The Netherlands was represented by Milly Scott, with the song '"Fernando en Filippo", at the 1966 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 5 March in Luxembourg City. Five acts participated in the Dutch preselection, which consisted of five qualifying rounds, followed by the final on 5 February. All the shows were held at the Tivoli in Utrecht, hosted by the 1959 Eurovision winner Teddy Scholten. Scott earned a place in Eurovision history as the first black performer to appear on stage, and would later state somewhat controversially that she believed her poor result at Eurovision was attributable, at least in part, to racism.
Qualifying heats
Five qualifying heats took place on consecutive evenings between 31 January and 4 February. Each involved one of the selected acts performing three songs, with the jury winner from each act going forward to the final. A different jury of 15 was used each evening. The format was the same used in the 1965 preselection, and would be used again 30 years later in the preselection of 1996.
The national final was held on 5 February. The winning song was chosen by the same five juries who had each individually chosen one of the songs for the final. Each jury member gave 1 point to their favourite song, and "Fernando en Filippo" was the choice of 52 of the 75 members.
Draw
Artist
Song
Points
Place
1
Helen Shepherd
"Wereld"
3
3=
2
Piet Sybrandi
"Ik heb je lief"
2
5
3
The Luckberries
"Dromen zijn bedrog"
15
2
4
Bob Bouber
"Nog wel bedankt"
3
3=
5
Milly Scott
"Fernando en Filippo"
52
1'''
At Eurovision
On the night of the final Scott performed 16th in the running order, following France and preceding Ireland. Voting was by each national jury awarding 5-3-1 to its top three songs, and at the close of the voting "Fernando en Filippo" had received 2 points, placing the Netherlands 15th of the 18 entries. During most of the voting procedure "Fernando en Filippo" had appeared to be heading for the infamous nul-points, until the last two countries to vote each awarded 1 point to the song. The Dutch jury awarded its 5 points to Belgium. The Dutch conductor at the contest was Dolf van der Linden.