Cyprus and Australia surge into Eurovision 2026 Grand Final

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Cyprus has secured a place in Saturday’s Grand Final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2026 after singer Antigoni Braxton delivered an energetic performance of “Jalla” during Thursday night’s second semi-final in Vienna.

Broadcast live from the Wiener Stadthalle arena, the semi-final saw 15 countries compete for the final 10 places in the Grand Final. Cyprus emerged as one of the evening’s standout qualifiers, with enthusiastic audience reactions and growing support across social media throughout the week.

Braxton’s performance blended Middle Eastern-inspired rhythms with contemporary pop choreography, drawing strong applause inside the arena. Greek media had already highlighted Cyprus as a potential surprise contender following positive rehearsal reactions and increasing fan momentum ahead of the live broadcast.

Australia also qualified for the Grand Final, with Delta Goodrem delivering a theatrical performance of her fiery ballad “Eclipse”. The 41-year-old singer impressed audiences during both rehearsals and the live semi-final, performing amid dramatic staging, wind machines and soaring vocals before climbing onto a piano and being lifted high above the stage for the song’s finale.

Fans quickly praised the performance online, with one viewer describing it as “Australia’s winning moment”, while another wrote: “Delta just SMASHED the stage of #eurovision. That’s what an Artist means.”

Social media reaction has fuelled speculation that Australia could be a genuine contender for victory, with fans predicting a top-five finish and some even tipping Goodrem to win the competition outright. However, attention is now turning to the unpredictable televote, particularly given Australians cannot vote for their own country.

Joining Cyprus and Australia in qualifying from the second semi-final were Albania, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Malta, Norway, Romania and Ukraine.

This year’s Eurovision competition has generated heightened interest across Greece, Cyprus and Australia, amid ongoing discussions surrounding staging, televoting patterns and the geopolitical undertones that increasingly shape the contest.

Saturday’s Grand Final will feature the newly qualified countries alongside the “Big Five” — France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom — as well as host nation Austria. For Cyprus, qualification marks another encouraging Eurovision result and raises hopes of returning to the competition’s upper ranks after several inconsistent years.

Meanwhile, Goodrem enters the Grand Final carrying strong fan support and additional momentum following the announcement of her upcoming seventh studio album, Pure, due for release on November 6.

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