Weekly Update

It’s Tuesday, February 3, 2026. Eurovision Universe brings you another weekly update. The Eurovision season moves fast. Vienna 2026 now comes into sharp focus. Each day puts the contest a little closer.

This week, we cover new artist and song announcements and key national final developments. We also spotlight major tour news for fans who want Eurovision live on stage.

New artists and songs
🇧🇬 Bulgaria: Dara chosen, song still to come

Bulgaria has chosen its Eurovision 2026 artist after a televised final on 31 January at BNT Studio 1 in Sofia. She won the show with “Thunder”, a selection song rather than the final Eurovision entry. On 28 February, she will perform three candidate songs, and Bulgaria will select the Eurovision entry that night. A five-member jury and online voters will decide the winner. source: Eurovision Universe national finals page

🇨🇾 Cyprus: Antigoni sets date for Jalla

Cyprus has confirmed that the entry will be premiered on Sunday, 8 February. The song and official music video will debut during the main evening news broadcast on CyBC. After the TV premiere, the track is expected to be available online. That includes the Eurovision platforms and major streaming services. source: Instagram Antigoni

🇬🇧 United Kingdom: BBC comments on selection rumours

The BBC addressed reports that it had dropped the UK’s Eurovision “entrant.” The Euro Trip Podcast says the BBC told one act it would not represent the UK. The podcast adds that some outlets overstated the situation, because the act never had a contract and never received a formal offer. It traces the rumour back to a story from The Sun. The BBC says it will announce its chosen act shortly and will complete its usual due diligence first. source: Euro Trip Podcast

🇦🇺 Australia: SBS teases news “very soon”

Eurovision remains part of SBS’s 2026 programming plans, and Australia’s next announcement may not be far away. TV Tonight reports that Natalie Edgar indicated the Australian Eurovision 2026 act will be revealed “very soon”. No artist name has been published at this stage. source: TV Tonight

National finals
🇸🇲 San Marino: familiar Eurovision names in the casting list

The Dreaming San Marino Song Contest continues to build its line-up through the casting phase. The official casting schedule includes Magdalena Tul. She represented Poland at the Eurovision Song Contest 2011Maraaya, who represented Slovenia at the Eurovision Song Contest 2015, also takes part. More names are expected as the selection process continues. source: Dreaming San Marino Song Contest

🇺🇦 Ukraine: Vidbir final on February 7

Ukraine’s national selection reaches its final stage this week. Suspilne has confirmed the hosts: Timur Miroshnychenko and Lesia Nikitiuk. Anna Tulieva will host the pre-show and a new Eurofans zone feature. The ten competing songs have also been released ahead of the live show from Kyiv. source: Eurovision Universe national finals page

Other news
Eurovision Song Contest Live Tour: first “Icons” announced

The first headliners have been revealed for the official Eurovision arena tour. The initial “Icons” line-up includes Alessandra, Guy Sebastian, Helena Paparizou, Johnny Logan, Katrina, Lordi and Verka Serduchka. The tour runs across ten European cities from 15 June to 2 July 2026. General ticket sales open on 6 February at 10:00 CET, with pre-sale access tied to Eurofan accounts. source: Eurovision.com

Related news

Uncategorized

Eurovision 2026 reactions: joy, relief and disappointment after semifinal

📷 EBU/Corinne Cumming The Eurovision 2026 reactions started immediately after Tuesday night’s first semi-final in Vienna. Greece, Finland, Belgium, Sweden, Moldova, Israel, Serbia, Croatia, Lithuania and Poland qualified for Saturday’s Grand Final. Portugal, Georgia, Montenegro, Estonia and San Marino did not make it through. Since Eurovision does not reveal the full semi-final ranking until later, the “winners” of the night are the ten qualifiers. Qualifiers celebrate their Grand Final place Greece’s Akylas reacted emotionally in comments reported by Greek newspaper LiFO. “Greece, we did it,” he said, adding that he was “so, so happy” and proud after reaching the final. Sweden’s Felicia also sounded relieved. In a message to Aftonbladet, she said the performance felt “incredible” and that she was now “very excited to win.” Belgium’s ESSYLA called her qualification “so insane” and “so incredible” in a filmed Instagram reaction. Moldova’s Satoshi also reacted on Instagram, saying that “Moldova is on duty” and that he felt full of happiness.   Lithuania’s Lion Ceccah gave one of the most personal reactions. Speaking to LRT, he said the moment brought his feelings back after a long period of pressure: “You want to qualify so badly.” Poland’s Alicja Szemplińska also thanked fans after qualifying, saying: “We did it! We really did it!” and promising that the final would bring even more effort. Finland’s UMK account kept it short and clear: “Suomi etenee lauantain viisufinaaliin,” meaning Finland is moving on to Saturday’s final. Serbia’s Eurovision account posted: “See you in the finals! Vidimo se u finalu!” In Croatia, tportal described LELEK’s reaction as pure disbelief and celebration, with hugs and jumping after their name was announced. Non-qualifiers thank fans and look back Portugal’s Bandidos do Cante responded with gratitude. On Instagram, they thanked everyone who followed their Eurovision adventure and said they left with the certainty that Alentejo could not have been better represented. Portuguese newspaper Correio da Manhã confirmed that Portugal stayed in the semi-final with “Rosa”. Georgia’s Bzikebi kept their message brief, posting “Thank you all!” on Instagram. Montenegro’s Tamara Živković had earlier thanked everyone listening to and supporting her song, while Vijesti reported after the show that she missed the final. Estonia’s Vanilla Ninja were also eliminated; national broadcaster ERR reported that Estonia did not qualify. San Marino’s SENHIT, who performed “Superstar” with Boy George, also focused on gratitude. Her social media message thanked fans for their love and support. The Eurovision 2026 reactions therefore showed two sides of the same night: qualifiers quickly switched to Grand Final mode, while the non-qualifiers framed Vienna as an intense but valuable experience.

Read More »
Uncategorized
Martijn

Eurovision 2026 reactions: joy, relief and disappointment after semifinal

📷 EBU/Corinne Cumming The Eurovision 2026 reactions started immediately after Tuesday night’s first semi-final in Vienna. Greece, Finland, Belgium, Sweden, Moldova, Israel, Serbia, Croatia, Lithuania and Poland qualified for Saturday’s Grand Final. Portugal, Georgia, Montenegro, Estonia and San Marino did not make it through. Since Eurovision does not reveal the full semi-final ranking until later, the “winners” of the night are the ten qualifiers. Qualifiers celebrate their Grand Final place Greece’s Akylas reacted emotionally in comments reported by Greek newspaper LiFO. “Greece, we did it,” he said, adding that he was “so, so happy” and proud after reaching the final. Sweden’s Felicia also sounded relieved. In a message to Aftonbladet, she said the performance felt “incredible” and that she was now “very excited to win.” Belgium’s ESSYLA called her qualification “so insane” and “so incredible” in a filmed Instagram reaction. Moldova’s Satoshi also reacted on Instagram, saying that “Moldova is on duty” and that he felt full of happiness.   Lithuania’s Lion Ceccah gave one of the most personal reactions. Speaking to LRT, he said the moment brought his feelings back after a long period of pressure: “You want to qualify so badly.” Poland’s Alicja Szemplińska also thanked fans after qualifying, saying: “We did it! We really did it!” and promising that the final would bring even more effort. Finland’s UMK account kept it short and clear: “Suomi etenee lauantain viisufinaaliin,” meaning Finland is moving on to Saturday’s final. Serbia’s Eurovision account posted: “See you in the finals! Vidimo se u finalu!” In Croatia, tportal described LELEK’s reaction as pure disbelief and celebration, with hugs and jumping after their name was announced. Non-qualifiers thank fans and look back Portugal’s Bandidos do Cante responded with gratitude. On Instagram, they thanked everyone who followed their Eurovision adventure and said they left with the certainty that Alentejo could not have been better represented. Portuguese newspaper Correio da Manhã confirmed that Portugal stayed in the semi-final with “Rosa”. Georgia’s Bzikebi kept their message brief, posting “Thank you all!” on Instagram. Montenegro’s Tamara Živković had earlier thanked everyone listening to and supporting her song, while Vijesti reported after the show that she missed the final. Estonia’s Vanilla Ninja were also eliminated; national broadcaster ERR reported that Estonia did not qualify. San Marino’s SENHIT, who performed “Superstar” with Boy George, also focused on gratitude. Her social media message thanked fans for their love and support. The Eurovision 2026 reactions therefore showed two sides of the same night: qualifiers quickly switched to Grand Final mode, while the non-qualifiers framed Vienna as an intense but valuable experience.

Read More »
Follow Us: