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Mary Roos (born Rosemarie Schwab on January 9 1949) is a German singer and actress.

1949-1970
Rosemarie Schwab was born in Bingen. At the age of nine, she recorded her first song "Ja die Dicken sind ja so gemütlich" as Die kleine Rosemarie. It was no major commercial success. in 1958, she also appeared in the film "Die Straße". Over the following years she would release many records and she also appeared in many singing competitions. Her first chart success came in 1965, when the single "Geh nicht den Weg" peaked at #36. In 1969, she took part in the Grand Prix RTL International with the song "Die Legende der Liebe". The same year, she reached the single charts again - "Das hat die Welt noch nicht erlebt" peaked at #19. Her first major was achieved in 1970 with the song "Arizona Man". It peaked at #9 in the single charts and remains her only top ten hit to date. The same year, she took part in the German national final for the Eurovision Song Contest for the first time. She was chosen to take part in the last minute - Edina Pop had to withdraw from the competition as she fell ill and Mary Roos was chosen to sing "Bei jedem Kuss" instead. She finished joint second among the six participants; nevertheless, the song was never recorded.

1971-1983
In the early 70s, Mary Roos got her own TV show on German television. At the same time, she tried to start a career in France, where she played the lead role in the musical "Un enfant dans la ville" next to Michel Fugain. In 1972, she entered the German national final for the Eurovision Song Contest the second time. With her song "Nur die Liebe läßt uns leben" she finished second after the first round of voting only one point behind Cindy & Bert but got the overall victory after the second round of voting. After the reprise of the winning song, she was booed off stage and her victory caused a stir in Germany as she was not the winner of the first round of voting and because of her mediocre vocal performance. In a later interview, she stated that she did not expect to win at all and that she was already removing her make-up when she was called back on stage. However, at the Eurovision Song Contest 1972 in Edinburgh, she finished third. The song was a minor hit in Germany peaking at #17 in the single charts. Over the 1970s she kept releasing singles and albums and was a frequent guest in music shows, although she did not have any major hits anymore. In 1975, she took part in the German national final again and finished third with "Eine Liebe ist wie ein Lied". Her fourth participation in the national final took place in 1982, where she competet among others against her then husband Werner Böhm. She performed the duet "Lady" with David Hanselmann and finished eighth out of the twelve participants, however, the song was commercially the second most succesful one of the year.

1984-today
In 1984, Mary Roos took part in the German national final for the Eurovision Song Contest for the fifth and last time so far and she sang herself to victory again: "Aufrecht geh'n" narrowly won the ticket to the Eurovision Song Contest 1984. At the contest, the song only received 34 points and finished 13th among the 19 contestants. Mary Roos was blamed for a bad vocal performance which she says was caused by an emotional crisis after her seperation from her husband Werner Böhm. "Aufrecht geh'n" would also be her last appearance in the single charts until 1999, when she released a German cover version of Cher's song "Believe" ("Leider lieb ich dich noch immer"). Today, she still has many live concerts and is said to be one of the most-booked singers of the schlager genre.

Personal life
From 1981 to 1989, Mary Roos was married to party singer Werner Böhm (known as Gottlieb Wendehals). She is the sister of Tina York, another popular schlager singer in Germany.

Albums

 * Lieber John (1973)
 * Mary Roos (1976)
 * Ich bin Mary (1977)
 * Maryland (1978)
 * Was ich fühle (1981)
 * Leben spür'n (1982)
 * Alles was ich will (1987)
 * Mehr als ein Gefühl (1992)
 * Rücksicht (1995)
 * Heiß und kalt (1997)
 * Mittendrin (1997)
 * Schlager-Party mit Mary Roos (1999)
 * Meine Besten (2000)
 * Roosige Zeiten (2000)
 * Leben für Musik (2001)
 * Achterbahn (2003)
 * Augenblicke (2003)
 * Herzen zu verschenken (2003)
 * Mein Porträt (2003)
 * Leben (2005)
 * Meine größten Hits (2006)
 * Immer wieder (2006)
 * Was ich fühle (2007)
 * Hautnah (2007)

National Songfestivaal
The national final took place on March 8 1998 at the RAI in Amsterdam. For the first time, the show was hosted by Linda de Mol and Paul de Leeuw. Four famous Dutch composeres had been invited to compose one song each and another four songs were selected by a jury from about 100 songs that were submitted to broadcaster NOS. Eventually, eight music acts took part, each of them presenting one song. All performers were accompanied by a live orchestra, which was conducted by Dick Bakker who had already written and conducted various Dutch entries in the contest.

The winner as chosen by a jury of ten people and televoting.

Interval acts
During the show, there were many Eurovision Song Contest related interval acts:


 * At the beginning, the hosts performed a medley of the four Dutch Eurovision Song Contest winning songs: Net als toen (1957), Een beetje (1959), De troubadour (1969) and Ding-A-Dong (1975). That performance was followed by another two classics: Waterloo(Sweden 1974) and Eres tú (Spain 1973).

Chart successes
=Alf Episodes=

ALF
This is a list of episodes of the United States sitcom Alf. The series ran from September 22, 1986 to March 24, 1990 airing 102 episodes.

Overview
= Season 1: 1986-1987 =

= Season 2: 1995-1996 =

= Season 3: 1996-1997 =

= Season 4: 1997-1998 =