Miss World 1964

Miss World 1964
Date 12 November 1964
Presenters Michael Aspel
Venue Lyceum Ballroom, London, UK United Kingdom
Broadcaster BBC
Entrants 42
Debuts Aruba, Montserrat
Withdrawals Bolivia, Cyprus, Israel, Jordan, Nigeria, Peru, Malaysia
Returns Ecuador, Gibraltar, Honduras, Italy, Lebanon, Morocco, Nicaragua, Republic of China, Uruguay
Winner Ann Sidney
 United Kingdom

Miss World 1964, the 14th edition of the Miss World pageant, was held on 12 November 1964 at the Lyceum Ballroom in London, UK. The winner was Ann Sidney of United Kingdom. She was crowned by Miss World 1963, Carole Joan Crawford of Jamaica.

Results

Countries and territories which sent delegates and results
Final results Contestant
Miss World 1964
1st runner-up
  •  Argentina – Ana María Soria
2nd runner-up
  •  Taiwan – Linda Lin Su-hsing
3rd runner-up
  •  Brazil – Maria Isabel de Avellar Elias
4th runner-up
  •  New Zealand – Lyndal Ursula Cruickshank
5th runner-up
  •  Jamaica – Erica Joanne Cooke
6th runner-up
  •  Italy – Mirka Sartori
Semi-finalists
  •  Denmark – Yvonne Mortensen
  •  France – Jacqueline Gayraud
  •  Germany – Juliane Herm
  •  Greece – Mary Kouyoumitzou
  •  Liberia – Norma Dorothy Davis
  •  Montserrat – Helen Joseph
  •  Spain – María José Ulla Madronero
  •  United States – Jeanne Marie Quinn
  •  Venezuela – Mercedes Hernández Nieves

Contestants

  •  Argentina – Ana María Soria
  •  Aruba – Regina Croes
  •  Austria – Victoria Lazek
  •  Belgium – Danièle Defrère
  •  Brazil – Maria Isabel de Avellar Elias
  •  Canada – Mary Lou Farrell
  •  Ceylon – Marina Dellerene Swan
  •  Taiwan – Linda Lin Su-Hsing
  •  Colombia – Paulina Vargas Gilede
  •  Denmark – Yvonne Mortensen
  •  Ecuador – María de Lourdes Anda Vallejo
  •  Finland – Maila Maria Östring
  •  France – Jacqueline Gayraud
  •  Germany – Juliane Herm
  •  Gibraltar – Lydia Davis
  •  Greece – Mary Kouyoumitzou
  •  Holland – Renske van der Berg
  •  Honduras – Araceli Cano
  •  Iceland – Rósa Einarsdóttir
  •  Ireland – Mairen Cullen
  •  Italy – Mirka Sartori

  •  Jamaica – Erica Joanne Cooke
  •  Japan – Yoshiko Nakatani
  •  Korea – Yoon Mi-hee
  •  Lebanon – Nana Barakat
  •  Liberia – Norma Dorothy Davis
  •  Luxembourg – Gabrielle Heyrard
  •  Montserrat – Helen Joseph
  •  Morocco – Leila Gourmala
  •  New Zealand – Lyndal Ursula Cruikshank
  •  Nicaragua – Sandra Correa
  •  Portugal – Rolanda Campos
  •  South Africa – Vedra Karamitas†
  •  Spain – María José Ulla Madronero
  •  Suriname – Norma Dorothy Tin Chen Fung
  •  Sweden – Agneta Malmgren
  •  Tunisia – Dolly Allouche
  •  Turkey – Nurlan Coskun
  •  United KingdomAnn Sidney
  •  Uruguay – Alicia Elena Gómez
  •  United States – Jeanne Marie Quinn
  •  Venezuela – Mercedes Hernández Nieves

Notes

Debuts

Returning countries

Nations not competing

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, January 16, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.