Miss World 1995
Miss World 1995, the 45th edition of the Miss World pageant, was held on 18 November 1995 for the fourth straight year at the Sun City Entertainment Centre in Sun City, South Africa. The 1995 pageant attracted 84 delegates. The pageant was hosted by Richard Steinmetz, Jeff Trachta, and Bobbie Eakes and also involved supermodels Linda Evangelista and Beverly Peele and Bruce Forsyth who acted as presenters. Aside from Sun City; Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and the Comoros hosted some segments of the show. The winner was Jacqueline Aguilera of Venezuela. She was crowned by Miss World 1994, Aishwarya Rai of India.
Miss World 1995 | |
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Miss World 1995 Titlecard | |
Date | 18 November 1995 |
Presenters | |
Entertainment | Caught in the Act |
Venue | Sun City Entertainment Center, Sun City, South Africa |
Broadcaster | |
Entrants | 84 |
Withdrawals | |
Returns | |
Winner | Jacqueline Aguilera |
Personality | Toyin Raji |
Best National Costume | Anica Martinović |
Photogenic | Jacqueline Aguilera |
Results
Placements
Final results | Contestant |
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Miss World 1995 | |
1st Runner-up | |
2nd Runner-up |
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Top 5 |
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Top 10 |
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Continental Queens of Beauty
Continental Group | Contestant |
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Africa |
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Americas | |
Asia & Oceania |
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Caribbean |
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Europe |
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Contestants
American Virgin Islands – Roshini Nibbs Argentina – María Lorena Jensen Aruba – Tessa Pieterz Australia – Melissa Porter[1] Austria – Elizabeth Unfried Bahamas – Loleta Marie Smith Bangladesh – Yasmin Bilkis Sathi Barbados – Rashi Holder Belgium – Véronique De Kock Bermuda – Renita Minors Bolivia – Carla Patricia Morón Peña Botswana – Monica Somolekae Brazil – Elessandra Cristina Dartora British Virgin Islands – Chandi Trott Bulgaria – Evgenia Kalkandjieva Canada – Alissa Lehinki Cayman Islands – Tasha Ebanks Chile – Tonka Tomicic Petric Colombia – Diana María Figueroa Castellanos Costa Rica – Shasling Navarro Aguilar Croatia – Anica Martinović Curaçao – Danique Regales Cyprus – Isabella Giorgallou Czech Republic – Katerina Kasalova Denmark – Tine Bay Dominican Republic – Patricia Bayonet Robles Ecuador – Ana Fabiola Trujillo Parker Estonia – Mari-Lin Poom Finland – Terhi Koivisto France – Helene Lantoine Germany – Isabell Brauer Ghana – Manuela Medie Gibraltar – Monique Chiara Greece – Maria Boziki Guam – Joylyn Muñoz Guatemala – Sara Elizabeth Sandoval Villatoro Holland – Didi Schackmann Hong Kong – Shirley Chau Yuen-Yee[1] Hungary – Ildiko Veinbergen India – Preeti Mankotia Ireland – Joanne Black Israel – Miri Bohadana Italy – Rosanna Santoli Jamaica – Imani Duncan Japan – Mari Kubo Korea – Choi Yoon-young Latvia – Ieva Melina Lebanon – Julia Syriani Lithuania – Gabriele Bartkute Macau – Geraldina Madeira da Silva Pedruco Malaysia – Trincy Low Ee Bing Mexico – Alejandra Quintero Velasco New Zealand – Sarah Brady[1] Norway – Inger Lise Ebeltoft Panama – Marisela Moreno Montero Paraguay – Patricia Serafini Geoghegan Peru – Paola Dellepiane Gianotti Philippines – Reham Snow Tago Poland – Ewa Izabella Tylecka Portugal – Suzana Leitao Robalo Puerto Rico – Swanni Quiñones Laracuerte Romania – Dana Delia Pintilie Russia – Elena Bazina[1] Seychelles – Shirley Low-Meng Singapore – Jacqueline Chew Slovakia – Zuzana Spatinova Slovenia – Teja Boškin South Africa – Bernelee Daniell Spain – Candelaria Rodríguez Pacheco Swaziland – Mandy Saulus Sweden – Jeanette Mona Hassel Switzerland – Stephanie Berger Tahiti – Timeri Baudry Taiwan ROC – Hsu Chun-Chun[1] Tanzania – Emily Adolf Fred Thailand – Yasumin Leautamornwattana Trinidad and Tobago – Michelle Khan Turkey – Demet Sener Ukraine – Nataliya Shvachiy United Kingdom – Shauna Marie Gunn United States – Jill Ankuda Venezuela – Jacqueline María Aguilera Marcano Zambia – Miryana Bujisic Zimbabwe – Dionne Best
Judges
Notes
Returns
Withdrawals
Withdrawals during the contest:
Nigeria – Toyin Enitan Raji - She was forced to withdraw from the contest due political reasons; a few hours after being given the Miss Personality on 16 November, she received telephone threats over the execution by Nigeria's military regime of nine political activists a week ago.[2][3]
Others:
China Iceland lost its franchise for Miss World until 1999. Kenya Mauritius Saint Lucia Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Sri Lanka lost its franchise for Miss World until 1999.
Replacement
Ukraine – The winner of Miss Ukraine 1995, Vlada Litovchenko couldn't participate due to the fact that she was a married woman with one child.[4] The 2nd runner up of Miss Europe 1994, Nataliya Shvachiy replaced her.
References
- "New Straits Times". Retrieved 26 January 2016.
- http://www.alamy.com/stock-photo-nigerias-representative-to-the-miss-world-beauty-contest-toyin-raji-118049239.html
- http://connection.ebscohost.com/c/articles/9512102106/miss-nigeria-drops-out-miss-world-pageant-amid-protest-against-government
- http://jetsetter.ua/stati/svetskaya-sreda/devushki-na-million.html?ismobile=0?ismobile=0
External links
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