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J'aime la Vie

"J'aime la vie"
Sandra Kim - J'aime la vie.jpg
Single by Sandra Kim
B-side "On n'oublie pas"
Released 1986
Format 7" single
Genre Pop, eurodisco
Length 3:00
Label Carrere
Writer(s) Jean Paul Furnémont (music)
Angelo Crisci (music)
Rosario Marino (lyrics)
Producer(s) Marino
Sandra Kim singles chronology
"Ami Ami"
(1985)
"J'aime la vie"
(1986)
"Tokyo Boy"
(1986)
Belgium "J'aime la vie"
Eurovision Song Contest 1986 entry
Country
Artist(s)
Sandra Caldarone
As
Language
Composer(s)
Jean Paul Furnémont
Angelo Crisci
Lyricist(s)
Rosario Marino
Conductor
Jo Carlier
Finals performance
Final result
1st
Final points
176
Appearance chronology
◄ "Laat me nu gaan" (1985)   
"Soldiers of Love" (1987) ►

"J'aime la vie" (French pronunciation: ​[ʒɛm la vi], I Love Life) was the winning song of the Eurovision Song Contest 1986, performed for Belgium by Sandra Kim. Belgium had finished the 1985 Contest in last place, and thus achieved the rare turnaround from last to first in the space of one year. The song also marks the only time to date that Belgium has won the Contest. The song was also released on Kim's album J'aime la vie in 1986.

Performed in French, the song is a positive one, dealing with the pleasure to be had in life.

During Preview Week, Kim sang the song with the common theme of "things she likes" intact throughout. In the video, she does many things which she finds enjoyable, which include partaking in physical education class, hanging out with friends, listening to her Walkman, buying a big ice cream cone, and performing a choreographed dance in an exercise studio.

The video was reconstructed scene by scene some 25 years later as a commercial for the insurancy company Delta Lloyd. The new and old videos were then shown side by side.

At Bergen, the song was performed thirteenth on the night (following Ireland's Luv Bug with "You Can Count On Me" and preceding Germany's Ingrid Peters with "Über Die Brücke Geh'n"). Its winning tally was 176 points, finishing first in a field of 20. The entry received points from every jury.

In the lyrics, Kim describes herself as being "fifteen", although she was later proven to be only thirteen at the time of her performance. She thus remains the youngest ever Eurovision winner and one of the youngest-ever performers at the Contest. Her record is unlikely to be challenged, as the Contest rules were changed to specify that performers must turn at least 16 in the year that they perform. According to author and historian John Kennedy O'Connor in his book The Eurovision Song Contest - The Official History, the Swiss (who had placed 2nd) petitioned to have the Belgian win nullified after Kim's age was revealed.


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