Miss Europe 1991 | |
---|---|
Date | 29 June 1991 |
Venue | Dakar, Senegal |
Entrants | 27 |
Placements | 12 |
Debuts | Lithuania |
Withdrawals | |
Returns | |
Winner | Susanne Petry Germany (Dethroned) Katerina Michalopoulou Greece (Succeeded) |
Miss Europe 1991 was the 46th edition of the Miss Europe pageant and the 35th edition under the Mondial Events Organization. It was held in Dakar, Senegal on 29 June 1991. Susanne Petry of Germany, was originally crowned Miss Europe 1991, but was later "dismissed" and dethroned. The crown then went to Katerina Michalopoulou of Greece. They both succeeded outgoing titleholder Michela Rocco di Torrepadula of Italy.[1]
Results
Placements
Placement | Contestant |
---|---|
Miss Europe 1991 |
|
1st Runner-Up |
|
2nd Runner-Up | |
3rd Runner-Up | |
4th Runner-Up |
|
Top 12 |
|
Contestants
- Austria - Sandra Luttenberger
- Belgium - Katia Alens[2]
- Bulgaria - UNKNOWN
- Czechoslovakia - UNKNOWN
- Denmark - UNKNOWN
- England - Racquel Jory
- Estonia - Liis Tappo
- Finland - Tanja Vienonen
- France - Gaëlle Voiry (Gaille Voiry)
- Germany - Susanne Petry
- Greece - Katerina Michalopoulou
- Holland - Monique Flinkevleugel[3]
- Hungary - Antónia Bálint (Bálint Antónia)
- Iceland - Sigrún Eva Kristinsdóttir
- Italy - Eleonora Benfatto
- Lithuania - Greta Bardavelytė (Greta Bardavelite)
- Luxembourg - UNKNOWN
- Norway - Tina Loddengaard
- Poland - Ewa Maria Szymczak
- Portugal - Carla Lopes da Costa Caldeira
- Romania - UNKNOWN
- Scotland - Karina Ferguson
- Spain - Silvia Jato
- Sweden - Marlene Quick
- Switzerland - Catherine Mesot
- Turkey - Defne Samyeli
- Wales - Jane Lloyd
Notes
Withdrawals
Debuts/Returns
- Lithuania - Was represented in the pageant as the Baltic States back in 1927. This is the first time Lithuania is competing as its own country.
Returns
References
- ↑ "1990-1999 - Pageantopolis". www.pageantopolis.com. Archived from the original on 2020-06-29. Retrieved 2020-12-14.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ↑ "Katia Alens". IMDb. Retrieved 2021-01-10.
- ↑ "Miss Holland 1989 | Miss Holland Now |" (in Dutch). Retrieved 2021-01-10.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.