Miss Brasil
Miss Brasil Pageant is a beauty contest that has been held since 1954 between winners of the pageants in the states of Brazil. The winner of Miss Brazil competes in the Miss Universe . The Miss Brazil, and Brazil itself, are responsible for one of the most successful campaigns in history of Miss Universe, with two winners and several runners-up, finalists and semifinalists. It was considered one of the best organized and most successful beauty pageants during the 1950s and 1960s and is believed that much of the fame of the beauty of Brazilian women comes from this. The current Miss Brazil, is from the state of Minas Gerais, Júlia Horta.
Formation | 1954 |
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Type | Beauty pageant |
Headquarters | São Paulo |
Location | |
Membership | Miss Universe Miss International |
Official language | Portuguese |
National Director | Winston Ling |
Website | missbrasil.beemotion.com.br |
Miss Brasil |
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History
Competition to win the crown of Miss Brasil began in the 1920s, following a trend throughout the world during that period. A famous controversy occurred when Miss Brasil 1929 competed in the International Pageant of Pulchritude, known as "Miss Universe" in the 1930s, but failed to place in the competition, much less win.[1]
The angered Brazilians hosted their own international pageant in 1930 leading to two separate "Miss Universe" titles that year, not related to the modern Miss Universe competition created in 1952. In the Brazilian "Miss Universe", Miss Brasil won the title while in the other competition in the US, Miss United States received the crown of Miss Universe 1930.[2] These competitions, like many others in the world, were discontinued as the Great Depression and World War II diverted the world's attention.
The modern Miss Brasil pageant was created in 1954 in the city of Petrópolis, Rio de Janeiro. The first edition of Miss Brasil, won by Bahia's representative Martha Rocha, was sponsored by the Folha de S.Paulo newspaper.
Organization
Under Diários Associados
In the following year, Brazilian media businessman, mogul and journalist Assis Chateaubriand took the rights to the Miss Brasil pageant, when the winners qualified to the Miss Universe, Miss World (participation began at 1958) and Miss International pageants (participation begin in 1960, when the pageant was created). The magnate who created Diários Associados, was responsible for promotion of the national beauties until 1980, when the network Rede Tupi was lost its concession by order of Haroldo de Mattos, Brazilian minister of Communications at the time, due to its bankruptcy.
The Quintandinha's roots
The Miss Brasil first four editions (1954 to 1957) were held in Palácio Quitandinha, Petrópolis. When Chateaubriand's media group assumed the promotion of pageant, it was massified nationally by its magazines and newspapers coverages, especially in the now defunct O Cruzeiro and O Jornal.
All national winners of the pageant in this period were placed into Miss Universe pageant, held in Long Beach, California in the United States.
Maracanãzinho's "golden years"
Miss Brazil's golden era began in 1958, when the pageant was moved from Petrópolis to the Federal District at the time, Rio de Janeiro. Rio Grande do Sul's Iêda Maria Vargas and Bahia's Martha Vasconcellos were winners of the 1963 and 1968 editions of Miss Universe (both held in the Carioca gymnasium). The same year that Vasconcellos was crowned, Guanabara State's Maria da Gloria Carvalho nabbed the Miss International title, while in 1971, Lucia Tavares Petterle was elected Miss World.
Adalgisa Colombo and Rejane Vieira Costa were 1st runners up at Miss Universe in 1958 and 1972 respectively. (See the winners table for 1959, 1962, 1971 and 1979 results).
Due to a fire in a part of Maracanãzinho's structure, the Miss Brazil 1970 pageant winner, Guanabara State's Eliane Fialho Thompson was crowned in an event edition held only one time in Pavilhão de São Cristóvão (São Cristóvão Pavilion), in a Carioca northern zone district. Its edition was the first nationally televised by Rede Tupi via a microwave system powered by Embratel.
In 1973, due to lack of public and media interest, and possible feminist protests, organizers moved the site to Ginásio Presidente Médici in the country's capital, Brasília. The Miss Brasil 1972 pageant (won by the gaúcha representative Rejane Vieira Costa) was the last held in Maracanãzinho's dependencies.
The Brasilia "decadence" and crisis
When the Miss Brasil pageant moved to the federal capital, Brasília, lack of public interest continued from 1973 to last edition in the city, held in 1980 (when Associados filed for bankruptcy protection due to closing of seven of Rede Tupi's owned and operated stations, except Bahia's TV Itapoan and TV Brasília, now Rede Record and Rede TV!'s, O&O and affiliate, respectively).
In the 1976 pageant, Helena Rubinstein cosmetics company retired its sponsorship of the Miss Brasil event. So, Catalina Swimwear brand continued its support to organization for some years until the mid-1980s, when the event broadcasting rights were assumed by SBT.
All Brazilian presidents of the period (except Ernesto Geisel) received the Miss Brasil state contestants in the Alvorada Palace days before the final nights, hosted by its coordinator at the time, Paulo Max, and actress Marly Bueno and telecasted by Tupi and its O&O, TV Brasília.
Under SBT
When the channels of defunct Tupi were redistributed for media businessman and TV animator Sílvio Santos and Russian-Brazilian journalist and owner of Manchete magazine Adolpho Bloch groups, on April 23, 1981, the new network SBT (one of the results of the Rede Associada inventory) owned the Miss Brasil until 1989.
Criticism
For the Miss Brasil pageant the 1980s was known the most tacky period, by opinion of some fans and television critics. The last top 5 obtained by a Brazilian representative in Miss Universe was in 1981, by the Rio de Janeiro candidate in national pageant, Adriana Alves de Oliveira. Because of the lack of ratings and announcers, SBT retired the promotion of Miss Brasil in April 1990, after the country had not participated in Miss Universe 1990.
Format changes
In this period, Miss Brazil pageant was held in separate pageants for Miss Universe (the most expected and important), Miss World and Miss International. SBT telecast to same state pageants, nationwide in Programa Sílvio Santos and locally by the affiliates, such as TV Alterosa (Minas Gerais) and TV Itapoan (Bahia).
Under Marlene Brito and others
In 1990, the SBT's former producer of the pageant, Marlene Brito, took the Miss Brasil rights and production until 1993, when Leila Schuster was crowned without realization of a traditional pageant, but she was indicated by the national direction for representative the country in Miss Universe 1993. From 1994, Miss Brasil was owned by various directors, including the former host in Tupi's period, Paulo Max.
The present directors, Nayla Micherif and Boanerges Gaeta Jr., assumed the functions by partnership in 2002. Since this year, the pageant national telecast is back, after some local broadcasts of it in the 1990s.
In the new era, Miss Brasil was broadcast first on Rede TV! and since 2003, Band network has assumed the television rights of the event, with venues in São Paulo (2003, 2004 and 2008), and Rio de Janeiro (2005-2007).;)
Locations and venues
- 1954–1957 Palácio Quitandinha, Petrópolis (RJ);
- 1958–1972 Maracanãzinho Gymnasium, Rio de Janeiro
- 1973–1980 Ginásio Presidente Médici, Brasília
- 1981–1987 Palácio das Convenções do Anhembi, São Paulo
- 1988–1989 Teatro Sílvio Santos (SBT Studios), São Paulo
- 1991 The Gallery, São Paulo
- 1992 Olympia (concert house), São Paulo
- In 1993, the pageant was replaced by a small event, in a fine restaurant of São Paulo, named Leopolldo. There Leila Schuster was crowned.
From 1994 to 1996, Miss Brazil was back to Rio de Janeiro. It was held initially at Ribalta house concert and, two years later, in the former Metropolitan (currently Citibank Hall).
In 1997, it was held in the northeastern city of Teresina, in Pavilhão de Eventos (Events Pavilion) Governador Guilherme Melo.
From 1998 to present, Rio de Janeiro (Hotel Glória, Copacabana Palace, Ribalta, Citibank Hall and Vivo Rio) and São Paulo (Palace, today Citibank Hall, Via Funchal and Credicard Hall) alternated the rights to host the annual beauty telecast show, at first broadcast by local affiliates from Rede Manchete, Rede Record and CNT. In 2017, IlhaBela, coast of São Paulo at the Red Theater
Titleholders
Year | Miss Brasil | Province | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1954 | Martha Rocha † | ||
1955 | Emília Barreto | ||
1956 | Maria José Cardoso | ||
1957 | Teresinha Morango | ||
1958 | Adalgisa Colombo † | ||
1959 | Vera Regina Ribeiro | ||
1960 | Jean "Gina" MacPherson | ||
1961 | Staël Maria da Rocha Abelha | ||
1962 | Olívia Rebouças | ||
1963 | Ieda Maria Vargas | Miss Universe 1963 | |
1964 | Ângela Vasconcelos | ||
1965 | Raquel de Andrade | ||
1966 | Ana Cristina Ridzi † | ||
1967 | Carmen Ramasco | ||
1968 | Martha Vasconcellos | Miss Universe 1968 | |
1969 | Vera Fischer | ||
1970 | Eliane Thompson | ||
1971 | Eliane Guimarães | ||
1972 | Rejane Vieira da Costa † | ||
1973 | Sandra Mara Ferreira | ||
1974 | Sandra Guimarães Oliveira | ||
1975 | Ingrid Budag | ||
1976 | Kátia Celestino Moretto † | ||
1977 | Cássia Morais Silveira | ||
1978 | Suzana Araújo | ||
1979 | Marta Jussara da Costa | ||
1980 | Eveline Schröeter | ||
1981 | Adriana Alves de Oliveira | ||
1982 | Celice Marques | ||
1983 | Marisa Fully Coelho † | Miss South America 1983 (1st Runner-up) | |
1984 | Ana Elisa Flores | ||
1985 | Márcia Canavezes | Miss South America 1985 (1st Runner-up) | |
1986 | Deise Nunes | Miss South America 1986 (2nd Runner-up) | |
1987 | Jacqueline Meirelles | ||
1988 | Isabel Bedüschi | Miss South America 1988 | |
1989 | Flávia Cavalcanti | ||
1991 | Patrícia Godói | Reina Sudamericana 1991 | |
1992 | Maria Carolina Portella | ||
1993 | Leila Schüster | ||
1994 | Valéria Péris | Nuestra Belleza Internacional 1994 | |
1995 | Renata Bessa | ||
1996 | Maria Joana Parizotto | Nuestra Belleza Internacional 1996 | |
1997 | Nayla Micherif | ||
1998 | Michela Marchi | ||
1999 | Renata Fan | World Miss University 2000 | |
2000 | Josiane Kruliskoski | ||
2001 | Juliana Borges | ||
2002 | Joseane Oliveira [^] | Stripped of the crown later because she was married at the time of her crowning | |
2003 | Gislaine Ferreira | ||
2004 | Fabiane Niclotti † | ||
2005 | Carina Beduschi | ||
2006 | Rafaela Zanella | ||
2007 | Natália Guimarães | Top Model of the World 2006 | |
2008 | Natália Anderle | ||
2009 | Larissa Costa | ||
2010 | Débora Lyra | Top Model of the World 2008 Miss Congeniality at World Miss University 2011 Miss Multiverse 2014 | |
2011 | Priscila Machado | ||
2012 | Gabriela Markus | ||
2013 | Jakelyne Oliveira | Miss Globe International 2012 | |
2014 | Melissa Gurgel | ||
2015 | Marthina Brandt | Miss Germany Brasil 2010 | |
2016 | Raissa Santana | ||
2017 | Monalysa Alcântara | ||
2018 | Mayra Dias | Reina Hispanoamericana 2016 (1st Runner-up) | |
2019 | Júlia Horta | Reina Internacional del Café 2016 (1st Runner-up) Miss Tourism International 2017 (4th Runner-up) | |
2020 | TBA | TBA | TBA |
Miss Brasil Universo
- : Declared as Winner
- : Ended as runner-up or top 5/6 qualification
- : Ended as one of the finalists or semifinalists
- : Ended as special awards winner
- The winner of Miss Brasil represents her country at the Miss Universe. On occasion, when the winner does not qualify (due to age) a runner-up is sent.
Year | Province | Miss Brasil Be Emotion | Placement at Miss Universe | Special Awards |
---|---|---|---|---|
2020 | TBA | TBA | TBA | |
2019 | Júlia do Vale Horta | Top 20 | Miss Internet | |
2018 | Mayra Alves Dias | Top 20 | Best National Costume (Top 6) | |
2017 | Monalysa Alcântara Nascimento | Top 10 | ||
2016 | Raissa Oliveira Santana | Top 13 | ||
2015 | Marthina Brandt | Top 15 | ||
2014 | Melissa Holanda Gurgel | Top 15 | ||
2013 | Jakelyne de Oliveira Silva | 4th Runner-up | ||
2012 | Gabriela Markus | 4th Runner-up | Best National Costume (4th Runner-up) | |
2011 | Priscila Machado | 2nd Runner-up | ||
2010 | Débora Moura Lyra | Unplaced | ||
2009 | Larissa Costa de Oliveira | Unplaced | ||
2008 | Natália Alberto Anderle | Unplaced | ||
2007 | Natália Guimarães | 1st Runner-up | ||
2006 | Rafaela Köhler Zanella | Top 20 | ||
2005 | Carina Schlichting Beduschi | Unplaced | ||
2004 | Fabiane Tesche Niclotti † | Unplaced | ||
2003 | Gislaine Rodrigues Ferreira | Top 10 | ||
2002 | Joseane Guntzell de Oliveira [^] | Unplaced | ||
Taíza Thomsen | Did not compete | |||
2001 | Juliana Dornelles Borges | Unplaced | ||
2000 | Josiane Oderdengen Kruliskoski | Unplaced | ||
1999 | Renata Bonfiglio Fan | Unplaced | ||
1998 | Michela Dauzacker Marchi | Top 10 | ||
1997 | Nayla Affonso Micherif | Unplaced | ||
1996 | Maria Joana Parizotto | Unplaced | ||
1995 | Renata Bessa Soares | Unplaced | ||
1994 | Valéria Melo Péris | Unplaced | ||
1993 | Leila Cristine Schüster | Top 10 | ||
1992 | Maria Carolina Portella Otto | Unplaced | ||
1991 | Patrícia Franco Godói | Unplaced | ||
1989 | Flávia Cavalcanti Rebêlo | Unplaced | Best National Costume | |
1988 | Isabel Cristina Bedüschi | Unplaced | ||
1987 | Jaqueline Ribeiro Meirelles | Unplaced | Best National Costume | |
1986 | Deise Nunes de Souza | Top 10 | ||
1985 | Márcia Giagio Canavezes | Top 10 | ||
1984 | Ana Elisa Flores da Cruz | Unplaced | ||
1983 | Marisa Fully Coelho † | Unplaced | ||
1982 | Celice Pinto Marques | Top 12 | ||
1981 | Adriana Alves de Oliveira | 3rd Runner-up | Best National Costume | |
1980 | Eveline Didier Schröeter | Unplaced | ||
1979 | Marta Jussara da Costa | 3rd Runner-up | ||
1978 | Suzana Araújo dos Santos | Unplaced | ||
1977 | Cássia Morais Silveira | Unplaced | ||
1976 | Kátia Celestino Moretto † | Unplaced | ||
1975 | Ingrid Budag | Top 15 | ||
1974 | Sandra Guimarães Oliveira | Unplaced | ||
1973 | Sandra Mara Ferreira | Top 15 | ||
1972 | Rejane Vieira da Costa † | 1st Runner-up | ||
1971 | Eliane Parreira Guimarães | 4th Runner-up | ||
1970 | Eliane Fialho Thompson | Top 15 | ||
1969 | Vera Lúcia Fischer | Top 15 | ||
1968 | Martha Maria Vasconcellos | Miss Universe 1968 | ||
1967 | Carmen de Barros Ramasco | Top 15 | Best National Costume | |
1966 | Ana Cristina Ridzi Bercet | Unplaced | ||
1965 | Raquel Helena de Andrade | Top 15 | ||
1964 | Ângela Teresa Vasconcelos | Top 15 | ||
1963 | Iêda Maria Brutto Vargas | Miss Universe 1963 | ||
1962 | Olívia Rebouças Cavalcanti | 4th Runner-up | ||
1961 | Staël Maria da Rocha Abelha | Unplaced | ||
1960 | Jean "Gina" MacPherson | Top 15 | ||
1959 | Vera Regina Ribeiro Secco | 4th Runner-up | ||
1958 | Adalgisa Colombo Teruskin | 1st Runner-up | ||
1957 | Teresinha Gonçalves Morango | 1st Runner-up | ||
1956 | Maria José Cardoso | Top 15 | ||
1955 | Emília Barreto Corrêa Lima | Top 15 | ||
1954 | Maria Marta Hacker Rocha† | 1st Runner-up | ||
Winners by state
State | Titles | Winning Years |
---|---|---|
14 | 1956, 1963, 1972, 1986, 1993, 1999, 2001, 2002**, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2011, 2012, 2015 | |
9 | 1961, 1971, 1978, 1983, 1995, 1997, 2007, 2010, 2019 | |
8 | 1967, 1973, 1974, 1976, 1977, 1984, 1991, 1994 | |
1958, 1959, 1960, 1965, 1966, 1970, 1980, 1981 | ||
5 | 1969, 1975, 1988, 2002*, 2005 | |
4 | 1964, 1992, 1996, 2016 | |
3 | 1955, 1989, 2014 | |
1985, 2000, 2013 | ||
1954, 1962, 1968 | ||
2 | 1957, 2018 | |
1979, 2009 | ||
1 | 2017 | |
2003 | ||
1998 | ||
1987 | ||
1982 |
States who have yet to win the Miss Brasil Be Emotion title
Notes
- Since their debut at Miss Universe in 1954, Brazil has never failed an edition.
- Rio Grande do Sul is the most successful state and has won the Miss Brasil title fourteen times, closely followed by Minas Gerais with nine and São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro both with eight.
- Piauí is the 16th state who wins the title first time in 2017.
- The extinct Guanabara State occupied the same territory of the city of Rio de Janeiro and was added to Rio de Janeiro State in 1975. All the evidence obtained by the state of Rio de Janeiro until 1974 belonged indeed to the former state of Guanabara.
- Brasil not wins the Miss Universe title since 1960s, even though they hold an important amount of placements at Miss Universe.
- Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo and Rio Grande do Sul, are the only ones who have kept two years in a row the Miss Brasil Be Emotion title not one, but twice in 1965-1966 and 1980-1981, 1973-1974 and 1976-1977, 2001-2002 and 2011-2012, respectively.
- Rio de Janeiro as the extinct Guanabara State is the only one who has won the Miss Brasil title three years in a row in 1958, 1959 y 1960.
- Brasil holds an ongoing streak at the top 20 with eight placements in a row.
- Rio Grande do Sul and Bahia are the only states each of them have produced a Miss Universe, Iêda Maria Britto Vargas and Martha Vasconcellos in 1963 and 1968, respectively.
- Brasil holds a record of 38 placements at Miss Universe. A total of fifteen finalists between two Miss Universe, five 1st runners up, one 2nd runner up, two 3rd runners up its curious that Brazil reached this place twice when Venezuela won the Miss Universe title, five 4 runners up and twenty two semifinalists.
- The first time a state from the North region won the Miss Brasil Be Emotion title was Amazonas 1957, from the South was Rio Grande do Sul in 1956, from the Northeast was Bahia in 1954, from the Southeast was Rio de Janeiro as the extinct Guanabara in 1958 and the first time a West Central region won was Mato Grosso in 1985.
- **Joseane Oliveira, from Rio Grande do Sul, was the winner of Miss Brasil 2002 and competed in the Miss Universe, but she was stripped of the crown later because she was married at the time of her crowning. The first runner up from Santa Catarina took over the title and finished the duties of Miss Brasil Be Emotion 2002. This is only case in whole history of Miss Brasil Be Emotion that the title is taken away from the winner and given to the first runner up.
- Deise Nunes de Souza, Raissa Oliveira Santana and Monalysa Alcântara are the only three black winners in the history of the entire contest who have won the Miss Brasil title in 1986, 2016 and 2017, respectively.
Miss Brasil winners by regions
Region | Titles | Last Winner |
---|---|---|
25 | Minas Gerais (2019) | |
23 | Paraná (2016) | |
9 | Piauí (2017) | |
5 | Mato Grosso (2013) | |
4 | Amazonas (2018) |
Ranking
- Updated with the latest edition of Miss Brasil Be Emotion 2019:
R | State | Miss Brasil | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | S | T |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
01º. | 14 | 6 | 8 | 5 | 4 | 18 | 55 | |
02º. | 9 | 6 | 8 | 3 | 6 | 20 | 52 | |
03º. | 8 | 12 | 5 | 4 | 7 | 22 | 58 | |
04º. | 8 | 7 | 10 | 8 | 3 | 26 | 62 | |
05º. | 5 | 3 | 1 | 4 | 2 | 26 | 41 | |
06º. | 4 | 3 | 5 | 1 | 3 | 25 | 41 | |
07º. | 3 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 22 | 37 | ||
08º. | 3 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 3 | 13 | 26 | |
09º. | 3 | 2 | 1 | 4 | 2 | 15 | 27 | |
10º. | 2 | 3 | 1 | 4 | 2 | 11 | 23 | |
11º. | 2 | 3 | 2 | 17 | 24 | |||
12º. | 1 | 2 | 6 | 4 | 1 | 17 | 31 | |
13º. | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 9 | 14 | ||
14º. | 1 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 14 | 20 | ||
15º. | 1 | 1 | 5 | 7 | ||||
16º. | 1 | 6 | 7 | |||||
17º. | 5 | 2 | 5 | 3 | 14 | 29 | ||
18º. | 3 | 2 | 3 | 1 | 20 | 29 | ||
19º. | 1 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 7 | |||
20º. | 1 | 1 | 4 | 6 | ||||
21º. | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | ||||
22º. | 2 | 2 | 16 | 20 | ||||
23º. | 2 | 5 | 7 | |||||
24º. | 1 | 1 | 7 | 9 | ||||
25º. | 2 | 5 | 7 | |||||
26º. | 1 | 4 | 9 | 14 | ||||
27º. | 1 | 4 | 5 |
- The 5 highest-ranked states.
- The 5 lowest-ranked states.
Miss Brasil Internacional
- : Declared as Winner
- : Ended as runner-up or top 5/6 qualification
- : Ended as one of the finalists or semifinalists
- : Ended as special awards winner
- Traditionally the second title of Miss Brasil will be crowning as Miss Brasil Internacional and competing at the Miss International pageant. Sometimes the other runners-up will be appointing if the official representative did not compete at the pageant. Began in 2017 Miss Beleza Internacional Brasil took over the franchise of Miss International and the winner directly sends to Miss International pageant.
Year | State | Miss Brasil | Placement at Miss International | Special Awards | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2020 | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD | |
2019 | Rio de Janeiro | Carolina Stankevicius Cruz | Unplaced | ||
2018 | São Paulo | Stephanie de Medeiros Pröglhöf | Unplaced | ||
2017 | São Paulo | Bruna Custódio Zanardo | Unplaced | ||
2016 | Rio Grande do Norte | Manoella Alves dos Santos | Unplaced | ||
2015 | Paraná | Ísis Stocco Machado | Top 10 | ||
2014 | Rio Grande do Norte | Deise Moura Benício | Top 10 | ||
2013 | Rio Grande do Norte | Cristina Alves da Silva | Top 15 | ||
2012 | São Paulo | Rafaela Gomes Butareli | Top 15 | ||
2011 | Bahia | Gabriella Marcelino Rocha | Top 15 | ||
2010 | Amazonas | Lílian Lopes Pereira | Unplaced | Best National Costume | |
2009 | Minas Gerais | Rayanne de Morais | Top 15 | ||
2008 | Ceará | Vanessa Lima Vidal | Unplaced | ||
2007 | Rio Grande do Sul | Carolina Prates Néry | Unplaced | ||
2006 | Acre | Maria Cláudia Barreto | Unplaced | ||
2005 | Espírito Santo | Ariane Colombo | Top 12 | ||
2004 | Paraná | Grazielli Soares Massafera | Unplaced | ||
2003 | Pará | Carlessa Macedo da Rocha | Unplaced | ||
2002 | Pernambuco | Milena Ricarda de Lima | Unplaced | ||
2001 | Minas Gerais | Fernanda Tinti Borja Pinto | Top 15 | ||
2000 | Rio Grande do Sul | Maria Fernanda Schneider Schiavo | Unplaced | ||
1999 | Minas Gerais | Alessandra Ferreira do Nascimento | Top 15 | ||
1998 | Rio Grande do Sul | Luizeani Altenhofen | Unplaced | ||
1997 | Rio Grande do Norte | Valéria Cristina Böhm | Top 15 | Best National Costume | |
1996 | Mato Grosso do Sul | Ana Carina Góis Homa | Unplaced | ||
1995 | Mato Grosso | Débora Reis Moretto | Top 15 | ||
1994 | São Paulo | Ana Paula Barrote | Unplaced | ||
1993 | Minas Gerais | Tatiana Paula Alves | Unplaced | ||
1992 | Minas Gerais | Cyntia de Cunto Moreira | Top 15 | ||
1991 | Rio Grande do Sul | Lisiane Bolsani Braile | Top 15 | ||
1990 | Paraná | Ivana Carla Hübsch | Unplaced | ||
1989 | São Paulo | Ana Paula Ottani | Unplaced | ||
1988 | São Paulo | Elizabeth Ferreira da Silva | Unplaced | Best National Costume | |
1987 | Rio Grande do Sul | Fernanda Campos Soares | Top 15 | ||
1986 | Rio Grande do Sul | Kátia Marques Faria | Unplaced | ||
1985 | São Paulo | Kátia Nascimento Guimarães | Top 15 | ||
1984 | Rio de Janeiro | Ana Elisa Glitz | Top 15 | ||
1983 | São Paulo | Geórgia Marinho Ventura | Unplaced | ||
1982 | Sergipe | Carmen Júlia Rando Bonoldi | Unplaced | ||
1981 | Paraná | Taiomara do Rocio Borchardt | 1st Runner-up | ||
1980 | São Paulo | Fernanda Bôscolo de Camargo | Unplaced | ||
1979 | Goiás | Suzane Ferreira de Andrade | Unplaced | ||
1978 | Rio de Janeiro | Ângela Soares Chichierchio | Unplaced | ||
1977 | Federal District | Patrícia Viotti de Andrade | Unplaced | ||
1976 | Rio de Janeiro | Vionete Revoredo Fonseca | 1st Runner-up | ||
1975 | Federal District | Lisane Guimarães Távora | 4th Runner-up | ||
1974 | Rio Grande do Sul | Janeta Eleomara Hovler | Unplaced | ||
1973 | Guanabara | Denise Penteado Costa | Unplaced | ||
1972 | Guanabara | Jane Vieira Macambira | 3rd Runner-up | ||
1971 | Rio Grande do Sul | Maria Bernadete Heemann | Top 15 | ||
1970 | Did not compete | ||||
1969 | São Paulo | Maria Lúcia Alexandrino | Top 12 | ||
1968 | Guanabara | Maria da Glória Carvalho | Miss International 1968 | ||
1967 | Minas Gerais | Virgínia Barbosa de Souza | Top 15 | ||
1966 | No contest | ||||
1965 | São Paulo | Sandra Penno Rosa | 4th Runner-up | ||
1964 | Guanabara | Vera Lúcia Couto | 2nd Runner-up | Miss Photogenic | |
1963 | Paraná | Tânia Maria Franco | Top 15 | ||
1962 | São Paulo | Julieta Maria Straüss | Unplaced | ||
1961 | Rio Grande do Sul | Vera Brauner Menezes | 1st Runner-up | ||
1960 | Federal District | Magda Renate Pfrimer | Unplaced |
Winners by state
State | Titles | Winning Years |
---|---|---|
São Paulo | 11 | 1962, 1965, 1969, 1980, 1983, 1985, 1988, 1989, 1994, 2012, 2017 |
Rio Grande do Sul | 9 | 1961, 1971, 1974, 1986, 1987, 1991, 1998, 2000, 2007 |
Rio de Janeiro | 8 | 1964, 1968, 1972, 1973, 1976, 1978, 1984, 2019 |
Minas Gerais | 6 | 1967, 1992, 1993, 1999, 2001, 2009 |
Paraná | 5 | 1963, 1981, 1990, 2004, 2015 |
Federal District | 4 | 1960, 1975, 1977, 2019 |
Rio Grande do Norte | 1997, 2013, 2014, 2016 | |
Bahia | 1 | 2011 |
Amazonas | 2010 | |
Ceará | 2008 | |
Acre | 2006 | |
Espírito Santo | 2005 | |
Pará | 2003 | |
Pernambuco | 2002 | |
Mato Grosso do Sul | 1996 | |
Mato Grosso | 1995 | |
Sergipe | 1982 | |
Goiás | 1979 |
Hosts
- Silvio Santos: 1982
- Marcos Mion: 2003
- Gustavo Gianetti: 2004
- Renata Fan: 2009
- Adriane Galisteu: 2011
Venue
- Palácio Quitandinha: 1954
- Ginásio do Maracanãzinho: 1958-1969
- Nilson Nelson Gymnasium: 1973-1981
- Anhembi Convention Center: 1982
- Belmond Copacabana Palace: 1999-2000, 2005
- Hotel Glória: 2001
- Via Funchal: 2003
- Citibank Hall (São Paulo): 2004, 2006, 2008,2015,2016
- Latin America Memorial: 2009-2010
Television acts
The actresses
Some Miss Brasil winners or finalists were acting in a lead or supporting roles in telenovelas and motion pictures after her reigns (nationwide or locally). By example:
- Natália Guimarães (Minas Gerais, winner, 2007 and 1st. runner up at Miss Universe 2007);
- Grazielli Massafera (Paraná, 2nd runner up, 2004);
- Mayana Neiva (Paraíba,2003);
- Marisa Fully Coelho (Minas Gerais, winner, 1983);
- Suzy Rego (Pernambuco, 1st runner-up, 1984);
- Vera Fischer (Santa Catarina, winner, 1969).
The hostesses
Some Miss Brasil winners or finalists acted or are still active hosting shows, sports programming or movie sessions aired in national television daily or weekly. They were/are:
- Brasília's resident and Cuiabá's native Jacqueline Meirelles (Cinema em Casa-SBT, 1988, Mulher 90 - Rede Manchete, 1989, some works in TV Gazeta in the 1990s and works in SBT at late 2000s and early 2010s). She won Miss Universe 1987 best national costume;
- Rio Grande do Sul's Luize Altenhofen (Band Esporte Clube – Rede Bandeirantes, 2007–2013 and other works on the same network and also at SporTV basic cable channel) 1st runner-up, 1998, she did not compete at the Miss International of that year held in Tokyo due to illness.
- São Paulo's Adriana Colin (former host of sports programs in Rede Manchete between 1994-1997 and Rede Record between 2000-2001, former co-host of SBT's Fantasia between 1997-1999 and commercial host of Globo's Domingão do Faustão, 2002–2009) 1st runner-up, 1989.
- However, the most famous former Miss Brazil who became TV hostess is Renata Fan, from Rio Grande do Sul, winner of Miss Brazil 1999, but she unplaced Top 10 at Miss Universe from same year. She also won Miss World University 2000. She has also hosted the TV show Jogo Aberto at Rede Bandeirantes.
Reality-TV
Some Miss Brasil pageant contestants, finalists or winners have appeared in popular reality television programs broadcast nationwide:
- Paraná's Grazielli Massafera (Big Brother Brasil 5 – Runner-Up, Rede Globo, 2005) was 2nd runner-up at national pageant in earlier years. She represented the country at Miss International 2004, held in Beijing;later she was able to establish a consolidated career as an actress, including getting an 44th International Emmy Awards nomination.
- São Paulo's Solange Frazão (Celebrity's House 3 – 4th Place, SBT, 2002) was 1st runner-up at the national pageant organized by the network of the program in 1982. Today, she is a very popular TV hostess in her country.
- Rio Grande do Sul's Joseane Oliveira (Big Brother Brasil 3 – 12th Place, Rede Globo, 2003 and Big Brother Brasil 10 – 16th Place, Rede Globo, 2010) lost her title on February 4 of that year after admitting to her marriage in a popular Sunday TV show, Domingão do Faustão.
- Pernambuco's Michelle Fernandes (Big Brother Brasil 9 – first evicted of the show in the season, Rede Globo, 2009) was Top 15 in the national pageant previously year.
- Amazonas's Vívian Amorim Big Brother Brasil 17 Runner Up was Top 10 in the national pageant in 2012.
- Paraná's Raissa Santana - Runner- Up Runner Up Dancing Brasil 3 in 2018 ).
References
- "INTERNATIONAL: Lovely Lisl". Time Magazine. 24 June 1929.
- "BRAZIL: Revenge". Time Magazine. 22 September 1930.