Entertainment

Small Icelandic town rallies behind Oscar-nominated song

The people of Husavik, a town of only 2,300, have staged a grassroots Oscar campaign on behalf of the song and adopted it as a de facto local anthem.
The people of Husavik, a town of only 2,300, have staged a grassroots Oscar campaign on behalf of the song and adopted it as a de facto local anthem. The people of Husavik, a town of only 2,300, have staged a grassroots Oscar campaign on behalf of the song and adopted it as a de facto local anthem.

The writers behind the Oscar-nominated song Husavik (My Hometown) knew that they wanted it to be an emotional core to the otherwise silly Will Ferrell film Eurovision Song Contest: The Story Of Fire Saga.

But they had no idea just how significant the ballad would become to the people of the small Icelandic town it is named after – especially considering the fact they have yet to visit.

And yet in the past year, the people of Husavik, a town of only 2,300, have staged a grassroots Oscar campaign on behalf of the song and adopted it as a de facto local anthem.

Children are taught it in school, it has been sung at the local retirement home and in church and been blasted over the loudspeakers before football games.

Orlygur Orlyson, left, and Johanna Baldursdottir pose for photographs in front of three elf homes, a location that appeared in the comedy Eurovision Song Contest: The Story Of Fire Saga, in Husavik, Iceland
Orlygur Orlyson, left, and Johanna Baldursdottir pose for photographs in front of three elf homes, a location that appeared in the comedy Eurovision Song Contest: The Story Of Fire Saga, in Husavik, Iceland Orlygur Orlygsson, left, and Johanna Baldursdottir in front of three elf homes, a location that appeared in the Eurovision Song Contest: The Story Of Fire Saga (Brynjar Gunnarsson/AP) (Brynjar Gunnarsson/AP)

One council member is gearing up to paint the main street red – as a red carpet – for the Oscars on April 25.

Husavik is even considering opening late on the day after so residents can stay up to watch the ceremony, which starts at 2am local time.

“It’s such a beautiful song about our town,” said Orlygur Orlygsson, the local entrepreneur behind the campaign.

“It lifted the spirits of the people so much. People became optimistic that we would get somehow through this thing.”

The song itself was a bit of a wild card.

Anyone who has seen director David Dobkin’s loving spoof of the Eurovision Song Contest knows that it does not exactly take itself seriously, and plopping a sincere ballad at the climax was a gamble.

“We were a little worried about getting to that one,” said Savan Kotecha, who co-wrote the song and executive produced the music in the film.

“The other ones were super fun and funny songs and up-tempo. David’s dream was to have this emotional moment at the end. But he felt we had to earn it.”

Husavik harbour in Iceland
Husavik harbour in Iceland Husavik harbour in Iceland (Brynjar Gunnarsson) (Brynjar Gunnarsson/AP)

Kotecha, a Grammy-nominated songwriter and producer who has worked with Ariana Grande, The Weeknd, Ellie Goulding and Katy Perry, enlisted what he calls the “Swedish songwriting mafia” of Rickard Goransson, who he had collaborated with on Grande hits Bang Bang and God Is A Woman, and Fat Max Gsus to help.

Goransson was sold at the mention of Will Ferrell, but also said he and Gsus “felt like this was something that we can relate to”.

Neither had ever specifically written a song for a musical film before, but they enjoyed the process and the back and forth with the director.

Here, they had been tasked with giving Rachel McAdams’s character, Sigrit, an emotional showstopper – the climax to her journey with Ferrell’s Lars.

Swedish pop singer Molly Sanden provided the vocals.

“What we really wanted to do was to really channel what she was feeling and what she would have written in her lonely hours in her hotel room,” Gsus said.

“I was facing some rejection at the time and I was kind of in a rough patch so it was easy to tap into that emotion.”

Its effectiveness even changed the trajectory of the scene.

“The original thought was to have a comedic moment,” Kotecha said.

“They didn’t know that they would get a song that really spoke to the heart of the movie.”

When the movie came out on Netflix a few months into the global shutdowns last June, it had its critics and supporters, but the people of Husavik quickly became its most passionate fans.

Yes, even with all those jokes about magical elves.

“We like to make fun of ourselves,” Orlygsson said.

“We are just happy that Hollywood chose to do it as well.”

Although it was always a big deal to have a major Netflix production set in their little northern coastal town, it took on an extra significance after Covid-19 devastated their main industry, tourism.

And sometime after the film came out, Husavik started seeing an uptick in domestic visitors who were unable to travel abroad.

Many cited the film as the reason for their visit.

Almost immediately Orlygsson, who also runs a small hotel, opened a Jaja Ding Dong cafe on a terrace outside in honour of one of the film’s sillier recurring songs to capitalise on the moment.

The song itself became immediately popular in the country, too.

And the Eurovision glow was extended when Husavik popped up on the Academy’s shortlist of potential original song nominees earlier this year.

The residents immediately sprang into action.

“We decided to do whatever we could to help. We set up a website, we made a campaign video,” Orlygsson said.

“A lot of people, especially the young folks in town, were heavily involved.”

The video, An Oskar For Husavik, has been viewed more than 70,000 times on YouTube and has been featured in The New York Times and on Good Morning America.

It is the kind of grassroots publicity that studios dream about.

Netflix is even donating some of the props from the film for an exhibition in the local museum as a thank you, including the elf knife.

The songwriters were beside themselves that the ballad meant so much to the locals.

“It was kind of like when you declare your love to someone and that moment when they actually respond,” Gsus said.

“It was like tickly, butterfly love.”

That there is now an Oscar nomination too is simply surreal.

“As a lover of movies and film and everything, it’s so crazy and amazing to be recognised in that world, because it’s a world in which I don’t usually live,” Gsus added.

“It’s absolutely fantastic.”

The Whale Watching Centre, shown in the film Eurovision Song Contest: The Story Of Fire Saga, in Husavik, Iceland
The Whale Watching Centre, shown in the film Eurovision Song Contest: The Story Of Fire Saga, in Husavik, Iceland The Whale Watching Centre, shown in the film Eurovision Song Contest: The Story Of Fire Saga, in Husavik, Iceland (Brynjar Gunnarsson/AP) (Brynjar Gunnarsson/AP)

Goransson added: “Just being on that list feels like winning to me.”

They are up against Speak Now from One Night In Miami, Io Si (Seen) from The Life Ahead, Fight For You from Judas And The Black Messiah and Hear My Voice from The Trial Of The Chicago 7.

Everyone’s Oscar night plans are in a bit of flux as the pandemic continues.

Goransson is in Los Angeles but both Kotecha and Gsus are in Sweden and were unclear how they were going to participate.

The people of Husavik are also doing what they can while still adhering to the restrictions.

Ideally they would have had a big town party, but now it is likely to be just gatherings of 10 or less.

And everyone knows that despite the efforts and the passion, anything can happen on Oscar night.

But one thing is certain – as soon as they can, Goransson, Gsus and Kotecha are making a trip to Husavik.