The
United Kingdom participated in the inaugural
Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2003, which was held on 15 November 2003 in
Copenhagen, Denmark. National broadcaster
ITV was responsible for their participation and organised a national final to select the British entry. Ultimately, Tom Morley was selected with "My Song for the World".
Tom Morley performed twelfth in the running order, following the entry from
Belgium and preceding the entry from
Denmark. The United Kingdom finished in third position with 118 points.
Before Junior Eurovision
Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2003: The British Final
On the night of the contest, held in
Copenhagen,
Denmark, Tom Morley performed 12th in the running order of the contest, following
Belgium and preceding Denmark. At the close of the voting Morley has received 118 points, placing 3rd of the 16 competing entries, beaten by
Spain and winners'
Croatia.[5]
In the United Kingdom, the show was televised on ITV1 with commentary by national final hosts Durden-Smith and Palmer-Tomkinson. The British spokesperson, who announced the British votes during the final, was national finalist Sasha Stevens. The live broadcast averaged 5 million viewers.[6]
The
United Kingdom participated in the inaugural
Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2003, which was held on 15 November 2003 in
Copenhagen, Denmark. National broadcaster
ITV was responsible for their participation and organised a national final to select the British entry. Ultimately, Tom Morley was selected with "My Song for the World".
Tom Morley performed twelfth in the running order, following the entry from
Belgium and preceding the entry from
Denmark. The United Kingdom finished in third position with 118 points.
Before Junior Eurovision
Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2003: The British Final
On the night of the contest, held in
Copenhagen,
Denmark, Tom Morley performed 12th in the running order of the contest, following
Belgium and preceding Denmark. At the close of the voting Morley has received 118 points, placing 3rd of the 16 competing entries, beaten by
Spain and winners'
Croatia.[5]
In the United Kingdom, the show was televised on ITV1 with commentary by national final hosts Durden-Smith and Palmer-Tomkinson. The British spokesperson, who announced the British votes during the final, was national finalist Sasha Stevens. The live broadcast averaged 5 million viewers.[6]