Miss World 1953 | |
---|---|
Date | 19 October 1953 |
Presenters | Eric Morley |
Venue | Lyceum Ballroom, London, United Kingdom |
Entrants | 15 |
Placements | 6 |
Debuts | |
Withdrawals | |
Winner | Denise Perrier France |
Miss World 1953 was the 3rd Miss World pageant, held at the Lyceum Ballroom in London, United Kingdom on 19 October 1953.
15 contestants competed for the crown. May-Louise Flodin of Sweden crowned her successor Denise Perrier of France.[1] At this ceremony, Perrier was given an official sash, bouquet and trophy, making the first Miss World winner to wear a Miss World sash, sponsored by Mecca Dancing in 1953.
Results
Placement | Contestant |
---|---|
Miss World 1953 | |
1st Runner-up |
|
2nd Runner-up | |
3rd Runner-up |
|
4th Runner-up |
|
5th Runner-up |
|
Contestants
- Ceylon - Manel Illangkoon
- Denmark - Ingrid Andersen
- Egypt - Marina Papaelia
- Finland - Maija-Riitta Tuomaala
- France - Denise Perrier
- Germany - Wilma Kanders
- Great Britain - Brenda Mee
- Greece - Alexandra Ladikou
- Holland - Yvonne Meyer
- Israel - Chavatzelet Dror
- Monte Carlo - Elizabeth Chovisky
- Norway - Synnøve Gulbrandsen
- Sweden - Ingrid Johansson
- Switzerland - Odette Michel
- United States - Mary Kemp Griffith
Notes
Debuts
Withdrawals
Did not Complete
- Austria - Lore Felger (Invited but not arrived due to lack of sponsors.)
- Belgium - Sepia Degehet (Sponsors sent her to Miss Europe.)
- Ireland - Mary Murphy (Became ill shortly before travelling.)
- Italy - Marcella Mariani† (Gave up at last minute because of the invitation to work in the film.)
- Lebanon - Hanya Beydoun (Invited but not arrived due to lack of sponsors.)
Replaced
- Egypt - Antigone Costanda (Can't complete for unknown reason so her 1st runner-up Marina Papaelia complete instead.)
- France - Syliviane Carpentier (Gave up and work on her wedding plan.)
References
- ↑ (in French) Denise Perrier : la Miss Monde 1953 de retour sur ses terres natales, Bugeycotiere.fr, 20 September 2019
- ↑ "Miss World 1953". 21 October 2019.
- ↑ "Miss World 1953". 21 October 2019.
External links
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