Conception "Gwendolyne" is a ballad with music composed and Spanish lyrics written by
Julio Iglesias. The song is about his first girlfriend, the titular Gwendolyne, a French girl whom he met at the age of twenty while still a law student and a goalkeeper for Spanish
football team
Real Madrid Castilla. In 1963, Iglesias was involved in a near-fatal car accident, which ended his football career, left him in rehabilitation for considerable time and indirectly led him to start learning the guitar, as a means of physical therapy. Iglesias began composing his own music; in 1968 he entered and won the 10th edition of the
Benidorm Song Festival with the song "" and shortly thereafter he signed with the Spanish branch of
Columbia Records.
Eurovision On 12–14 February 1970, "Gwendolyne" performed by both Julio Iglesias and
Rosy Armen competed in the of the , the national final organized by (TVE) to select its song and performer for the of the
Eurovision Song Contest. They both were accompanied on stage by –María Jesús Aguirre, Cristina Fernández, and Mercedes Valimaña– as backing singers. Benito Lauret conducted the event's live orchestra in their performances. The song won the competition so it became the for Eurovision. As Rosy Armen was a French singer, Julio Iglesias became automatically its performer for the contest. He released "Gwendolyne" in five languages: Spanish, English –with lyrics by
Marcel Stellman–, French, German, and Italian, and toured several European television stations promoting the song. On 21 March 1970, the Eurovision Song Contest was held at the
RAI Congrescentrum in
Amsterdam hosted by
Nederlandse Omroep Stichting (NOS), and broadcast live throughout the continent. Iglesias performed "Gwendolyne" ninth on the evening following 's "
Je suis tombé du ciel" by
David Alexandre Winter and preceding 's "
Marlène" by
Dominique Dussault.
Augusto Algueró conducted the event's live orchestra in the performance of the Spanish entry. Iglesias was dressed entirely in sky blue. This was the color that looked best in black and white, since TVE –and many other broadcasters– did not broadcast in color yet. His suit had no pockets, since at TVE were afraid that he would put his hands in them during the performance as he used to do. He was accompanied on stage by Trío La La La as backing singers. At the close of voting, the song had received eight points, placing fourth in a field of twelve, in a tie with "Marie-Blanche" by
Guy Bonnet for and "Retour" by
Henri Dès for . It received points only from the juries of , , and . It was succeeded as Spanish entry at the by "
En un mundo nuevo" by
Karina.
Aftermath His participation in Eurovision was his first major international television appearance. "Gwendolyne" went on to become his first number 1 single in Spain, where he gave forty-one concerts in forty-one different cities in just thirty days. On 28 June 1970, TVE aired a special musical show filmed at the
World Exposition 1970 in
Osaka, directed by
Valerio Lazarov and featuring
Massiel,
Karina, Julio Iglesias, and
Miguel Ríos. Iglesias performed the German version of "Gwendolyne" at the Swiss pavilion as one of his acts. On 17 October 1970, Iglesias and Massiel hosted the first episode of '''', the series produced by TVE to for the following Eurovision. "Gwendolyne" was the title track to his released that same year. The album was later reissued in 1983, 1987, and 2017. During 1971, he achieved his first million album sales. His international breakthrough single "" followed in 1972. By 1973, he had already sold his first ten million records. Despite the great success that "Gwendolyne" gave him, he soon removed it from his repertoire since he does not like to remember it. ==Chart history==