Miss World 1969
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Miss World 1969 | |
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![]() Eva Rueber-Staier, Miss World 1969 | |
Date | 27 November 1969 |
Presenters | Michael Aspel, Pete Murray |
Entertainment | Frank Ifield, Lionel Blair & his Dancers |
Venue | Royal Albert Hall, London, UK |
Broadcaster | BBC |
Entrants | 50 |
Placements | 15 |
Debuts | |
Withdrawals | |
Returns | |
Winner | Eva Rueber-Staier[1][2] Austria |
Miss World 1969 was the 19th edition of the Miss World pageant, held for the first time at the Royal Albert Hall on 27 November 1969, broadcast for the first time in colour by the BBC. 50 delegates vied for the crown won by Eva Rueber-Staier of Austria.[1][2] She was crowned by actor Omar Sharif, not by Miss World 1968 winner Penelope Plummer of Australia.
Results
[edit]Placement | Contestant |
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Miss World 1969 | |
1st runner-up | |
2nd runner-up |
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3rd runner-up |
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4th runner-up | |
Top 7 |
|
Top 15 |
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Contestants
[edit]Argentina – Graciela Marino
Australia – Stefane Meurer
Austria – Eva Rueber-Staier[1]
Bahamas – Wanda Pearce
Belgium – Maud Alin
Brazil – Ana Cristina Rodrigues
Canada – Jacquie Perrin
Chile – Ana María Nazar
Colombia – Lina María García Ogliastri
Costa Rica – Damaris Ureña
Cyprus – Flora Diaouri
Czechoslovakia – Marcela Bitnarova
Denmark – Jeanne Perfeldt
Dominican Republic – Sandra Simone Cabrera Cabral
Ecuador – Ximena Aulestia Díaz
Finland – Päivi Ilona Raita
France – Suzanne Angly
Gambia – Marie Carayol
West Germany – Christa Margraf[1]
Gibraltar – Marilou Chiappe
Greece – Heleni Alexopoulou
Guyana – Pamela Patricia Lord[1]
Holland – Nente van der Vliet
Iceland – Ragnheiður Pétursdóttir
India – Adina Shellim
Ireland – Hillary Clarke
Israel – Tehila Selah
Jamaica – Marlyn Elizabeth Taylor
Japan – Emiko Karashima
South Korea – Kim Seung-hee
Lebanon – Roula Majzoub
Liberia – Antoinette Coleman
Luxembourg – Jacqueline Schaeffer
Malta – Mary Brincat
Mexico – Gloria Leticia Hernández Martín del Campo
New Zealand – Carole Robinson
Nicaragua – Carlota Marina Brenes López
Nigeria – Morenike Faribido
Norway – Kjersti Jortun
Paraguay – Blanca Zaldívar
Philippines – Feliza Teresa Miro
Seychelles – Sylvia Labonte
South Africa – Linda Meryl Collett
Sweden – Ing-Marie Ahlin
Tunisia – Zohra Tabania
Turkey – Sermin Elmasi
United Kingdom – Sheena Drummond
United States – Gail Renshaw
Venezuela – Marzia Rita Gisela Piazza Suprani[1]
Yugoslavia – Radmila Živković
Notes
[edit]Debuts
[edit]Seychelles
Withdraws
[edit]Malaysia – Pauline Chai Siew Phin