Mauriziok/Miss World 1970 | |
---|---|
Date | 20 November 1970 |
Presenters | Michael Aspel, Keith Fordyce, Bob Hope[1][2] |
Venue | Royal Albert Hall, London, UK |
Broadcaster | BBC |
Entrants | 58 |
Placements | 15 |
Debuts | Africa South, Grenada, Mauritius |
Withdrawals | Chile, Costa Rica, Czechoslovakia, Paraguay |
Returns | Ceylon, Hong Kong, Italy, Malaysia, Puerto Rico, Spain, Thailand |
Winner | Jennifer Hosten[3] Grenada |
Miss World 1970, the 20th edition of the Miss World pageant, was held on 20 November 1970 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, UK.[4] 58 contestants competed for the Miss World title. Jennifer Hosten from Grenada won the crown of Miss World 1970.[3] She was crowned by Miss World 1969, Eva Rueber-Staier of Austria. The event was marked by controversy in the days beforehand, during the contest itself and afterwards.
Results
editPlacement
editFinal results | Contestant |
---|---|
Miss World 1970 | |
1st Runner-up |
|
2nd Runner-up | |
3rd Runner-up | |
4th Runner-up |
|
Top 7 |
|
Top 15 |
|
Continental Queens of Beauty
editContinental Group | Contestant |
---|---|
Africa | |
Americas | |
Asia |
|
Europe | |
Oceania |
Contestants
edit- Africa South[6] – Pearl Gladys Jansen
- Argentina – Patricia María Charré Salazar
- Australia – Valli Kemp
- Austria – Rosemarie Resch
- Bahamas – June Justina Brown
- Belgium – Francine Martin
- Brazil – Sonia Yara Guerra
- Canada – Norma Joyce Hickey
- Ceylon – Yolanda Shahzali Ahlip
- Colombia – Carmelina Bayona Vera
- Cyprus – Louiza Anastadiades
- Denmark – Winnie Hollman
- Dominican Republic – Fátima Shecker
- Ecuador – Sofía Virginia Monteverde Nimbriotis
- Finland – Hannele Hamara
- France – Micheline Beaurain
- Gambia – Margaret Davies
- Germany – Dagmar Eva Ruthenberg
- Gibraltar – Carmen Gomez
- Greece – Julie Vardi
- Grenada – Jennifer Hosten
- Guyana – Jennifer Diana Evan Wong
- Holland – Patricia Hollman
- Hong Kong – Ann Lay
- Iceland – Anna Hansdóttir
- India – Heather Corinne Faville
- Ireland – Mary Elizabeth McKinley
- Israel – Irith Lavi
- Italy – Marika de Poi
- Jamaica – Elizabeth Ann Lindo
- Japan – Hisayo Nakamura
- Korea – Lee Jung-hee
- Lebanon – Georgina Rizk
- Liberia – Mainusa Wiles
- Luxembourg – Rita Massard
- Malaysia – Mary Ann Wong
- Malta – Tessa Marthese Galea
- Mauritius – Florence Muller
- Mexico – Libia Zulema López Montemayor
- New Zealand – Glenys Elizabeth Treweek
- Nicaragua – Evangelina Lacayo
- Nigeria – Stella Owivri
- Norway – Aud Fosse
- Philippines – Minerva Manalo Cagatao
- Portugal – Ana Maria Diozo Lucas
- Puerto Rico – Alma Doris Pérez
- Seychelles – Nicole Barallon
- South Africa – Jillian Elizabeth Jessup
- Spain – Josefina Román Gutiérrez
- Sweden – Marjorie Christel Johansson[8]
- Switzerland – Sylvia Christina Weisser
- Thailand – Tuanjai Amnakamart
- Tunisia – Kaltoum Khouildi
- Turkey – Afet Tugbay
- United Kingdom – Yvonne Anne Ormes
- United States – Sandra Anne Wolsfeld
- Venezuela – Tomasa Nina de las Casas Mata
- Yugoslavia – Tereza Đelmiš
Judges
editA panel of nine judges evaluated the performance of the contestants in Miss World 1970.[2][9][10] Judges included Joan Collins, Roesmin Nurjadin (the Indonesian Ambassador), Eric Gairy (the first Prime Minister of Grenada), Glen Campbell and Nina.[2][9][11]
Notes
editDebuts
edit- Africa South
- Grenada
- Mauritius
Returns
editProtests and controversy
editThere was controversy before the contest began because the organisers had allowed two entries from South Africa, one black, one white. On the evening of the contest, a bomb exploded under a BBC outside broadcast van in an unsuccessful attempt by the Angry Brigade to prevent the contest being televised. There were no injuries. The audience then had to enter the hall past noisy demonstrators who were penned behind barricades.[12]
During the evening there were protests by Women's Liberation activists.[7] They threw flour bombs during the event, momentarily alarming the host, Bob Hope.[13][14] He was also heckled during the proceedings.[2][12][15] The protests are the subject of the film Misbehaviour which was released in 2020.
Even greater controversy then followed after the result was announced. Jennifer Hosten won becoming the first Black woman to win Miss World and the black contestant from South Africa was placed second. The BBC and newspapers received numerous protests about the result. Four of the nine judges had given first-place votes to Miss Sweden, while Miss Grenada received only two firsts, yet the Swedish entrant finished fourth. Furthermore, the Prime Minister of Grenada, Sir Eric Gairy, was on the judging panel. One of Gairy's obituaries described his corruption and use of a gang of thugs when in government.[16][12] There were many accusations that the contest had been rigged, with counter-accusations that scrutiny of the results was motivated by racism and pointed that favouritism of white contestants had been typical in the contest's history. Some of the audience gathered in the street outside Royal Albert Hall after the contest and chanted "Swe-den, Swe-den". Four days later the organising director, Julia Morley, resigned because of the intense pressure from the newspapers. Years later Miss Sweden, Maj Christel Johansson, was reported as saying that she felt she had been cheated out of the title.
Julia Morley's husband, Eric Morley, was the chairman of the company (Mecca) that owned the Miss World franchise. To disprove the accusations, Eric Morley put the judging panel's ballot cards on view[5] and described the complex "majority vote system". These cards showed that Jennifer Hosten had more place markings in the 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th positions over Miss Sweden and the other five finalists. Julia Morley then resumed her job. However many still felt Sir Eric Gairy on the judging panel had influenced the other judges to give Ms Hosten token placings.[12]
References
edit- ^ Pelling, Rowan (13 July 2015). "What's so wrong about being a beauty queen?". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "The Owosso Argus-Press". Retrieved 27 January 2016.
- ^ a b c d "Miss World Competition Through the Years". E!. 12 December 2014. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
- ^ Chaudhuri, S. (2006). Feminist Film Theorists: Laura Mulvey, Kaja Silverman, Teresa de Lauretis, Barbara Creed. Routledge Critical Thinkers. Taylor & Francis. p. pt48. ISBN 978-1-134-34667-7.
- ^ a b "Misses World on stamps". The Philippine Star. 11 November 2015. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
- ^ a b c Drum: A Magazine of Africa for Africa. African Drum Publications. 1971.
- ^ a b "Daytona Beach Sunday News-Journal". Retrieved 27 January 2016.
- ^ a b c Times Daily
- ^ a b Daytona Beach Sunday News-Journal
- ^ The Glasgow Herald
- ^ Ottawa Citizen - Google News Archive Search
- ^ a b c d Baker, Rob (2015). Beautiful Idiots and Brilliant Lunatics: A Sideways Look at Twentieth Century London. Amberley Publishing. ISBN 978-1445651194.
- ^ "Miss World 2006". Archived from the original on 3 August 2008. Retrieved 26 January 2016.
- ^ "L–ast milestone on a record-breaking comedy Road ... Bob Hope dies at 100". Buzzle.com. 29 July 2003. Archived from the original on 16 March 2009. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
- ^ "Cattle show: Miss Grenada wins, Bob Hope loses". Ottawa Citizen. 21 November 1970. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
- ^ O'Shaughnessy, Hugh (25 August 1997). "Obituary". The Independent.
External links
edit- Pageantopolis – Miss World 1970
- 1970 Miss World Part 1
- 1970 Miss World Part 2
- Sally Alexander, one of the feminists who disrupted the 1970 Miss World contest, talking about the protest
[[:Category:Miss World 1970| ]] [[:Category:Miss World]] [[:Category:1970 in London]] [[:Category:1970 beauty pageants]] [[:Category:Beauty pageants in the United Kingdom]] [[:Category:Events at the Royal Albert Hall]] [[:Category:November 1970 events in the United Kingdom]] [[:Category:Feminist protests]] [[:Category:Feminism in the United Kingdom]] [[:Category:Boycotts of apartheid South Africa]]