Miss Universe 1974
| Miss Universe 1974 | |
|---|---|
|  Amparo Muñoz, Miss Universe 1974 | |
| Date | 21 July 1974[a] | 
| Presenters | Bob Barker, Helen O'Connell | 
| Venue | Folk Arts Theater, Manila, Philippines | 
| Broadcaster | CBS (international) KBS (DZKB-TV) (official broadcaster) | 
| Entrants | 65 | 
| Placements | 12 | 
| Debuts | |
| Withdrawals | |
| Returns | |
| Winner | † Amparo Muñoz .svg.png) Spain | 
| Congeniality | Anna Bjorn (Iceland) | 
| Best National Costume | Kim Jae-kyu (South Korea) | 
| Photogenic | Johanna Raunio (Finland) | 
Miss Universe 1974 was the 23rd Miss Universe pageant, held on 21 July 1974[a][1] at the Folk Arts Theater in Pasay City, Philippines. It was the first Miss Universe pageant to ever be held in the Philippines, and in extension, Asia.[2] Margarita Moran of the Philippines crowned her successor Amparo Muñoz of Spain at the end of the event, marking the first and so far only time Spain has ever won a Miss Universe competition.
There were 65 delegates from around the world who competed for the 1974 title. Six months later, Amparo Muñoz, after refusing a planned travel to Japan, decided to relinquish her title.[3] Helen Morgan, the first runner-up, was unable to assume the title and fulfill the duties of Miss Universe 1974, because she went on to win Miss World 1974,[4] although a controversy would force her to resign 4 days later.[5] The title was not offered to any of the runners-up and Muñoz was still recognized as the official titleholder.[6]
Results
Placements
| Placement | Contestant | 
|---|---|
| Miss Universe 1974 | 
 | 
| 1st runner-up | 
 | 
| 2nd runner-up | |
| 3rd runner-up | 
 | 
| 4th runner-up | 
 | 
| Top 12 | 
 | 
Contestants
Sixty-five contestants competed for the title.
Notes
- ^ a b The event was held at 8:00 am Philippine Standard Time (UTC+08:00); for the Americas, this was July 20 in their local times.
References
- ^ "Miss Universe". The Spokesman-Review. 22 July 1974. Retrieved 1 December 2018.
- ^ Requintina, Robert (2 August 2016). "PH eyes MOA or Philippine Arena as venue for Miss Universe 2016". Tempo (in English and Filipino). Retrieved 2 August 2016.
- ^ "Amparo Muñoz, la mujer más guapa del mundo: por qué renunció a MissUniverso y el rumor que destrozó su carrera". COPE (in Spanish). 2021-02-27. Retrieved 2023-04-24.
- ^ The Sydney Morning Herald
- ^ "Search for 'missing' Miss World". BBC. 2004-07-23. Retrieved 2023-04-24.
- ^ Gomez, Shirley (2025-01-10). "Miss Universe controversies: Beauty queens who lost their crowns". Hola!. Retrieved 2025-03-28.
- ^ "Oranjestad". Amigoe di Curacao (in Dutch). 4 June 1974. p. 1. Retrieved 11 May 2023 – via Delpher.
- ^ "Girl takes three beauty titles". The Canberra Times. 17 September 1973. p. 3. Retrieved 11 May 2023 – via Trove.
- ^ ""Cathy" De Jongh Miss Curacao 1974". Amigoe di Curacao (in Dutch). 4 June 1974. p. 3. Retrieved 11 May 2023 – via Delpher.
- ^ "50 years of Miss India: Winners through the years". The Times of India. 25 March 2013. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
- ^ Lo, Ricky (15 March 2008). "Whatever happened to Guada Sanchez?". Philippine Star. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
- ^ "Amparo Muñoz muere a los 56 años" [Amparo Muñoz dies at the age of 56]. El Periodico (in Spanish). 28 February 2011. Retrieved 11 May 2023.




.svg.png)



.svg.png)
.svg.png)


.svg.png)


.svg.png)


.svg.png)
.svg.png)


.svg.png)




.svg.png)


.svg.png)
.svg.png)






.svg.png)








.svg.png)
.svg.png)



.svg.png)

.svg.png)

.svg.png)





.svg.png)

.svg.png)

