tajči and the song "Hajde da ludujemo"
Before Eurovision
Jugovizija 1990
The Yugoslav national final to select their entry, Jugovizija 1990, was held on 3 March 1990 in
Zadar,
Croatia, and was hosted by Ana Brbora Hum and Branko Uvodić.
Sixteen songs made it to the national final, which was broadcast by
JRT to all of the regions of Yugoslavia. The winner was decided by the votes of eight regional juries (
Sarajevo,
Zagreb,
Skopje,
Titograd,
Belgrade,
Ljubljana,
Priština and
Novi Sad). The winning entry was "Hajde da ludujemo" (Let's go crazy), one of the entries submitted on behalf of TV Zagreb and performed by
Croatian singer
Tajči.
On the night of the contest Yugoslavia performed 15th in the running order, following France and preceding Portugal. At the close of voting, "Hajde da ludujemo" had picked up 81 points, placing Yugoslavia in 7th place out of 22 entries.[1] The Yugoslav jury awarded its 12 points to runner-up France.
Yugoslavia was the host nation of the Eurovision Song Contest 1990, held in
Zagreb,
SR Croatia, Yugoslavia. It was represented by
Tajči and the song "Hajde da ludujemo"
Before Eurovision
Jugovizija 1990
The Yugoslav national final to select their entry, Jugovizija 1990, was held on 3 March 1990 in
Zadar,
Croatia, and was hosted by Ana Brbora Hum and Branko Uvodić.
Sixteen songs made it to the national final, which was broadcast by
JRT to all of the regions of Yugoslavia. The winner was decided by the votes of eight regional juries (
Sarajevo,
Zagreb,
Skopje,
Titograd,
Belgrade,
Ljubljana,
Priština and
Novi Sad). The winning entry was "Hajde da ludujemo" (Let's go crazy), one of the entries submitted on behalf of TV Zagreb and performed by
Croatian singer
Tajči.
On the night of the contest Yugoslavia performed 15th in the running order, following France and preceding Portugal. At the close of voting, "Hajde da ludujemo" had picked up 81 points, placing Yugoslavia in 7th place out of 22 entries.[1] The Yugoslav jury awarded its 12 points to runner-up France.