An early event was the January 1977 Model Engineer Exhibition, which had previously been held at the Seymour Hall in
Marylebone. On 7 May 1977 the centre was the venue for the
1977 Eurovision Song Contest, where the United Kingdom came second. On 18 October 1977 it hosted the first ever
Brit Awards ceremony (then called the
1977 BPI awards). The centre was used for numerous conferences, trade events, exhibitions, corporate hospitality,
annual general meetings, university graduation ceremonies, banquets, indoor sport popular music and dance competitions. It hosted the World Cup Disco Dance Championships in May 1987 won by Jeanette Doughty (Len Goodman Dance Centre) as reported in Dance News A classical music concert by the
National Youth Orchestra suggested the centre's acoustics were at best mediocre, in addition to which it was hard for classical music to attract large enough audiences to fill the Grand Hall. On 30 August 1995, the Centre hosted the
first ever National Television Awards presented by
Eamonn Holmes. On 7 November 1999, it hosted the darts match between the reigning PDC World Champion
Phil Taylor and the reigning BDO World Champion
Raymond van Barneveld, with a 60-minute clock ticking down to zero and with a short break around the half-way stage. The match was broadcast on
ITV. Taylor won the match 21–10 in legs. It hosted three
Ricky Hatton boxing matches where he was victorious. 21 October 2000, he defeated fellow Briton
Jon Thaxton by unanimous decision, On 26 March 2001, he defeated Canadian
Tony Pep with a fourth round
TKO two and a half minutes in and on 15 December 2001, he defeated Australian Justin Rowsell with a second-round TKO with thirty six seconds to go. During
Live Aid on 13 July 1985, the conference centre and exhibition halls were used to provide dressing rooms for the performers. Between 10 July 2004 and 22 April 2006, it hosted ten
Cage Rage mixed martial arts events. ==In popular culture==