Miss World 1972
Miss World 1972 | |
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Date | 1 December 1972 |
Presenters | |
Venue | Royal Albert Hall, London, United Kingdom |
Broadcaster | BBC |
Entrants | 53 |
Placements | 15 |
Debuts |
|
Withdrawals |
|
Returns |
|
Winner | Belinda Green[1][2] Australia |
Miss World 1972 was the 22nd edition of the Miss World pageant, held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England, United Kingdom[2] on 1 December 1972 on BBC. Fifty-three delegates vied for the crown won by Belinda Green of Australia.[1][2][3][4] Green became the second Australian winner of the crown in just four years. Since the reigning Miss World 1971, Lúcia Petterle had suffered a broken arm and was unable to travel to London, the CEO Julia Morley crowned the new Miss World 1972.
Selection of participants
Debuts, returns, and, withdrawals
This edition marked the debut of Botswana and Singapore, as well as the return of Honduras, which last competed in 1967, Costa Rica in 1969 and Hong Kong and Liberia in 1970.
Also, the withdrawal of Ceylon,[a] Cyprus, Guyana, Luxembourg, Nicaragua, Panama, South Korea, Trinidad and Tobago and Tunisia, withdrew from the competition for unknown reasons. Maria Koutrouza of Cyprus and Chung Keum-ok of South Korea, was supposed but don’t show up in the host country. Martha Lucia Cardozo Cruz of Colombia, Regina Melgar de Garcia of Panama —- arrived November 30th, too late to compete and Helga Vera Johns of Rhodesia, Miss Rhodesia 1972 was not allowed to compete despite having British citizenship. She would later try to compete again in 1975 as Miss South Africa but was barred again because she hadn't lived in South Africa for at least 5 years as per the requirements for the Miss World Organization.[5][6][7]
Results
Placement | Contestant |
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Miss World 1972 | |
1st runner-up | |
2nd runner-up | |
3rd runner-up | |
4th runner-up | |
Top 7 |
|
Top 15 |
|
Judges
A panel of judges evaluated the contestants' performances.[3] Peter Sellers was one of the judges.[3]
Contestants
Miss World 1972 had a total of 53 contestants.[3] Seven contestants did not arrive on time, and were disqualified from the event.[3][8]
- Argentina – Olga Edith Cognini Ferrer
- Aruba – Sandra Werleman
- Australia – Belinda Green[1][2]
- Austria – Ursula Pacher[2]
- Bahamas – Heather Cleare
- Belgium – Anne-Marie Roger
- Bermuda – Helen Brown
- Botswana – Agnes Motswere Letsebe
- Brazil – Ângela Maria Favi
- Canada – Bonny Brady
- Costa Rica – María Victoria Ross González
- Dominican Republic – Teresa Evangelina Medrano
- Ecuador – Patricia Falconí
- Finland – Tuula Anneli Björkling[3]
- France – Claudine Cassereau
- Gibraltar – Rosemarie Vivian Catania
- Greece – Helen Lykissa
- Guam – Maria Louise Pangelinan
- Holland – Monique Borgeld
- Honduras – Doris van Tuyl
- Hong Kong – Gay Mei-Lin
- Iceland – Rósa Helgadóttir
- India – Malathi Basappa[2]
- Ireland – Pauline Therese Fitzsimons
- Israel – Chana Ordan
- Italy – Laura Romano
- Jamaica – Gail Geraldeen Phillips
- Japan – Akiko Kajitani
- Liberia – Cecelia Armena King
- Malaysia – Janet Mok Swee Chin
- Malta – Jane Attard
- Mauritius – Marie Ange Bestel
- Mexico – Gloria Guadalupe Gutiérrez López
- New Zealand – Kristine Dayle Allan
- Norway – Ingeborg Marie Sorensen[2]
- Paraguay – Rosa Angélica Mussi
- Philippines – Evangeline Rosales Reyes[9]
- Portugal – Anita Marques
- Puerto Rico – Ana Nisi Goyco †
- Seychelles – Jane Edna Straevens
- Singapore – Rosalind Lee Eng Neo
- South Africa[b] – Cynthia Shange
- South Africa – Stephanie Elizabeth Reinecke
- Spain – María del Rocío Martín Madrigal
- Sweden – Rita Berntsson
- Switzerland – Astrid Vollenweider
- Thailand – Jintana Jitsophon
- Turkey – Feyzal Kibarer[10]
- United Kingdom – Jennifer Mary McAdam[3]
- United States – Lynda Carter[2]
- Venezuela – Amalia Heller Gómez
- West Germany – Heidemarie Renate Weber
- Yugoslavia – Biljana Ristić
Notes
References
- ^ a b c d "The Tuscaloosa News". Retrieved 26 January 2016.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "The Bryan Times". Retrieved 26 January 2016.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j "The Sydney Morning Herald". Retrieved 26 January 2016.
- ^ a b c "Ellensburg Daily Record". Retrieved 26 January 2016.
- ^ Strack, Harry R. (1978). Sanctions: The Case of Rhodesia. Syracuse University Press. p. 233. ISBN 9780815621614.
- ^ Trethowan, Anthony (2008). Delta Scout: Ground Coverage Operator. 30° South Publishers. p. 149. ISBN 9781920143213.
- ^ Sally-Ann Fawcett (20 April 2016). More Misdemeanours - And Other Beauty Queen Stories. Lulu Enterprises. ISBN 9781326634148. OL 35077796M.
- ^ "Bharat Sundari and Little Miss India". Women on the March. Vol. XVI. November 1972. p. 25. Retrieved 3 April 2024.
- ^ Burton-Titular, Joyce (1 October 2013). "From Vivien to Megan: The PH in Miss World history". Rappler. Archived from the original on 24 July 2024. Retrieved 28 April 2025.
- ^ Tarihi, Güncelleme (4 May 2020). "Güzeller canlı yayında buluştu" [Beauties met on live broadcast]. Hürriyet (in Turkish). Archived from the original on 2 January 2023. Retrieved 29 April 2025.