| OTI Festival 1995 | |
|---|---|
| Date and venue | |
| Final |
|
| Venue | Anfiteatro José Asunción Flores San Bernardino, Paraguay |
| Organization | |
| Organizer | Organización de Televisión Iberoamericana (OTI) |
| Supervisor | Darío de la Peña |
| Host broadcaster | Teledifusora Paraguaya |
| Musical director | Oscar Cardozo Ocampo |
| Presenters |
|
| Participants | |
| Number of entries | 24 |
| Returning countries | |
| Non-returning countries | |
| Vote | |
| Voting system | The members of a single jury selected their favourite songs in a secret vote |
| Winning song | "Eres mi debilidad" |
The OTI Festival 1995 (Spanish: Vigésimo Cuarto Gran Premio de la Canción Iberoamericana, Portuguese: Vigésimo Quarto Grande Prêmio da Canção Ibero-Americana) was the 24th edition of the OTI Festival, held on 11 November 1995 at Anfiteatro José Asunción Flores in San Bernardino, Paraguay, and presented by Menchi Barriocanal and Rubén Rodríguez. It was organised by the Organización de Televisión Iberoamericana (OTI) and host broadcaster Teledifusora Paraguaya.
Broadcasters from twenty-four countries participated in the festival. The winner was the song "Eres mi debilidad" performed by Marcos Llunas representing Spain; with "Canción contra la tristeza" by Alberto Plaza representing Chile placing second; and "Hoy que no estás" by Cristina Rebull representing Cuba placing third.
Location

The Organização da Televisão Ibero-americana (OTI) designated Teledifusora Paraguaya as the host broadcaster for the 24th edition of the OTI Festival. The broadcaster staged the event in San Bernardino. The venue selected was Anfiteatro José Asunción Flores, an open-air venue opened in 1992 with a capacity for 20,614 people, used for social events, festivals and concerts, located at the slopes of the Andes mountain range. This was the first time the festival was held outdoors.
On 9 November 1995, the participating artists were received by the president of the country Juan Carlos Wasmosy.
Participants
Broadcasters from twenty-four countries participated in this edition of the OTI festival. The OTI members, public or private broadcasters from Spain, Portugal, and twenty-two Spanish and Portuguese speaking countries of Ibero-America signed up for the festival. From the countries that participated in the previous edition, only Netherlands Antilles was absent, with Canada returning after missing that festival.
Some of the participating broadcasters, such as those representing Chile and Cuba, selected their entries through their regular national selections. Other broadcasters decided to select their entry internally.
Four performing artists had previously represented the same country in previous editions: Rolando Percy had represented Paraguay in 1978 and 1990, Carlos Brizzio had represented Honduras in 1984, Martha Baltodano had represented Niracagua in 1991, and Tony Cheng had represented Panama in 1993.
| Country | Broadcaster | Artist | Song | Language | Songwriter(s) | Conductor |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inés Rinaldi y Fernando Porta | "Si se pierden las canciones" | Spanish |
|
Oscar Cardozo Ocampo | ||
| Denise Rivera | "Adiós mi tierra" | Spanish |
|
Fernando Sancho | ||
| Beto Surian | "Aonde está você" | Portuguese | Beto Surian | Oscar Cardozo Ocampo | ||
| TLN | Mariela Torres | "Quiéreme" | Spanish | Jorge González | Oscar Cardozo Ocampo | |
| UCTV | Alberto Plaza | "Canción contra la tristeza" | Spanish | Alberto Plaza | Roberto Trujillo Sidiela | |
| César Mora | "Sólo por hoy" | Spanish | César Mora | Milton Salcedo | ||
| Rafael F. Dubón | "El buen Felipe" | Spanish | Rafael F. Dubón | Carlos Guzmán Bermúdez | ||
| ICRT | Cristina Rebull | "Hoy que no estás" | Spanish | Carlos Miguel Ojeda | Oscar Cardozo Ocampo | |
| Manuel Jiménez | "Un solar en la luna" | Spanish | Manuel Jiménez | Manuel Tejada | ||
| Tierrabuena | "Mira" | Spanish | Fernando Proaño | Claudio Jácome Harb | ||
| TCS | Matices | "Ven aquí conmigo" | Spanish |
|
Oscar Cardozo Ocampo | |
| Mario Mejía | "Siéntelo" | Spanish | Nelson Leal | Roberto Estrada | ||
| Carlos Brizzio | "La casa de Pablo" | Spanish | Carlos Brizzio | Oscar Cardozo Ocampo | ||
| Televisa | Sayeg | "Cantos distintos" | Spanish | Sayeg | Alberto Núñez Palacios | |
| Martha Baltodano | "Esa mirada" | Spanish |
|
César Prado | ||
| Tony Cheng | "Has hecho trampa" | Spanish | Augusto César Esucdero | Oscar Cardozo Ocampo | ||
| Teledifusora Paraguaya | Rolando Percy | "Por siempre América" | Spanish |
|
Palito Miranda | |
| Julio Andrade | "Brillo en la piel" | Spanish | Julio Andrade | Carlos Wong | ||
| RTP | Pedro Migueis | "Vê lá bem" | Portuguese |
|
Ramón Galarza | |
| Telemundo Puerto Rico | Carlos Alberto Fortuño | "Latinoamericano" | Spanish | Antonio Ramía Pérez | Ramón Sánchez | |
| TVE | Marcos Llunas | "Eres mi debilidad" | Spanish | Alejandro Abad | Javier Capella Sanz | |
| Univision | Silvia Bezi | "Secreto de amor" | Spanish | José Villarreal | Roy Velásquez | |
| Sociedad Televisora Larrañaga | Pájaro Canzani | "Un mundo mejor" | Spanish | Pájaro Canzani | Julio Frade | |
| Rogelio Ortiz | "El viaje" | Spanish | Simón Díaz | Alí Agüero |
Festival overview
The festival was held on Saturday 11 November 1995, beginning at 21:00 PYST (00:00+1 UTC). It was presented by Menchi Barriocanal and Rubén Rodríguez. The musical director was Oscar Cardozo Ocampo, who conducted the orchestra when required.
The winner was the song "Eres mi debilidad" performed by Marcos Llunas representing Spain; with "Canción contra la tristeza" by Alberto Plaza representing Chile placing second; and "Hoy que no estás" by Cristina Rebull representing Cuba placing third. The first prize was endowed with a monetary amount of US$30,000, the second prize of US$20,000, and the third prize of US$10,000.[2] The festival ended with a reprise of the winning entry.
| R/O | Country | Artist | Song | Place |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Julio Andrade | "Brillo en la piel" | N/a | |
| 2 | César Mora | "Sólo por hoy" | N/a | |
| 3 | Denise Rivera | "Adiós mi tierra" | N/a | |
| 4 | Pájaro Canzani | "Un mundo mejor" | N/a | |
| 5 | Pedro Migueis | "Vê lá bem" | N/a | |
| 6 | Rogelio Ortiz | "El viaje" | N/a | |
| 7 | Manuel Jiménez | "Un solar en la luna" | N/a | |
| 8 | Silvia Bezi | "Secreto de amor" | N/a | |
| 9 | Carlos Brizzio | "La casa de Pablo" | N/a | |
| 10 | Inés Rinaldi y Fernando Porta | "Si se pierden las canciones" | N/a | |
| 11 | Sayeg | "Cantos distintos" | N/a | |
| 12 | Tierrabuena | "Mira" | N/a | |
| 13 | Beto Surian | "Aonde está você" | N/a | |
| 14 | Mariela Torres | "Quiéreme" | N/a | |
| 15 | Cristina Rebull | "Hoy que no estás" | 3 | |
| 16 | Carlos Alberto Fortuño | "Latinoamericano" | N/a | |
| 17 | Tony Cheng | "Has hecho trampa" | N/a | |
| 18 | Marcos Llunas | "Eres mi debilidad" | 1 | |
| 19 | Alberto Plaza | "Canción contra la tristeza" | 2 | |
| 20 | Matices | "Ven aquí conmigo" | N/a | |
| 21 | Martha Baltodano | "Esa mirada" | N/a | |
| 22 | Mario Mejía | "Siéntelo" | N/a | |
| 23 | Rafael F. Dubón | "El buen Felipe" | N/a | |
| 24 | Rolando Percy | "Por siempre América" | N/a |
Jury
The nine members of a single jury selected their favourite songs in a secret vote. Only the top three places were revealed. The voting was supervised by Darío de la Peña. The members of the jury were:
Antonio Vodanovic – television host
Manuel Mijares – singer
Delia Fiallo – screenwriter
Donatto – singer-songwriter
Estéfano – singer-songwriter
Daniela Mercury – singer-songwriter
Francisco – singer, won the festival for Spain in 1981 and 1992
Víctor Pecci – tennis player
Luis Szarán – composer
Broadcast
The festival was broadcast in the 24 participating countries where the corresponding OTI member broadcasters relayed the contest through their networks after receiving it live via satellite.
Known details on the broadcasts in each country, including the specific broadcasting stations and commentators are shown in the tables below.
| Country | Broadcaster | Channel(s) | Commentator(s) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Teledifusora Paraguaya | Canal 13 | |||
| TVE | La Primera[a] | José Luis Uribarri | [3] |
Notes
References
- ^ a b XXIV Festival de la canción OTI 1995 (Television programme) (in Spanish). San Bernardino, Paraguay: Teledifusora Paraguaya. 11 November 1995.
- ^ "El hijo de Dyango dio a España el quinto triunfo en el XXIV Festival de la OTI". Diario de Ávila (in Spanish). Ávila, Spain. 13 November 1995. p. 30 – via Virtual Library of Historical Newspapers.
- ^ "Radio y TV". Diario Palentino (in Spanish). Palencia, Spain. 12 November 1995. p. 38 – via Virtual Library of Historical Newspapers.
