Miss World 2000
Miss World 2000, the 50th edition of the Miss World pageant, was held on 30 November 2000 at the Millennium Dome in London, United Kingdom.[3] The pageant's swimsuit segment was filmed in the Maldives.
Miss World 2000 | |
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Miss World 2000 titleholder – Priyanka Chopra | |
Date | 30 November 2000 |
Presenters | |
Entertainment | |
Venue | Millennium Dome, London, United Kingdom |
Broadcaster |
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Entrants | 95 |
Placements | 10 |
Debuts | |
Withdrawals | |
Returns | |
Winner | Priyanka Chopra[1][2] |
The pageant was the first since the death of pageant owner Eric Morley, whose widow Julia Morley assumed responsibility for the event. The pageant had 95 contestants, the highest number of Miss World participants at that time.
The pageant was won by Priyanka Chopra of India,[1][2] at the age of 18. She was crowned by her predecessor Yukta Mookhey also from India. She is the fifth Miss World and the second consecutive winner from her country. Internationally, Chopra reigned alongside Miss Universe 2000 titleholder Lara Dutta, marking the most recent time (as of 2020) that any country has held the two most prestigious beauty pageant titles in the world in a single year.
Results
Placements
Final results | Contestant |
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Miss World 2000 | |
1st Runner-Up | |
2nd Runner-Up |
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Top 5 |
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Top 10 |
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Contestants
A total of 95 contestants participated in Miss World 2000.[4]
American Virgin Islands – Luciah Hedrington Angola – Deolinda Vilela Argentina – Daniela Stucan Aruba – Monique van der Horn Australia – Renee Henderson Austria – Patricia Kaiser Bahamas – Latia Bowe Bangladesh – Sonia Gazi Barbados – Leilani McConney Belarus – Sviatlana Kruk Belgium – Joke van de Velde Bolivia – Jimena Rico Toro Bosnia & Herzegovina – Jasmina Mahmutović Botswana – Puna Keleabetswe Serati Brazil – Francine Eickemberg British Virgin Islands – Nadia Harrigan Ubinas Bulgaria – Ivanka Peytcheva Canada – Christine Cho Cayman Islands – Jacqueline Bush Chile – Isabel Bawlitza Chinese Taipei – Shu-Ting Hao Colombia – Andrea Durán Costa Rica – Cristina de Mezerville Croatia – Andreja Čupor Curaçao – Jozaine Wall Cyprus – Ifigenia Papaioannou Czech Republic – Michaela Salačová Denmark – Anne Katrin Vrang Dominican Republic – Gilda Jovine Ecuador – Ana Dolores Murillo England – Michelle Walker Estonia – Irina Ovtchinnikova Finland – Salima Peippo France – Karine Meier Germany – Natascha Berg Ghana – Maame Ewarfaah Hawkson Gibraltar – Tessa Sacramento Greece – Athanasia Tzoulaki Guatemala – Cindy Ramírez Holland – Raja Moussaoui Honduras – Verónica Rivera Hong Kong – Margaret Kan Hungary – Judit Kuchta Iceland – Elva Dögg Melsted India – Priyanka Chopra[1][2] Ireland – Yvonne Ellard Israel – Dana Dantes Italy – Giorgia Palmas Jamaica – Ayisha Richards Japan – Mariko Sugai Kazakhstan – Margarita Kravtsova Kenya – Yolanda Masinde Korea – Jung-sun Shin Lebanon – Sandra Rizk Lithuania – Martyna Bimbaite Madagascar – Julianna Todimarina Malaysia – Tan Sun Wei Malta – Katia Grima Mexico – Paulina Flores Arias Moldova – Mariana Moraru † Namibia – Mia de Klerk Nepal – Usha Khadgi New Zealand – Katherine Allsopp-Smith Nigeria – Matilda Kerry Northern Ireland – Julie Lee-Ann Martin Norway – Stine Pedersen Panama – Ana Raquel Ochy Paraguay – Patricia Villanueva Peru – Tatiana Angulo Philippines – Katherine Annwen de Guzman Poland – Justyna Bergmann Portugal – Gilda Dias Pe-Curto Puerto Rico – Sarybel Velilla Romania – Aleksandra Cosmoiu Russia – Anna Bodareva Scotland – Michelle Watson Singapore – Charlyn Ding Zung Ee Slovakia – Janka Horecna Slovenia – Maša Merc South Africa – Heather Joy Hamilton Spain – Verónica García Sri Lanka – Ganga Gunasekera Sweden – Ida Sofia Manneh Switzerland – Mahara McKay Tahiti – Vanini Bea Tanzania – Jacqueline Ntuyabelikwe Trinidad & Tobago – Rhonda Rosemin Turkey – Yuksel Ak Ukraine – Olena Shcherban United States – Angelique Breaux Uruguay – Katja Thomsen Venezuela – Vanessa Cárdenas Wales – Sophie-Kate Cahill Yugoslavia – Iva Milivojević Zimbabwe – Victoria Moyo
Judges
Notes
Debuts
Replacements
Denmark – Cecilie Elisa Dahlstrøm Russia – Ekaterina Izmail - Dethroned of her crown due to marriage[5] Mexico Jacqueline Bracamontes - She won Nuestra Belleza Mundo México 2000 and supposed to represent Mexico at Miss World that year, however she decided to enter Nuestra Belleza Mexico 2000 and won the contest, but as she won 2 contests Lupita Jones president of Nuestra Belleza México, decides to appoint Paulina Flores Arias - (Suplente of Nuestra Belleza México 2000 pageant) to compete at Miss World 2000.[6] Moldova - Miss Moldova 2000, Irina Babusenko didn't go to Miss World 2000 due to her being underage. She was replaced by her 1st runner up Mariana Moraru.[7]
Withdrawals
Guyana - No contest. Latvia – Miss Latvia 1999, Dina Kalandārova withdrew at the last minute due to personal reasons. She competed in Miss World 2001 instead. Seychelles - No contest. Sint Maarten – Angelique Romou went to Miss Universe instead. Swaziland - No contest. Thailand – No contest. United Kingdom - No longer competes as United Kingdom. Now competes as its constituent countries instead, England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. Zambia - No contest.
References
- "Miss Universe vs Miss World: Facts and comparisons". MSN. 15 January 2015. Retrieved 25 January 2016.
- "Daily News". Retrieved 27 January 2016.
- "New Straits Times". Retrieved 27 January 2016.
- "Toledo Blade". Retrieved 27 January 2016.
- Vsenashimiss (In Russian)
- "Jacqueline Bracamontes van Hoorde nace el 23 de septiembre de 1979".
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 16 September 2016. Retrieved 29 August 2016.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)