Miss Universe 1985

Miss Universe 1985
Date 15 July 1985
Presenters Bob Barker, Joan Van Ark
Entertainment John Denver, Clint Holmes
Venue James L. Knight Convention Center, Miami, Florida, USA United States
Entrants 79
Placements 10
Debuts Dominica
Withdrawals Aruba, French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Namibia, South Africa, Switzerland, Turkey
Returns Bahamas, Haiti, Senegal, Sri Lanka, Tahiti
Winner Deborah Carthy-Deu
 Puerto Rico
Congeniality Lucy Montinola
 Guam
Best National Costume Sandra Caldas
 Colombia
Photogenic Brigitte Bergman
 Holland

Miss Universe 1985, the 34th Miss Universe pageant, was held on 15 July 1985 at the James L. Knight Convention Center in Miami, Florida, USA. Seventy-nine contestants competed in the pageant. Deborah Carthy-Deu of Puerto Rico crowned by Yvonne Ryding of Sweden.[1]

This internationally televised event was expected to reach an estimated audience of 600 million television viewers in 45 countries.[1]

Results

Placements

Final results Contestant
Miss Universe 1985
1st runner-up
2nd runner-up
  •  Zaire - Kayonga Mureka
3rd runner-up
4th runner-up
Semi-finalists

Special awards

Awards Contestant
Best National Costume
Miss Congeniality
  •  Guam - Lucy Carbullido Montinola
Miss Photogenic
Most Followed by Media

Semi-final scores

Delegate Preliminary Average Interview Swimsuit Evening Gown Semifinal Average
 Spain 8.251 (1) 8.793 (1) 9.331 (1) 8.660 (6) 8.928 (1)
 Zaire 7.710 (9) 8.648 (3) 8.705 (3) 8.983 (3) 8.778 (2)
 Venezuela 8.140 (2) 8.693 (2) 8.455 (5) 9.000 (2) 8.716 (3)
 Uruguay 7.824 (7) 8.560 (4) 8.805 (2) 8.730 (4) 8.698 (4)
 Puerto Rico 8.035 (4) 8.365 (5) 8.536 (4) 9.057 (1) 8.652 (5)
 Ireland 7.904 (6) 7.708 (8) 8.325 (7) 8.668 (5) 8.233 (6)
 Canada 8.091 (3) 8.261 (6) 8.148 (8) 8.021 (10) 8.143 (7)
 Chile 7.732 (8) 7.737 (7) 8.326 (6) 8.232 (7) 8.098 (8)
 USA 8.016 (5) 7.650 (9) 7.538 (10) 8.164 (8) 7.784 (9)
 Brazil 7.592 (10) 7.161 (10) 7.658 (9) 8.042 (9) 7.620 (10)

     Winner
     First runner-up
     Second runner-up
     Third runner-up
     Fourth runner-up
     Top 10 semi-finalist
(#) Rank in each round of competition

Order of announcements

Top 10

  1. Ireland
  2. Uruguay
  3. Chile
  4. Canada
  5. Brazil
  6. Puerto Rico
  7. Zaire
  8. USA
  9. Spain
  10. Venezuela

Top 5

  1. Uruguay
  2. Zaire
  3. Spain
  4. Puerto Rico
  5. Venezuela

Background music

Judges

Contestants

Notes

Crossovers

Miss World
Miss International
Miss Intercontinental
  • 1983:  Holland - Brigitte Bergman (winner)
Miss Wonderland
Reinado Internacional del Café
  • 1985:  Brazil - Márcia Giagio Canavezes de Oliveira (winner)
Reina Mundial del Banano
  • 1985:  Costa Rica - Rosibel Chacón Pereira (winner)

Miss América Latina
Miss Sudamérica
Maja Internacional
Miss Europe
  • 1985:  Holland - Brigitte Bergman (2nd runner-up)
  • 1985:  Belgium - Anne van der Broeck
  • 1985:  Cyprus - Andri Andreou
  • 1985:  France - Suzanne Iskandar
  • 1985:  Gibraltar - Karina Hollands
  • 1985:  Luxembourg - Gabrielle Chiarini
Miss Scandinavia
  • 1986:  Iceland - Hana Bryndis Jonsdóttir (2nd runner-up)
  • 1986:  Finland - Marja Kinnunen
Miss Asia Pacific

Host city

In October 1984, the owners of the newly expanded West Edmonton Mall in Edmonton, Canada showed an interest in hosting the Miss Universe 1985 pageant there.[3] This followed an unsuccessful attempt to host the Miss Universe 1984 pageant in Calgary, Canada the previous year.

Pageant organizers chose to host the pageant in Miami, Florida for the second consecutive year. George Honchar, president of Miss Universe Inc., expressed disappointment at a lack of local support for the event, which cost the city $2 million.[1]

Miss South Africa controversy

In April, 1985 the city of Miami requested that the Miss Universe organization insist that South Africa should not send a representative to pageant, due to the threat of demonstrations over her country's Apartheid policy.[4] In mid May the nation announced that they would not send their titleholder, Andrea Steltzer, to the pageant because of fears for her safety.[5] This was the first time since 1975 that the country did not participate in the pageant; they would not return to the event until 1995.[6] Andrea Steltzer (half South African and half German) took part as Miss Germany in the 1989 Miss Universe pageant where she was a semi-finalist.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "79 Women Vie For Miss Universe Crown". Associated Press. 1985-07-15.
  2. Leisner, Pat (1985-05-13). "Miss Texas, the New Miss USA, Will Represent USA in Miss Universe Pageant". Associated Press.
  3. "Edmonton's new focus". The Globe and Mail. 1984-10-23. p. M1.
  4. Reuters (1985-04-02). "Miami Worried About Miss South Africa". The San Francisco Chronicle.
  5. "Protest Fears Force Miss South Africa Out Of Miss Universe Pageant". Associated Press. 1985-05-19.
  6. "South African representatives to Miss Universe". Pageant Almanac. Retrieved 2007-04-21.

External links

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