As the winners of the 2014 contest, Austria was given the responsibility of hosting the
2015 contest. Shortly after the 2014 final, ORF confirmed the preliminary dates for the 2015 contest, as well as that several cities in Austria were competing to host the 60th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest. After a competition was held to determine the host venue, three cities were short-listed by ORF:
Vienna;
Innsbruck; and
Graz. On 6 August it was announced that the
Wiener Stadthalle in Vienna would host the 2015 contest, scheduled to be held on 19, 21 and 23 May 2015. On 19 December 2014, the hosts of the contest were announced, with Wurst taking on the role of
green room host for the event. On Wurst's return to Austria after winning Eurovision, she was greeted at
Vienna International Airport by thousands of fans and hundreds journalists celebrating her victory. On 18 May she met with
Werner Faymann, the
Chancellor of Austria and Josef Ostermayer, the Minister of Arts, Culture, and Media at an official reception, followed by a performance on stage at Vienna's
Ballhausplatz to an audience of thousands of fans. The concert was however criticised by the conservative
Austrian People's Party, a member of the coalition government. The song also reached the top 10 in charts in twelve countries, including number one in
Austria and the
UK Indie Chart. Wurst received both praise and criticism following her victory. Many celebrities sent their congratulations and support to Wurst via Twitter and other means, including
Elton John,
Cher,
Lady Gaga,
Boy George and
Robbie Williams, as well as from fellow Eurovision winners
Alexander Rybak,
Emmelie de Forest,
Lena Meyer-Landrut and
Charlotte Perrelli. However her victory was also met with negative reaction by some more conservative sections of European society. In Turkey, which had not taken part in the contest since 2012, the government party
AKP criticised Wurst's win, with then-
Prime Minister of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdoğan vowing that Turkey would never take part in the contest again and his colleague
Volkan Bozkır proclaiming "Thank god we no longer participate in Eurovision". Church leaders in the
Balkans have also claimed that Wurst's win is responsible for
floods in south-east Europe in May 2014, which left over 60 people dead.
Metropolitan Amfilohije, the Montenegrin patriarch of the
Serbian Orthodox Church claimed that "this [flood] is not a coincidence, but a warning" and a "reminder that people should not join the wild side",
Patriarch Irinej, the spiritual leader of Eastern Orthodox Serbs has reportedly said the floods are "divine punishment for their vices" and that "God is thus washing Serbia of its sins". Wurst had previously been condemned by the
Russian Orthodox Church. However Fr. Michael Unger, Tom Neuwirth's childhood Catholic priest, condemned the homophobic backlash against him, and said that he is "just happy that he's happy". and
Jean Paul Gaultier at the Vienna
Life Ball In the wake of her Eurovision win, Wurst was invited onto several television programmes across Europe. Wurst appeared as a guest on several
BBC programmes in the United Kingdom; including
The Graham Norton Show on 16 May, a chat show hosted by British commentator
Graham Norton; and on 23 May 2014 she appeared on
The One Show and
Newsnight. Wurst was invited onto the German talk show
TV total on 4 June 2014, hosted by former Eurovision contestant and host
Stefan Raab, and was in demand by German broadcaster
RTL as a new personality for their upcoming reality shows. Wurst also performed on the popular Swedish show
Allsång på Skansen in July 2014. In June 2014, Wurst headlined the Vienna
Life Ball, Europe's biggest charity event supporting people with HIV and
AIDS, attending the event in a dress designed by
Jean Paul Gaultier. Wurst has since modelled for both Gautier and
Karl Lagerfeld at several events. Both before and after her Eurovision win, Wurst had become very involved with the
LGBT community. In June 2014 Wurst recorded a message for the
It Gets Better Project, an Internet-based project devoted to preventing
suicide among LGBT youth by having gay adults convey the message that their lives will improve, and to inspire change required to make life better for them. Wurst was also invited to perform at several
pride events in several cities across Europe, including in
Stockholm, Zürich,
Dublin, Berlin, Madrid,
Amsterdam,
London and
Manchester among others. In October 2014, British gay lifestyle magazine
Attitude awarded Wurst with the 'Moment of the Year' award for her win at Eurovision as part of the 2014 Attitude Awards. In October 2014, Wurst accepted an invitation by
Ulrike Lunacek MEP, vice-president of the
Austrian Greens, to perform in a special concert at the
European Parliament. The concert was organised by MEPs from 5 different
parliamentary groups, with the aim to support the adoption of a report against homophobia and sexual discrimination in February. This was followed in November 2014 by a performance at the
United Nations Office at Vienna and a meeting with the
Secretary-General of the United Nations Ban Ki-moon. Ban hailed Wurst's win as a "powerful message", praising her promotion of respect for diversity, which he called a "core value" of the United Nations and that "discrimination has no place in the United Nations, nor in the world of the 21st century". Wurst had also extended her CV into voice acting, voicing the character of Eva in the German
dub of the animated film
Penguins of Madagascar, spin-off of the
Madagascar film franchise. ==References==