Rachael Finch, Miss Universe Australia
News
Paddy
Power one of UK’s biggest betting agencies
say Miss Australia has been backed off the map
by astute punters around the world
·A
spokesperson said they have taken bets at $16
- $12 - $8 - $6 - $5 & now have her a raging
$4.50 favourite.
She
is the one they want & it’s very educated
money
·
All other betting agencies agree that Miss Australia
is the one punters big & small want to back
·
Her odds could end up around $3.50 the way the
money is still coming in for her
·
Many quoted that they have never seen this much
support for any previous Miss Universe favourite
·
Her present quote is almost half of what last
years starting price of the winner Miss Venezuela
@ $7
·
We are expecting to pay out some big wagers if
she wins - She does look the standout this year.
Source:
Miss Universe 2009 Betting
Miss
Universe is an annual international female beauty
contest run by the Miss Universe Organization.
The
contest was founded in 1952 by California clothing
company Pacific Mills. The pageant became part
of Kayser-Roth and then Gulf and Western Industries,
before being acquired by Donald Trump in 1996.
Alongside
with its rival Miss World and Miss Earth contests,
this pageant is one of the most publicised beauty
contests in the world.
History
The
winner of the "Miss America 1951" pageant,
Yolande Betbeze, refused to pose in a swimsuit
from its major sponsor, Catalina swimwear. As
a result, the brand's manufacturer Pacific Mills
withdrew from Miss America and set up the Miss
USA and Miss Universe contests. The first Miss
Universe Pageant was held in Long Beach, California
in 1952. It was won by Armi Kuusela from Finland,
who gave up her title to get married to a Filipino
tycoon, Virgilio Hilario, shortly before her year
was complete. Until 1958 the Miss Universe title
(like Miss America) was post-dated, so at the
time Ms. Kuusela's title was Miss Universe 1953.
The
pageant was first televised in 1955. CBS began
nationally broadcasting the combined Miss USA
and Miss Universe pageants from 1960 and, separately,
from 1965. In 2003 NBC took over the television
rights.
The
main pageant was held consecutively in the continental
US from 1952 to 1971. Since then, the pageant
has been held in locales around the world.
Competition formats
In
the early years of the pageant, the ladies who
made the cut were announced after the preliminary
competition. From 1965 to the present day, the
semi-finalists were not announced until the night
of the main event. The semi-finalists once again
competed in evening gown and swimsuit and a top
5 were announced. An interview portion was introduced
in 1960 to decide the runners-up and winner.
From
1959 to 1964, there were slight format changes.
In 1959 through 1963, there was no cut to 5 finalists;
the runners-up and winners were called from the
assembled 15 semi-finalists. In 1964, the top
15 became a top 10, and after a round of interview,
the winner and runners-up were called from the
10 finalists.
In
1965, the pageant returned to the original format
of a cut to 5 finalists, and remained so until
1989.
In
1969, a final question was posed to the last five
contestants. The final question was an on-and-off
feature of the pageant. In 1990, it had taken
root and every pageant since, the final contestants
have to answer a final question.
In
1990, the pageant implemented major format changes
in the competition itself. Instead of five finalists,
the field was reduced from 10 semi-finalists to
6. Each contestant then randomly select a judge
and answer the question posed by the judge. After
that, the field is narrowed down further to a
final 3. In 1998, the number of finalists was
reduced to 5, although there still was a cut to
a final 3. This continued to 2001, where the final
5 format was re-instated.
In
2000, the interview portion of the semi-finals
was quietly dropped and the contestants once again,
as in the early days of the pageant, competed
only in swimsuit and gowns.
In
2006, twenty semi-finalists were announced, with
these delegates competing in the swimsuit competition.
The number of competing delegates was then cut
to ten, with those delegates competing in the
evening gown competition. After that round of
competition, the final five was announced, with
the finalists competing in the "final question"
or interview round. At the end of competition
the runners-up were announced and the winner crowned
by the outgoing queen.
In
2007 the format changed slightly with the top
15 moving to the swimsuit competition; from there,
10 selected contestants moved on to the evening
gown competition where half were eliminated. The
final five answered the final question to decide
the ultimate winner.
The contest today
The
Miss Universe Organization, a New York-based partnership
between NBC and Donald Trump, has run the contest
since June 20, 2002. The current president is
Paula Shugart. The Organization sells television
rights to the pageant in other countries, and
also produces the Miss USA and Miss Teen USA contests
with the winner of Miss USA representing the USA
in Miss Universe.
Candidate selection
Each
year, bids are received by the Miss Universe organizers
from organizations who wish to select the Miss
Universe contestant for a country. This allows
competition between different pageants to hold
a country's license, as happened for Miss Italy
and Miss France for example, when the licenses
for their respective traditional organizations
were revoked (the usual Miss France competition
returned in 2004).
Usually
a country's candidate selection involves pageants
in major cities, with the winners competing in
a national pageant, but this does not always occur.
For example, in 2000 Australia's national pageant
was abolished as a relic of a bygone era, with
Australian delegates instead chosen by a modeling
agency. Such "castings" are generally
discouraged by the Miss Universe Organization,
which prefers national pageants that preserve
an aura of respectability and competition. Despite
being "cast", Miss Australia, Jennifer
Hawkins, was chosen as Miss Universe 2004. Later
that year, Australia resumed its national pageant
and chose Michelle Guy as Miss Universe Australia
2005.
Some
of the most successful national pageants in the
last decade have been Venezuela, USA, Puerto Rico,
India, South Africa, and etc which command consistently
high interest and television ratings in their
respective countries[1].Recent arrivals in the
pageant include China (2002), Albania (2002),
Vietnam (2004), Georgia (2004), Ethiopia (2004),
Latvia (2005), Kazakhstan (2006), and Tanzania
(2007); there have also been efforts to revive
strong national pageants in Chile, Uruguay, Argentina,
Canada, and the Caribbean, among other regions.
There
are continually efforts to expand the pageant,
but the participation of some countries such as
Indonesia and Algeria has proven difficult due
to cultural barriers to the swimsuit competition,
while others such as Mozambique, Armenia and Nepal
have baulked at sending representatives due to
the cost (in fact, of all the major international
pageants, the franchise fee for Miss Universe
is the most expensive). As of 2007, only four
countries have been present at every Miss Universe
since its inception in 1952: Canada, France, Germany,
and the United States. Many European countries
allow 17-year-old contestants to compete in their
pageants, while Miss Universe's minimum age is
18, so national titleholders often have to be
replaced by their runners-up. Miss Universe also
prohibits transsexual applicants and age fabrication.
Main pageant
The
main Miss Universe Pageant, as of now, is held
over a two week period in May and July. In the
1970s through the 1990s, the pageant was a month
long. This allows time for rehearsals, appearances
and the preliminary competition, with the winner
being crowned by the previous year's titleholder
during the final competition.
According
to the organizers, the Miss Universe contest is
more than a beauty pageant: women aspiring to
become Miss Universe must be intelligent, well-mannered
and cultured. Often a candidate has lost because
she did not have a good answer during the question
responses rounds; although this section of competition
has held less importance during recent pageants
than it did in the twentieth century. Delegates
also participate in swimsuit and evening gown
competitions.
Currently,
the final placement of the finalists is determined
by a ranked vote, where each judge ranks each
of the final three/five candidates, with the contestant
posting the lowest cumulative score becoming the
winner. If there is a tie, which often happens
when there are even members of the jury, the higher
semifinal scores become decisive.
The
winner is assigned a one-year contract with the
Miss Universe Organization, going overseas to
spread messages about the control of diseases,
peace, and public awareness of AIDS. Since Donald
Trump took over the pageant, the winner has been
given the use of a Trump Tower apartment in New
York City for use during her reign.
Aside
from the main winner and her runners-up, special
awards are also awarded to the winners of the
best National Costume, Miss Photogenic, and Miss
Congeniality. Miss Congeniality is chosen by the
delegates themselves. In recent years, Miss Photogenic
has been chosen by popular internet vote (the
winner used to be chosen by media personnel covering
the event).
Final judgement
The
competition for the Miss Universe title has seen
many changes, although there have been several
constants throughout its history. All the contestants
compete in a preliminary round of judging (nowadays
called the "Presentation Show") where
the field is narrowed to a select number of semi-finalists.
This number has fluctuated over the years. The
very first Miss Universe pageant had ten semi-finalists.
The next two years, the number of semi-finalists
grew to 16. In 1955, the number dropped to a stable
15, which remained through 1970. In 1971, the
number was reduced to 12. That number was further
reduced to a mere 10 in 1984. This lasted until
2003, when the number of 15 was re-instated. In
2006, there were 20 semi-finalists, the highest
number ever. In 2007, the Organization announced
the Top 15 system will be back.
In
the early years, the contestants were judged in
swimsuit and evening gown only. In later years,
the contestants also competed in a preliminary
interview round in a one-on-one meeting with each
individual judge.
In
2007, 77 contestants started the competition;
the top 15 moving to the swimsuit competition.
From there, 10 were selected for the evening gown
competition which halved the contenders to 5.
These final five then answered a final question
to decide the winner.
Crown
The
Miss Universe crown was designed by Mikimoto,
the official jewellery sponsor of the Miss Universe
Organization], and depicts the phoenix rising,
signifying status, power and beauty. The crown
has 500 diamonds of almost 30 carats (3.6 g),
120 South Sea and Akoya pearls, ranging in size
from 3 to 18mm diameter and is valued at $250,000.
The Crown was designed specifically for the pageant
on Mikimoto Pearl Island in Japan with the Mikimoto
crown and tiara being first used for Miss Universe
2002.
Miss Universe 2007
Miss Universe 2007
The
2007 Miss Universe Pageant was held at the National
Auditorium in Mexico City, Mexico with peripheral
events taking place in the cities of Cancún,
the Mayan Riviera and Chiapas. Although initial
expectations were that ninety delegates would
participate, only 77 candidates competed for the
title with Miss Sweden withdrawing amongst complaints
in her home country that the contest degrades
women. Protesters in Mexico wore white dresses
splashed with fake blood and sashes proclaiming
Miss Juarez, Miss Atenco and Miss Michoacan alluding
to places in Mexico made infamous by killings
or sexual abuse of women.
The
winner of Miss Universe 2007 was Riyo Mori crowned
by the previous year's winner, Zuleyka Rivera
of Puerto Rico. Ningning Zhang from China, aged
20, won the Miss Congeniality award, while Anna
Theresa Licaros, aged 22, from the Philippines,
was chosen as Miss Photogenic.
The
2008 Miss Universe Pageant will be held in Nha
Trang, the capital of Khanh Hoa Province in Vietnam.
Nha Trang is famous for its beautiful beaches
and seaside resorts such as Vinpearl.
Trivia
and statistics
Scores
* Electronic voting was introduced to television
viewers in 1978 when the pageant was held in Acapulco,
Mexico: for the first time in a televised pageant,
the audience got to see how the judges voted.
The pageant still uses a computer voting system.
There is a team of three people who install, maintain,
and operate the voting system. They sit somewhere
in the audience area with a view of the stage,
usually just in front of the accountants. They
are listed in credits as “Computer Score
Operators”. The same system is used for
Miss Teen USA, Miss USA, and Miss Universe.
Locations
For the full list of venues, see List of Miss
Universe winners and venues.
* The USA hosted the early years of the pageant
(1952-1971).
o During this period, 4 delegates were crowned
Miss Universe on home turf:
+ 1954 and 1956 in Long Beach, California.
+ 1960 and 1967 in Miami Beach, Florida.
o After this period, another Miss Universe winner
was crowned on home turf:
+ Miss Universe 1997 Brook Lee in Miami Beach,
Florida
* In 1972, the Miss Universe Pageant was held
outside the continental US for the first time,
taking place in Dorado, Puerto Rico.
* Outside the continental US, Mexico has hosted
the most Miss Universe pageants, with four. The
various locations were:
o Mexico: Acapulco (1978), Cancún (1989),
Mexico City (1993) and (2007)
* Apart from the United States and Mexico, the
other territory/states to host the pageant more
than once were:
o Puerto Rico: Dorado (1972), Bayamon (2001),
San Juan (2002)
o Manila, Philippines (1974 & 1994)
o Panama City, Panama (1986 & 2003)
o Bangkok, Thailand (1992 & 2005)
Competing states
List of Miss Universe countries
* The United States has performed the best throughout
the pageant's entire history, with seven winners,
eight first runners-up, six second runners-up,
one third runner-up, five fourth runners-up, six
finalists, and seventeen semi-finalists. Miss
USA has missed the semi-finals only three times:
1976 (Barbara Peterson), 1999 (Kimberly Pressler),
and 2002 (Shauntay Hinton). In 1957, Leona Gage
of Maryland was disqualified from the semi-finals
after it was revealed that she was married and
a mother.
* After the USA, Venezuela is the next most successful
nation in terms of overall placements in the semi-finals
(34), it is followed in turn by Brazil (29), Sweden
(28), Colombia (27), Germany (21), Israel (20),
England and India (both 19), Finland and Greece
(both 18), Norway and Japan (both 17), Peru, South
Africa, Canada, and Puerto Rico (16 each). Of
these countries, only England has yet to win the
contest.
* The United States has been the most successful
state to compete in Miss Universe in the 1950s,
1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. In the 1960s, Finland
was the most successful nation, and Puerto Rico
has been most successful in the 2000s.
* The nations that have competed every single
year of competition (from 1952 to date) are France,
Germany, USA, and Canada. Sweden lost this distinction
when it failed to send a contestant in 2005. Israel
missed the pageant in 1953, while Greece was absent
in 1988 (its delegate withdrew because of illness).
* Before becoming states in 1959, Alaska and Hawaii
both sent delegates to the pageant during the
1950s. In fact, Miss Hawaii was 1st runner-up
in 1952 and 2nd runner-up in 1958 (before winning
Miss Universe as Miss USA in 1997), while Miss
Alaska reached the semi-finals in 1957.
* After the USA, Venezuela ranked second in terms
of consecutive placements in the semi-finals:
21 years, from 1983 to 2003, nearly beating the
United States' 22-year streak between 1977-1998.
While Alicia Machado has been the only Venezuelan
Miss Universe in the last decade, of the nine
following pageants, four have seen Venezuela's
representative place first runner-up (1997, 1998,
2000, and 2003).
* Other than the USA and Venezuela, the countries
that have made the semi-finals the most in a row
are India (who in recent years has emerged as
a pageant powerhouse) with 11 (1992-2002) consecutive
placements; Germany with ten (1952 to 1961); and
Finland with 8 (1962-1969).
* Colombia had three first-runner up placements
in a row (1992-1994) a streak that has been unparalleled
in competition history.
* Finland has had the most consecutive runners-up.
For five years, from 1965 to 1969, its delegates
placed among the five finalists without interruption
(1965: Virpi Miettinen, first runner-up, 1966:
Satu Ostring, first runner-up, 1967: Ritva Lehto,
third runner-up, 1968: Leena Brusiin, second runner-up,
and 1969: Harriet Eriksson, first runner-up).
* Puerto Rico has had at least 1 winner in each
of the last 4 decades, the only state/territory
to accomplish this feat: Marisol Malaret in the
70s (1970), Deborah Carthy-Deu in the 80s (1985),
Dayanara Torres in the 90s (1993), and Denise
Quiñones (2001) & Zuleyka Rivera (2006)
in the 2000s.
Delegates
* Miss Universe 1957, Gladys Zender from Peru
was the youngest Miss Universe in history. She
was 17 when she won the title.
* The very first Miss Universe (from Finland),
the very first Miss Asia (from Taiwan) and the
very first Miss International (from Colombia)
all married Filipinos.
* On three occasions, contestants that did not
place in Miss World: Georgina Rizk, Angela Visser,
and Mpule Kwelagobe, won Miss Universe. However,
no contestant who failed to place at Miss Universe
has ever gone on to win Miss World.
* Eight Miss Universe delegates placed as runner-up
or semi-finalist in that pageant and later won
the Miss World title. They were: Carmen Susana
Duijim Zubillaga - semi-finalist, Venezuela 1955;
Corinne Rottschafer - semi-finalist, Holland 1958;
Rosemarie Frankland - First Runner-up, Wales 1961;
Madeleine Hartog Bell - semi-finalist, Peru 1966;
Eva Von Rueber-Staier - semi-finalist, Austria
1969; Helen Morgan - first runner-up, Wales 1974
(dethroned); Gina Ann Casandra Swainson - First
Runner-up, Bermuda 1979 and Agbani Darego - semi-finalist,
Nigeria 2001.
* At 64 inches (1.63 m) tall, Miss Thailand 1965,
Apasra Hongsakula is the shortest Miss Universe
ever crowned.
* In 1957, Miss USA Mary Leona Gage was disqualified
for being married, though she had qualified for
the semi-finals. She was replaced by Miss Argentina.
* Amparo Muñoz of Spain, Miss Universe
1974, was dethroned shortly before her reign ended
and did not crown her successor, but she was not
formally replaced. Amparo's runner-up, Helen Morgan
of Wales, went on to represent the United Kingdom
in the Miss World pageant later that same year.
She won, only to resign a few days later when
she was revealed to be an unwed mother.
* Irene Sáez, Miss Universe 1981, ran for
President of Venezuela in 1998 (losing to Hugo
Chávez), after having been elected mayor
of Chacao in 1992 and governor of Margarita Island
in 1999 .
* Trinidad & Tobago's Janelle Commissiong
became the first woman of black descent to be
crowned Miss Universe, in 1977 in Santo Domingo,
Dominican Republic. The first black African to
win Miss Universe of was Mpule Kwelagobe, of Botswana,
crowned in 1999 at Chaguaramas, Trinidad &
Tobago.
* Only once have black women won Miss Universe
in succession. Wendy Fitzwilliam of Trinidad &
Tobago won the title in 1998, followed by Mpule
Kwelagobe of Botswana in 1999.
* Andrea Stelzer was Miss South Africa in 1985,
but pulled out of Miss Universe because of anti-apartheid
demonstrations. She competed in 1989 as Miss Germany,
and was a top 10 semi-finalist.
* Miss Lebanon 2001, Christina Sawaya, pulled
out of the 2002 Miss Universe competition because
of the participation of Miss Israel. She went
on to win the rival Miss International competition
in the same year.
* 2002's winner, Oxana Fedorova of Russia, became
the first Miss Universe who officially did not
finish her reign, making first runner-up Justine
Pasek the first Panamanian to hold the title.
Fedorova was crowned in Puerto Rico in mid-May,
and was replaced by Pasek in late September. It
is unclear whether Fedorova was fired for failure
to perform her duties (the official version),
or chose to resign because she had not expected
the heavy workload.
* The strong rivalry between Puerto Rico and Venezuela
is so well-known in Latin-American popular culture,
that their struggle has been immortalized in several
Spanish-language television commercials in the
United States for such companies as MasterCard
and Budweiser. In the latter, former Miss Universe
winners Dayanara Torres of Puerto Rico and Alicia
Machado of Venezuela cause mayhem in a sports
bar as they compete to win the admiration of the
men present.
* A new trend of delegates representing countries
they were not born in has developed. Miss Universe
2002 Justine Pasek was born in Kharkiv Ukraine,
where her Panamanian mother was completing her
University studies. Miss Israel 2005, Elena Ralph
was also born in Ukraine and moved to Israel when
she was 18 years old. The most famous country-swapper
was probably Natascha Borger. After placing 12th
in the 2000 Venezuelan pageant she moved to Germany
where she easily won the crown of Miss Deutschland.
Other notable contestants who represent countries
other than their birth place include the Miss
Universe Canada and Miss Universe 2005 Natalie
Glebova who is Russian by birth, Miss Universe
Canada 2006 Alice Panikian who is Bulgarian by
birth, Miss Germany Universe 2006 Natalie Ackermann
who is Colombian by birth, and Venezuelan born
Francis Barraza Sudnicka representing Poland.
Such is also reflected in the growing number of
delegates from different parts of the world being
sent to a third country (almost always Latin American)
for further training before going on to the host
country and compete in the pageant proper.
* In 1999, Botswana sent Mpule Kwelagobe as its
first ever delegate to the pageant and she won.
* In 2007 Jamaica sent the first ever Rastafari
contestant.
* In 2007, Riyo Mori of Japan was crowned in Mexico
City, Mexico in another controversial competition.
All ten finalists were brunettes. When Miss Mexico
failed to make the final cut, the crowd loudly
booed Miss USA who did pass despite falling over
in the evening gown competition. Interestingly,
two delegates who fell wearing their evening gowns
advanced to the final question round. They were
Miriam Quiambao, Miss Philippines 1999 who tripped
and gracefully recovered during the preliminaries;
and Rachel Smith, Miss USA 2007 who slipped during
the evening gown competition. Quiambao managed
to place as first runner-up while Smith ended
up as 4th runner-up.
Winners
* Natalie Glebova of Canada, Miss Universe 2005
reigned for the longest period in Miss Universe
history: one year and two months from the time
she was crowned on May 31, 2005 in Bangkok, Thailand.
* There are only ten winners from Asia. Most of
these winners represented four countries from
East and Southeast Asia, each country having two
titleholders each. They are Akiko Kojima and Riyo
Mori of Japan in 1959 and 2007, Gloria Diaz and
Margarita Moran of the Philippines in 1969 and
1973 respectively, Apasra Hongsakula and Porntip
Nakhirunkanok of Thailand in 1965 and 1988, and
Sushmita Sen and Lara Dutta of India in 1994 and
2000. The two other winners were from Western
Asia, Georgina Rizk of Lebanon in 1971 and Rina
Messinger of Israel in 1976.
* Eleven contestants of Asian descent have won
the pageant: Akiko Kojima and Riyo Mori of Japan
in 1959 and 2007, Apasra Hongsakula and Porntip
Nakhirunkanok of Thailand in 1965 and 1988, Gloria
Diaz and Margarita Moran of the Philippines in
1969 and 1973, Georgina Rizk of Lebanon in 1971,
Rina Messinger of Israel in 1976, Sushmita Sen
and Lara Dutta of India in 1994 and 2000, and
Brook Mahaelani Lee from the state of Hawaii in
1997.
* In April 2006, a reunion of former titleholders
took place in New York City to celebrate the launch
of the book "Universal Beauty" by Cara
Birnbaum. The reunion included Sylvia Hitchcock
(1967, USA); Margaret Gardiner (1978, South Africa);
Yvonne Ryding (1984, Sweden); Deborah Carthy-Deu
(1985, Puerto Rico); Barbara Palacios Teyde (1986,
Venezuela); Porntip Nakhirunkanok (1988, Thailand);
Mona Grudt (1990, Norway); Lupita Jones (1991,
Mexico); Michelle McLean (1992, Namibia); Brook
Lee (1997, USA); Wendy Fitzwilliam (1998, Trinidad
& Tobago); Denise Quiñones (2001, Puerto
Rico); Justine Pasek (2002, Panama); Amelia Vega
(2003, Dominican Republic) and Natalie Glebova(2005,
Canada).
* Miss Universe 2000, Lara Dutta's (India) finalist
interview was the highest individual score in
any category in the history of the Miss Universe
contest, as her perfect interview saw a majority
of the judges giving her the maximum 9.99 mark.
It was the last year such scores were televised
until 2007.
* Highest Televised Scores in the Semi-Finals:
Swimsuit competition - 9.88 by Oxana Fedorova
of Russia in 2002.
Interview competition - 9.843 by Milka Chulina
of Venezuela in 1993.
Evening Gown competition - 9.897 by Carolina Gomez
Correa of Colombia in 1994.
* The largest gap in between winning Miss Universe
(at present) is from Japan, wherein Akiko Kojima
won the title in 1959, and 48 years later, Riyo
Mori became the second recipient afterwards. The
shortest gap is only two years later (by this
day, no country has won twice in a row): USA (won
in 1954 and 1956; then in 1995 and 1997) and Venezuela
(won in 1979 and 1981). Curiously, between the
Venezuelan triumphs of 1979 and 1981, the winner
was from the USA, and between the two from USA
(1995 and 1997) the winner was from Venezuela.
* The largest interval between a nation winning
Miss Universe (at present) is Japan; Akiko Kojima
won the title in 1959 and, 48 years later, Riyo
Mori became the second recipient from Japan. The
shortest gap is two years; USA won in 1954 and
1956, then in 1995 and 1997 and Venezuela won
in 1979 and 1981. Curiously, between the Venezuelan
triumphs of 1979 and 1981, the winner was from
the USA, and between the two USA wins in 1995
and 1997, the winner was from Venezuela.
Awards
Further information: Miss Universe Special Awards
* The Philippines has won the Miss Photogenic
award seven times (including a back-to-back and
a three-peat), followed by England and Puerto
Rico, both with five. Puerto Rico won its five
awards during a six-year period (1999-2004, did
not win in 2000).
* Colombia has won the Best National Costume Award
six times.
* Guam has won the Miss Congeniality award four
times.
* No Miss Congeniality has ever gone on to win
Miss Universe. The closest was Miss El Salvador
1955, who was 1st runner-up.
* The only Miss Universe to win 3 other awards
on pageant night was Denise Quiñones (Miss
Puerto Rico), who in 2001 also won Miss Photogenic,
Bluepoint Swimsuit Award, and Clairol Best Style
Award.
* Four Miss Universe winners were awarded Miss
Photogenic: Margareta Arvidsson (Sweden, 1966),
Margarita Moran (Philippines, 1973), Janelle Commissiong
(Trinidad/Tobago, 1977) and Denise Quiñones
(Puerto Rico, 2001)
* Three titleholders have also won Best National
Costume: Porntip Nakhirunkanok (Thailand, 1988),
Wendy Fitzwilliams (Trinidad/Tobago, 1998) and
Amelia Vega (Dominican Republic, 2003)
The Miss Universe Creed
From
1960 to 1990, the Miss Universe Creed was read
at each pageant:
"We,
the young women of the universe, believe people
everywhere are seeking peace, tolerance and mutual
understanding. We pledge to spread this message
in every way we can, wherever we go."
Controversies
* Aarmi Kuusela of Finland was crowned as the
first Miss Universe in 1952. She was also the
first Miss Universe and the first international
beauty queen to resign to marry her Filipino boyfriend
but the organization had no rule that states if
the winner will resign, the title will be offered
to the first runner-up. She remains the official
Miss Universe of 1952.
* Miss Universe 1974 Amparo Munoz of Spain resigned
to marry her Filipino boyfriend but the title
was not offered to the first runner-up. The first
runner-up was Helen Morgan of the United Kingdom
who was also fired after revealing that she was
a single mother.
* In 1993, Miss USA Kenya Moore was booed by the
Mexicans during the pageant held in Mexico. Fourteen
years later, Rachel Smith of USA was booed once
again by the Mexicans, during the pageant night
and the national costume parade days before.
* Miss Universe 1996, Alicia Machado of Venezuela,
was nearly fired by the organization because of
her weight. She exceeded the weight required during
her reign but the requirement was not implemented.
(Credit:
Wikipedia).
Profiles
Jennifer
Hawkins
Miss
Universe Australia
Beauty
Pageants
Mediaman does not represent the Miss Universe
Organization
Mediaman does not represent Rachael Finch
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