User:Mauriziok/Miss World 1991

Mauriziok/Miss World 1991
Date28 December 1991
Presenters
EntertainmentIndecent Obsession
VenueGeorgia World Congress Center, Atlanta, Georgia, United States
BroadcasterE!
Entrants79
Placements10
Debuts
Withdrawals
Returns
WinnerNinibeth Leal
 Venezuela[1]
← 1990
1992 →

Miss World 1991, the 41st edition of the Miss World pageant, was held on 28 December 1991 at the Georgia World Congress Center in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. The winner was Ninibeth Leal representing Venezuela. She was crowned by Gina Tolleson of the United States. Miss World 1991 was scheduled to be held in the Dominican Republic. Due to scheduling difficulties, Miss World was first moved to Puerto Rico, then to Atlanta, United States. Preliminary swimsuits in Miss World 1991 were held in South Africa.[2] It was the first time the Miss World pageant was held in the United States.

Results

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Countries and territories which sent delegates and results for Miss World 1991[1][2]

Placements

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Final results Contestant
Miss World 1991
1st Runner-up
2nd Runner-up
Top 5
Top 10

Continental Queens of Beauty

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Continental Group Contestant
Africa
Americas
Asia & Oceania
Caribbean
Europe
  •   Turkey – [[Dilek Aslihan Koruyan|}

Contestants

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Nation Contestant Hometown Preliminary Score
  American Virgin Islands Cheryl Leiba Milligan St. Croix 35
  Antigua Joanne Bird St. John's 34
  Argentina Marcela Noemí Chazarreta Buenos Aires 35
  Aruba Sandra Croes Santa Cruz 33
  Australia Leanne Buckle Brisbane 48
  Austria Andrea Isabelle Pfeiffer Graz 32
  Bahamas Tarnia Paula Newton Stuart New Providence 33
  Belgium Anke van Dermeersch Antwerp 41
  Belize Josephine (Josie) Gault Belize City 33
  Bolivia Mónica Gamarra Giese Cochabamba 35
  Brazil Cátia Silene Kupssinski São Paulo 39
  British Virgin Islands Marjorie Penn Tortola 34
  Bulgaria Liubomira Slavcheva Sofia 33
  Cayman Islands Yvette Peggy Jordison Grand Cayman 35
  Chile Carolina Beatriz Michelson Martínez Santiago 38
  Chinese Taipei Rebecca Lin Lan-Chih Taipei 33
  Colombia Adriana Rodríguez Anzola Bogota 41
  Costa Rica Eugenie Jiménez Pacheco San Francisco de Heredia 33
  Curaçao Nashaira Desbarida Willemstad 39
  Cyprus Anna Margaret Stephanou Nicosia 34
  Czechoslovakia Andrea Tatarkova Košice 32
  Denmark Sharon Givskav Copenhagen 33
  Dominican Republic Rosanna Rodríguez Concepción de La Vega 34
  Ecuador Sueanny Denise Bejarano López Guayaquil 33
  El Salvador Lucía Beatriz López Rodríguez San Salvador 33
  Finland Nina Autio Tampere 35
  France Mareva Georges Punaauia 46
  Germany Susanne Petry Saarbrücken 40
  Ghana Jamilla Haruna Danzuru Accra 32
  Gibraltar Ornella Costa Gibraltar 37
  Greece Miriam Panagos Athens 38
  Greenland Bibiane Holm Nuuk 34
  Guam Yvonne Marie Limtiaco Speight Asan 32
  Guatemala Marlyn Lorena Magaña Ramírez Guatemala City 33
  Holland Linda Egging Spanbroek 39
  Honduras Arlene Rocío Rauscher Duarte Tegucigalpa 33
  Hungary Orsolya Anna Michina Budapest 32
  Iceland Svava Haraldsdóttir Reykjavík 37
  India Ritu Singh New Delhi 43
  Ireland Amanda Brunker Dublin 34
  Israel Li'at Ditkovsky Herzliya 32
  Italy Sabina Pellati Reggio Emilia 39
  Jamaica Sandra Foster Kingston 49
  Japan Junko Tsuda Tokyo 33
  Kenya N'kirote Karimi M'mbijjiwe Nairobi 34
  Korea Kim Tae-hwa Busan 32
  Latvia Inese Šlesere Riga 33
  Lebanon Diana Begdache Beirut 32
  Macau Cristina Guilherme Lam Macau 32
  Malaysia Samantha Schubert Kuala Lumpur 38
  Malta Romina Genuis Gzira 32
  Mauritius Marie Geraldine Deville Central Flacq 32
  Mexico María Cristina Urrutia de la Vega Mexico City 36
  Namibia Michelle McLean Windhoek 51
  New Zealand Lisa Maree de Montalk Taupo 41
  Nigeria Adenike Oshinowo Lagos 37
  Norway Anne-Britt Røvik Kolbotn 33
  Panama Malena Estela Betancourt Guillén Panama City 36
  Paraguay Vivian Rosanna Benítez Brizuela Asuncion 37
  Philippines Gemith Gonzalo Gemparo Manila 39
  Poland Karina Wojciechowska Katowice 32
  Portugal Maria do Carmo Ramalho Lisbon 35
  Puerto Rico Johanna Berenice Irizarry Lajas 35
  Romania Gabriela Dragomirescu Bucharest 32
  Singapore Jasheen Jayakody Singapore 35
  South Africa Diana Tilden-Davis Johannesburg 51
  Spain Candelaria (Catia) Moreno Navarro Tenerife 39
  Swaziland Jackie Emelda Bennett Manzini 32
  Sweden Cathrin Olsson Kungsbacka 34
   Switzerland Sandra Aegerter Aigle 38
  Thailand Rewaedee Malaisee Bangkok 33
  Trinidad and Tobago Sastee Bachan Port of Spain 35
  Turkey Dilek Aslihan Koruyan Istanbul 47
  United Kingdom Joanne Elizabeth Lewis Nottingham 39
  United States Charlotte Ray Camden 42
  Uruguay Andrea Regina Gorrochategui Granja Montevideo 36
  Venezuela Ninibeth Beatriz Leal Jiménez[1] Maracaibo 57
  Yugoslavia Slavica Tripunović Vukovar 33

Notes

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Debuts

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  •   Greenland

Returns

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Last competed in 1977:

  •   South Africa – returned after the Miss World Organization decided to lift a 14-year apartheid rule, allowing its contestants to compete.
  • Last competed in 1986:
    •   Antigua
  • Last competed in 1988:
    •   Lebanon
    •   Swaziland
  • Last competed in 1989:
    •   China Taipei
    •   Ecuador
    •   Malaysia

Withdrawals

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  •   Canada
  •   Cook Islands
  •   Cote d'Ivoire - Muriel Edoukou[3] - Due lack of Sponsorship.
  •   Guyana - Tracy Ann D'Abreu - Due to the controversy over her victory and citizenship, she was declared ineligible to compete at Miss World 1991.[4][5]
  •   Hong Kong - Renewed its franchise, however it happened three months after Miss World.
  •   Luxembourg - Did not send delegates to Miss World after 1990 until it returned in 2009.
  •   Papua New Guinea
  •   Peru – Due to problems with their franchise and lack of sponsorship
  •   Sri Lanka – Due to scheduling conflict
  •   Soviet Union - The winner of Miss USSR 1991, Ilmira Shamsutdinova was invited to compete in Miss World 1991, however she rejected the invitation because was too underage for the contest.[6] No runners-up from Miss USSR 1991 pageant were sent for Miss World 1991.[7] The USSR ceased to exist only two days before the Miss World pageant.

Replacements

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  •   Hungary – Antonia Balint - She was Dethroned of her Miss Hungary 1991 crown after Hungarian newspapers printed photographs that she had previously appeared in the men's magazine Lui and other publications against Miss World rules.[8] Her 1st -runner up, Timea Raba couldn't replace her for the same reason.[9]
  •   Taiwan – Lu Shu-Fang[10]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Sarasota Herald-Tribune". Retrieved 26 January 2016.
  2. ^ a b "New Straits Times". Retrieved 26 January 2016.
  3. ^ http://www.elanecdotario.com/2005/feb05/10/feb10ai.html
  4. ^ https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2492&dat=19911116&id=DKZjAAAAIBAJ&sjid=2iYMAAAAIBAJ&pg=578,927571&hl=en
  5. ^ https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2492&dat=19911011&id=FqZjAAAAIBAJ&sjid=2iYMAAAAIBAJ&pg=996,1145672&hl=en
  6. ^ российские красавицы 90-х: ИЛЬМИРА ШАМСУТДИНОВА
  7. ^ МИСС СССР 1991
  8. ^ http://www.blikk.hu/sztarvilag/sztarsztorik/hat-evig-harcolt-a-koronajaert-balint-antonia/gdwbd0p
  9. ^ http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/miss-hungary-is-re-crowned-after-six-year-battle.aspx?pageID=438&n=miss-hungary-is-re-crowned-after-six-year-battle-1997-07-25
  10. ^ articles.chicagotribune.com/1992-08-05/news/9203100545_1_miss-world-beauty-pageant-miss-venezuela-outer-beauty
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[[:Category:Miss World]] [[:Category:1991 in the United States]] [[:Category:1991 beauty pageants]] [[:Category:Beauty pageants in the United States]] [[:Category:1991 in Georgia (U.S. state)]] [[:Category:December 1991 events in the United States]]