After ‘American Idol,' This Singer Is Moving to an Even Bigger Stage: Eurovision 2024

after ‘american idol,' this singer is moving to an even bigger stage: eurovision 2024

After ‘American Idol,’ This Singer Is Moving to an Even Bigger Stage: Eurovision 2024

Nutsa Buzaladze received raves from the American Idol judges when she competed last year on season 21 of the long-running television talent series. Eliminated from the top 12 on April 30, 2023, the singer from the nation of Georgia didn’t sit still. This week she will perform on another televised song contest when she represents her country in the Eurovision Song Contest, which normally reaches a worldwide audience in the hundreds of millions.

One year after interviewing Nutsa in Hollywood during her time on Idol, Billboard sat down with her again, this time in Malmö, Sweden, to talk about her life since then and what will be the biggest moment of her career so far.

When we talked last year in California, I suggested you sing for Georgia in Eurovision, and here you are. What have the last 12 months been like for you?

First of all, American Idol was the biggest thing I’ve done in my life. They gave me an open door to new opportunities. Like Lionel [Richie] said to me, “It doesn’t matter what number, you’re a star.” American Idol was a starter for my international career. Being on Idol makes your life much easier because people look at you and say you’re the real deal. I have an agent in America and he had me perform the National Anthem at a Lakers game and a Dodgers game. I had an amazing summer living in Miami and was in the Hamptons for a weekend when a producer [with Georgia’s national broadcaster] called and said, “Nutsa, we are thinking of having you represent your country at Eurovision. When are you coming to Georgia?”

So you said yes to Eurovision?

I told them I only had one condition: I’m going to be involved with every little detail. And they said, “Yes, for sure. We want you to be at your best. We want you to sing the song that you love to sing.” So I had the freedom to be myself and not someone that they want me to be and that is the greatest thing they’ve done for me. And it’s coming from the director of the broadcast.

You’re singing “Firefighter” as the Georgian entry. Who found the song?

We had an open call. We received amazing songs, and we listened to all 300 of them. We had three favorites, and we chose one that I feel very confident in. “Firefighter” was from Darko Dimitrov, a Macedonian producer who has a lot of experience in Eurovision. The writer of the lyrics was Ada Skitka from Estonia. I really loved the song, but only the chorus. I flew from Miami to Macedonia, and we spent three days in the studio finishing the song. It was a very creative process.

What does representing Georgia in Eurovision mean to you?

I have loved my country ever since I was a very little girl. Because of my country’s history and our people, I want to make them proud. I want to show the world how great Georgia is and how many talented people we have. We are a very small nation and that makes me more motivated to put Georgia on the map everywhere I can. Because especially in America, they think that Georgia is a state.

You competed on Idol and now you’re competing again in Eurovision. What are your thoughts about the competition?

I don’t really think of it as a competition, to be honest. I do it for my career and I do it to become better and to have more experience, because all my life I wanted to have a career where you can go everywhere and sing everywhere. Not only in my country, but everywhere. I think big competitions give you the possibilities to be heard by millions and millions of people and that’s the main reason I’m doing it. I don’t like to compete with anybody. The only person I’m competing with always is myself, because I always want to do something bigger and better.

Wat was the main lesson you learned during your run on American Idol?

On American Idol, I realized that I had done hard work before, but Idol is the hardest work. I pushed myself to the limits. When I was in my hotel room, I cried because I was so exhausted from the emotions. By the time we were doing the live shows, it was better. I became friends with the contestants and then I became friends with the crew.

What are your plans for your career after Eurovision?

My new single is coming out on May 12. I shot a music video before flying to Malmö. The song is called “Mother’s Day” and I’m releasing it on Mother’s Day. It’s about my mom and she is in the music video with me. I’m sure a lot of people are going to cry because I love my mother very much and I wanted to have a song about her.

What else lies ahead?

There is other news I haven’t told anybody, so I’ve saved it for Billboard. I’ve been invited to audition for Broadway on May 11 [the same day as Eurovision]. So I need to go to New York as soon as possible for that.

Can you tell me for what show?

I don’t think they want me to. It’s a modern musical. The character that they want me to play is very near to who I am in real life and the voice of that character in the songs is my style.

Nutsa Buzaladze will sing “Firefighter” in the first semi-final of the 2024 Eurovision Song Contest on Tuesday (May 7) in Malmö, Sweden. The live broadcast can be seen in the U.S. on Peacock at 3 p.m. ET. If “Firefighter” is one of 10 songs from the 15 semi-final entries that qualifies for the grand final, she will perform the song again on Saturday (May 11). That four-hour show will be seen on Peacock, also at 3 p.m. ET.

More from Billboard

OTHER NEWS

25 minutes ago

Archbishop of Canterbury piles pressure on Keir Starmer to ditch 'cruel' two-child benefit limit

25 minutes ago

'Proud' 10-year-old girl cuts off hair for second time for charity

25 minutes ago

John Fetterman: ‘Absurd’ that he's a bully

25 minutes ago

Tesla Cybertruck Hack: Wet Towel Trick Combats Charging Time Suck

25 minutes ago

MLB insider addresses odds of New York Yankees signing Juan Soto to contract extension in-season

25 minutes ago

Federal byelection called in Liberal stronghold of Toronto-St. Paul's

25 minutes ago

Caitlin Clark News: Fever Star Makes WNBA History in Just Three Games

25 minutes ago

Helicopter carrying Iran's president suffers a ‘hard landing,' state TV says, and rescue is underway

25 minutes ago

What we know about Suits L.A., the spinoff of everyone’s favorite streaming binge

25 minutes ago

Orlando Pirates: TWO return, TWO ruled out of Nedbank Cup final?

25 minutes ago

Qatari royal facing UK arrest after failing to turn up to court over $6bn debt

26 minutes ago

Elder, Braves Look to Bounce Back From Game One Loss

29 minutes ago

Video: Aussie model Sahara Ray opens up about health condition that left her paralysed: 'My whole life changed in an instant'

29 minutes ago

Meghan Markle's £100,000 wedding dress that the Queen thought was 'too white' - as the Duke and Duchess of Sussex celebrate sixth anniversary

30 minutes ago

Putin and Xi’s bro-hug proves that fight for Ukraine is same as fight against China

30 minutes ago

Biden applauds call for ceasefire in Gaza at Morehouse College commencement

30 minutes ago

Airstrike kills 27 in central Gaza and fighting rages as Israel's leaders are increasingly divided

30 minutes ago

Dava party reaches out to Muslim migrants in Germany: is Turkey's Erdogan behind the movement?

30 minutes ago

"Six rings and playing with Michael Jordan commanded respect" - Damon Stoudamire on why Scottie Pippen was a great leader

30 minutes ago

Bodour Al Qasimi inaugurates Greek edition of ‘Folktales Reimagined’

31 minutes ago

'Fallout’s' success makes me crave a final send-off to this canceled sci-fi series

31 minutes ago

Man City XI vs West Ham: Starting lineup, confirmed team news, injury latest for Premier League final day

31 minutes ago

U.S. regulators reconsider capital hike for big banks, WSJ reports

31 minutes ago

Mammoth Overland’s ultra-rugged TL travel trailer has an insane amount of space

31 minutes ago

Manchester United XI vs Brighton: Starting lineup, injury latest, confirmed team news

31 minutes ago

The Summer Popcorn Wars: How Movie Theaters Prep for the Busy Season

31 minutes ago

Ira Winderman: Heat can’t let history get in way of potential Donovan Mitchell pursuit

31 minutes ago

Michael Che tricks Colin Jost into cracking joke about wife Scarlett Johansson in Weekend Update

32 minutes ago

UTMB Health Athlete of the Week: Clear Creek’s Tyler Austin

34 minutes ago

Biden delivers Morehouse commencement speech as some students and faculty express pro-Palestinian messages

38 minutes ago

Simone Biles wins US Classic ahead of hotly-anticipated Olympics return in Paris

38 minutes ago

Arsenal vs Everton LIVE: Premier League team news and line-ups as Bukayo Saka misses out

38 minutes ago

66 killed in fresh floods in Afghanistan

38 minutes ago

Brentford release trio as contracts expire with Neal Maupay and Sergio Reguilon also leaving

38 minutes ago

Montreal reflects on inaugural PWHL season

38 minutes ago

We need to improve political discourse, says Lib Dem leader on therapy

38 minutes ago

Why Shares of Cameco Are Powering Higher

38 minutes ago

John Tavares Picks Up Two Assists to Help Canada Stay Undefeated and How the Maple Leafs Performed in Day 9 of the World Hockey Championship

38 minutes ago

Kerry amble to all too easy win over surprisingly tepid Monaghan in All-Ireland Group 4 opener

38 minutes ago

Ireland will ‘recognise Palestinian statehood’ despite reports of diplomatic row

Kênh khám phá trải nghiệm của giới trẻ, thế giới du lịch