A whirlwind Eurovision: Bulgaria clinches victory, as UK comes lastpublished at 00:57 BST 17 May
Imogen James
Live reporter
Image source, Getty ImagesAs a first time Eurovision watcher, I now see the hype.
I feel like I got whiplash during tonight's 70th year of the Eurovision Song Contest. We travelled through multiple music styles - heavy metal, pop, screeching ballads and everything in between.
At the end, the winner's trophy landed in the hands of Bulgaria's Dara with her smash song Bangaranga - she got 516 points overall.
It's a song that's going to want you to get dancing, and it certainly got the whole arena in the mood - have a listen back to it here.
She was followed by Israel with 343 and Romania with 296. Unsurprisingly, if I can say that, the UK came last with only one point.
The energy in Vienna's Wiener Stadthalle arena was electric, packed to the brim with fans cheering on their favourites.
There were 25 performers in total, but five countries chose to boycott this year's competition over Israel's participation - read more on that here.
Denmark’s Soren Torpegaard Lund opened the show, and it was non-stop from there.
We had a very energetic Greek performer with a fireman's pole, graphics, pyrotechnics and a scooter, as well as a piano that lifted Australia's act into the air and some incredibly moving violin work from Finland.
A hiccup came for Czechia, whose performance was impacted by technical difficulties. But, they weren't given the chance to perform again.
And it was closed by this year's host country Austria, Cosmo, who performed with more of a fizzle than a bang, our music correspondent Mark Savage writes.
That's all from us for this year's live Eurovision coverage, you can read Mark's full recap here - thanks for joining!


















