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Eurovision Song Contest to mark 70th birthday with a live tour
Summary
The European Broadcasting Union has announced a live tour to celebrate the Eurovision Song Contest’s 70th anniversary, beginning at London’s O2 arena on 15 June and visiting nine other European cities. The show will feature memorable performers from the contest’s history and will include performances from 10 of this year’s entrants, with the 2026 line-up to be confirmed after the contest.
Content
The Eurovision Song Contest has announced a live tour to mark its 70th anniversary, to begin after this year’s grand final. Organisers said the new show will bring together memorable performers from across the contest’s seven decades and will include some acts from this year’s competition.
Key details:
- The European Broadcasting Union (EBU) announced the tour and described it as a celebration of the contest’s history and future.
- The tour opens at London’s O2 arena on 15 June and will visit nine other cities: Hamburg, Milan, Zürich, Antwerp, Cologne, Copenhagen, Amsterdam, Paris and Stockholm.
- Organisers said the show will include performances by notable past Eurovision performers and feature 10 acts from the 2026 contest.
- Artists on the tour are expected to sing their own Eurovision entries and cover songs from the contest’s 70-year history, according to organisers.
- The roster of 2026 artists taking part in the tour will not be announced until after this year’s contest, suggesting selections will follow the final in May.
- The EBU said the tour is intended to give fans who could not secure contest tickets a chance to see a large-scale Eurovision live show.
Summary:
The announcement positions the tour as a pan-European celebration that will take place immediately after this year’s contest in Vienna on 16 May. The line-up of participating 2026 artists will be confirmed after the contest, and the tour will begin at the O2 on 15 June as scheduled. The announcement comes alongside reported disagreements over this year’s contest, including debate about Israel’s participation and statements from several countries and artists; the broader situation is ongoing and developments continue to be reported.
