Engelbert Humperdinck enters Eurovision Song Contest - Action News
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Entertainment

Engelbert Humperdinck enters Eurovision Song Contest

The BBC has chosen big-voiced crooner Engelbert Humperdinck, whose last hit was more than 40 years ago, to represent Britain in the Eurovision Song Contest.

1960s sex symbol to represent United Kingdom

British pop singer Engelbert Humperdinck performs during a concert in Bombay, India, in 2005. The 75-year-old singer has been selected to represent Britain in the Eurovision Song Contest. (Aijaz Rahi/Associated Press)

Who best to guide Britain to glory after years of disappointment in Europe's leading pop music competition?

Apparently Engelbert Humperdinck, the sideburned, square-jawed, 75-year-old crooner who famously beat the Beatles to the No. 1 spot in the U.K. charts in 1967.

The BBC has surprised pop fans by choosing Humperdinck, whose last hit was almost 40 years ago, as Britain's entry in the 2012 Eurovision Song Contest, the international competition renowned for kitsch balladry and plastic pop.

The singer, best known for his 1967 song Release Me, said he was honoured to be representing his country and was "raring to go."

'Clearly, the notion that our thriving national pop culture should be embodied by a 75-year-old cabaret crooner is someone's idea of an ironic joke' U.K. rock critic Neil McCormick

The BBC said Humperdinck would perform a song by Sacha Skarbekco-writer of James Blunt's You're Beautiful and Grammy-winning producer Martin Terefe.

Enlisting the septuagenarian singer to compete in a pan-European talent show usually dominated by packaged pop acts was seen either as an audacious gamble or an embarrassing wrong note.

Daily Telegraph newspaper rock critic Neil McCormick called it "an act of desperation or a stroke of genius."

"Clearly, the notion that our thriving national pop culture should be embodied by a 75-year-old cabaret crooner is someone's idea of an ironic joke," McCormick wrote Friday.

On the other hand, Humperdinck might be able to draw on his large international fan club to boost the U.K.'s voting total in the lighthearted contest that many believe is determined by regional sympathies and animosities.

1960s sex symbol

Humperdinckwhose former name is Arnold Dorsey was a 1960s sex symbol whose Release Me topped the British charts in 1967, keeping The Beatles' Penny Lane/Strawberry Fields Forever at No. 2. He also had a top 10 U.S. hit in 1976 with After the Lovin.

Britain has failed for years at Eurovision, which Britons watch and mock in equal measure. Since the U.K. last won in 1997, a selection of British boy bands, reality television contestants and bubblegum pop singers has failed to impress viewers and juries who vote for the winner.

Even the 2009 decision to call in music impresario Andrew Lloyd Webber wasn't enough to boost Britain's standing past fifth place. Last year, British boy band Blue scored a modest 11th place.

Previous winners of the contest include '60s chanteuse Lulu, Sweden's ABBA victors in 1974 with Waterloo and Canada's Cline Dion, who triumphed for Switzerland in 1988.

The 57th Eurovision Song Contest will be held in May in Baku, Azerbaijan.