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| photogenic = Karin Zorn (Austria) |
| photogenic = Karin Zorn (Austria) |
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| date = 15 November 1979 |
| date = 15 November 1979 |
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| presenters = {{Hlist|[[Esther Rantzen]]|[[Sacha Distel]] |
| presenters = {{Hlist|[[Esther Rantzen]]|[[Sacha Distel]]}} |
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| venue = [[Royal Albert Hall]], [[London]], United Kingdom |
| venue = [[Royal Albert Hall]], [[London]], United Kingdom |
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| broadcaster = [[BBC]] |
| broadcaster = [[BBC]] |
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* {{flag|United States}} – Carter Wilson |
* {{flag|United States}} – Carter Wilson |
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* {{flag|Uruguay}} – Laura RodrÃguez Delgado |
* {{flag|Uruguay}} – Laura RodrÃguez Delgado |
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* {{flag|West Germany}} – Andrea |
* {{flag|West Germany}} – Andrea |
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Latest revision as of 15:16, 5 October 2025
Beauty pageant edition
| Miss World 1979 | |
|---|---|
| Date | 15 November 1979 |
| Presenters | |
| Venue | Royal Albert Hall, London, United Kingdom |
| Broadcaster | BBC |
| Entrants | 70 |
| Placements | 15 |
| Debuts | |
| Withdrawals |
|
| Returns |
|
| Winner | Gina Swainson[4] Bermuda |
| Personality | Anne-Marie Franke (Guam) |
| Photogenic | Karin Zorn (Austria) |
Miss World 1979, the 29th edition of the Miss World pageant, was held on 15 November 1979 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, United Kingdom. The winner was Gina Swainson from Bermuda.[4] She was crowned by Miss World 1978, Silvana Suarez of Argentina. First runner-up was Carolyn Seaward representing the United Kingdom and second runner-up was Debbie Campbell from Jamaica. Swainson was a first runner-up in Miss Universe 1979 represented Bermuda and Carolyn Seaward was a second runner-up in same pageant represented England.
Live television coverage of the contest was largely abandoned by the BBC as a result of a trade union dispute typical of the era in Britain, when sound engineers refused to work, and the BBC decided shortly beforehand that it could not show live pictures without a commentary. The parade of the contestants in their national costumes and each of the entrants in their evening wear had been recorded the night before, so this was televised, followed later in the evening with the crowning of the winner with mute pictures narrated by Ray Moore.[5] A unscheduled repeat of Futtocks End was televised to bridge the two segments. For later overseas transmission, a commentary was added to the silent pictures of the entire event, but the interviews with the final 7 contestants were never shown.
This edition marked the debut of Lesotho. And the return of Portugal, which last competed in 1973, Guatemala last competed in 1976 and Bolivia, Lebanon and Panama last competed in 1977. Curaçao, Dominica, Saint Vincent, Tunisia, withdrew from the competition for unknown reasons.
Results
Placements
Contestants
Notes
References



