Eurovision 2025 first tickets wave sells out in minutes
The first wave of
42,000 tickets for the 2025 Eurovision Song Contest sold out within minutes on
Wednesday, organisers said.
The Swiss city of
Basel will host the glitzy annual television extravaganza at the St.
Jakobshalle indoor arena, with the semi-finals on May 13 and 15, and the final
on May 17.
The first wave of
tickets for the live shows sold out within seven minutes, while those for the
preview shows sold out in 20 minutes, host broadcaster SRG said.
Fans who
pre-registered for tickets but missed out on Wednesday will have further
chances to be in the arena in future sales waves.
Tickets for the
various shows range from 40 to 350 Swiss francs ($44-$385).
"We were
overwhelmed by the huge demand," ESC 2025 co-executive producers Reto
Peritz and Moritz Stadler said in a statement.
"It is moving to
see how much the Eurovision Song Contest inspires people in our country and all
over the world."
Swiss singer Nemo's
2024 Eurovision victory in Malmo, Sweden gave Switzerland the right to host
this year's edition.
Israel's participation
in last year's event, in the midst of the war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza,
attracted pro-Palestinian demonstrations.
Israeli competitor
Eden Golan had to change her lyrics over their apparent references to the
deadly Hamas attack on October 7, 2023.
A survivor of that
attack will represent Israel in Basel.
When Hamas militants
killed over 370 people at the Nova music festival, Yuval Raphael survived by
hiding under a pile of bodies. She said she would be ready to face the kind of
hostility Golan did.
- 'Pumping beats'
and yodelling -
Around 36,000 fans
without golden tickets for the arena will be able to flock to the St.
Jakob-Park football stadium across the street to watch the final on giant
screens.
Ticket sales for the
stadium event open on Thursday at 0900 GMT, with tickets costing 55 to 128
Swiss francs ($60-$140).
The arena stage design
is inspired by Switzerland's mountains and linguistic diversity, while the
signature music for the show combines yodelling, a Basel drum corps, dulcimers
and alphorns.
"We've created a
bold, high-energy track, which will prepare the audience for an unforgettable
experience with its pumping beats and surprising musical effects," said
art director Artur Deyneuve.
Moldova pulled out
ahead of Tuesday's semi-final draw for financial reasons and the lack of a
strong enough entrant.
Fifteen countries were
drawn in the first semi-final and 16 in the second. The top 10 go through from
each semi to join hosts Switzerland and the so-called Big Five (Britain,
France, Germany, Italy and Spain) broadcasters in the final.
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