We know a lot about Eurovision and we want to share this knowledge with you! Therefore weâd like to bring you a blast from the past. Today, we go back to 1967, when Sandie Shaw brought the first victory to the United Kingdom with “Puppet On A String”. United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest Few countries have a Eurovision pedigree like the United Kingdom. Since debuting in 1957, the UK has won five times: Sandie Shaw (1967), Lulu (1969), Brotherhood of Man (1976), Bucks Fizz (1981) and Katrina & The Waves (1997). The country hosted on nine occasions, most recently Liverpool 2023. t also holds the record for most runnerâup finishes, with 16 second places; the last came in 2022 when Sam Ryderâs âSPACE MANâ topped the jury vote. Recent form has been mixed: in 2023, host act Mae Muller finished 25th with 24 points; in 2024, Olly Alexander placed 18th with 46 points; and in 2025, Remember Monday ended 19th on 88 points.  Such swings epitomise the UKâs rollerâcoaster history: long stretches of podiums and wins, punctuated by lean years, yet always central to Eurovisionâs story and spectacle. Sam Ryder, EBU A Song For Europe 1967 The UK national final in those days was called A Song For Europe. One artist sang 5 or 6 songs. Sandie Shaw was chosen to do the job in 1967. The contest was held on February 25. The results were announced one week later.The 5 titles were: Tell The Boys, 2nd place I’ll Cry Myself To Sleep, 3rd place Had A Dream Last Night, 4th place Puppet On A String, 1st place Ask Any Woman, 5th place  “Had A Dream Last Night” was written by another very popular pop star from those days: Chris Andrews. He is known for a lot of hits in the late sixties, “Yesterday Man” and “Pretty Belinda” being the biggest. You can watch a recap of all songs here in good quality. Sandie Shaw Sandie Shaw (born Sandra Ann Goodrich on 26 February 1947 in Dagenham) ranks among Britainâs defining 1960s pop voices. As a teenager, talent scouts noticed her; Pye Records signed her, and in 1964 she hit No. 1 with the Burt BacharachâHal David song â(Thereâs) Always Something There to Remind Me.â She followed it with a run of singlesââGirl Donât Come,â âLong Live Love,â and âMessage Understoodââthat cemented her chart presence. Performing barefoot, she turned a quirk into a signature and a style statement. In 1967, Shaw won the Eurovision Song Contest for the United Kingdom in Vienna with âPuppet on a String,â securing the countryâs first victory, and the single topped charts across Europe. In the early 1970s, Shaw stepped away from pop to pursue stage roles and business ventures. She later challenged her recording contracts. In the 1980s she returned to the charts through collaborations with indie admirers, notably The Smiths. Her 1988 album âHello Angelâ showcased a mature voice. Through the 1990s and 2000s she recorded selectively. She curated reissues of her catalogue. Sandie trained as a psychotherapist, mentoring artists and advocating for performersâ rights. She published memoirs and kept performing. In 2017 the UK honoured her with an MBE for services to music. It’s an honour that recognized a career bridging eras while remaining unmistakably hers. I’m going to the toilet Boudewijn BĂŒch (1948â2002) was a Dutch author, poet, bibliophile, and television presenter. He became famous for literary travel programs on VARA, a Dutch public broadcaster. In 1988, BĂŒch invited Sandie Shaw onto his VARA show. He kept the conversation light, comparing music âthen and now.â Sandie’s ground rules forbade any talk of the Eurovision Song Contest. When BĂŒch raised the topic anyway, Shaw stood up, said âIâm going to the toilet,â and walked out, almost yanking her microphone cable free. BĂŒch closed the episode in the restroom, singing âPuppet on a String,â and he concluded that the song had gone down the toilet. Puppet On A String âPuppet On A Stringâ is Sandie Shawâs bright, bouncy slice of 1960s Europop. Lyricist Bill Martin and composer Phil Coulter wrote the song. At Eurovision 1967 in Vienna, Shaw performed barefoot, locking onto the camera with crisp phrasing and a smile. The arrangement rides an oomâpah, fairground swing with brisk brass and a skippy rhythm. The hook lodges instantly, and the melody aims squarely at continental tastes. The United Kingdom stormed to victory with 47 points. That is more than double the runnerâup. This way the UK its first Eurovision win. The single topped the UK charts, and Shaw recorded versions in multiple languages, cementing its crossâEuropean appeal. Lyrically, the song toys with the image of a lover manipulated like a marionette, âa puppet on a stringâ, while the upbeat pop setting turns the drama into perfect television. âPuppet On A Stringâ stands as a defining Eurovision winner and an enduring cornerstone of Sandie Shawâs catalogue today.   Â