Miss Universe 2002

Miss Universe 2002 was the 51st Miss Universe pageant, held at the Roberto Clemente Coliseum in San Juan, Puerto Rico on 29 May 2002.

Miss Universe 2002
Date29 May 2002
Presenters
EntertainmentMarc Anthony
VenueColiseo Roberto Clemente, San Juan, Puerto Rico
BroadcasterCBS
Entrants75
Placements10
Debuts
  • Albania
  • China
Withdrawals
  • Argentina
  • Botswana
  • Lebanon
  • Malta
  • New Zealand
  • Paraguay
  • Taiwan
  • Turks and Caicos
  • Zimbabwe
Returns
  • Australia
  • Guyana
  • Kenya
  • Mauritius
  • Namibia
Winner
CongenialityMerlisa Rhonda George, (United States Virgin Islands)
Best National CostumeVanessa Mendoza
(Colombia)
PhotogenicIsis Casalduc, (Puerto Rico)
← 2001
2003 →

At the end of the event, Denise Quiñones of Puerto Rico crowned Oxana Fedorova of Russia as Miss Universe 2002.[1] This was the first time that Russia had been crowned Miss Universe.

Fedorova had her title removed four months later as she could not travel to fulfill her duties, and was replaced by first runner-up Justine Pasek of Panama.[2]

Contestants from seventy-five countries competed in this pageant. The competition was hosted by Phil Simms and Daisy Fuentes, and Miss Universe 1997 Brook Lee was the backstage correspondent. Marc Anthony performed at this pageant. This was also the last Miss Universe edition to be aired on CBS.

Background

Coliseo Roberto Clemente, Miss Universe 2002 venue

Location and date

In December 2001, Jorge Santini, then-mayor of San Juan and Miss Universe 2001 Denise Quiñones attended at a news conference in San Juan where it was announced that the 2002 pageant will be held in Puerto Rico for the second consecutive year. The city of San Juan was chosen as the venue of the pageant from eight other cities.[3]

Selection of participants

Seventy-five countries and territories competed in the pageant. One candidate was appointed to her position to replace the original winner.

Replacements

Lorena Ayala, the winner of Miss España 2001 pageant, cut all ties with the Miss España organization and lost the right to represent Spain at any international pageant after a threat of a lawsuit against the Miss España Organization by her family, due to a contractual breach with the organization. Ayala was replaced by Vania Millán at the request of the Miss Universe Organization.[4][5]

Debuts and withdrawals

The 2002 edition saw the debuts of Albania and China,[6] and the returns of Kenya who last competed in Miss Universe 1995, Guyana who last competed in Miss Universe 1999, and Australia. Mauritius, and Namibia who last competed in Miss Universe 2000. Karen Russell of Belize and Yana Booth of Great Britain withdrew due to a change of the local franchise holder.[7][8] Christina Sawaya, Miss Lebanon 2001, withdrew due to her support of the Second Intifada, stating that she couldn't compete with Miss Israel 2002, Yamit Har-Noy at the pageant.[9] Euwonka Selver of the Turks and Caicos Islands had her title removed a few weeks before leaving for the pageant, and the organization didn't replace her. Shirley Yeung of Hong Kong, Loredana Zammit of Malta, and Gabriela Riquelme of Paraguay withdrew after their respective organizations lost their licenses. Hong Kong began sending their candidates to Miss China in 2003. Argentina, Barbados, Botswana, New Zealand, and Taiwan withdrew after their respective organizations failed to hold a national competition or appoint a delegate.

Oxana Fedorova, the original winner

Replacement of Oxana Fedorova

In September 2002, four months after winning Miss Universe, Fedorova was replaced by Justine Pasek, making her the first Miss Universe to be removed during their reign.[10][11] According to then-president of the Miss Universe Organization Paula Shugart, Fedorova was not able to fulfill her duties as she needed to spend a lot of time in Russia.[12] Fedorova was expected to travel extensively and make personal appearances as part of her duties, but she declined to participate in some of those assignments, including the 2002 Miss Teen USA pageant.[11]

In an interview with Russian TV Channel 2, Fedorova said she was surprised when the Miss Universe Organization described her resignation as an ouster, and that the decision to return the crown was up to her. According to Fedorova, the reason why she spent so much time in Russia was because of her education. Fedorova is a police lieutenant in Russia, and at the time she was Miss Universe, she was finishing her dissertation at the Academy of Internal Affairs which she defended in October of the same year.[13] Fedorova also refuted speculations that she is pregnant because she is not yet married.[13][14]

First runner-up Justine Pasek was crowned as Miss Universe 2002 at a press conference in New York City by Donald Trump.[15]

Results

Miss Universe 2002 participating countries and territories

Placements

PlacementContestant
Miss Universe 2002
1st runner-up
2nd runner-up
3rd runner-up
4th runner-up
Top 10

Special awards

AwardWinner
Miss Photogenic
Miss Congeniality

Best National Costume

PlacementContestant
Winner
1st runner-up
2nd runner-up

Pageant

Selection committee

Final broadcast

Contestants

Seventy-five contestants competed for the title.

Country/TerritoryContestantAge[a]Hometown
AlbaniaAnisa Kospiri19Tirana
AngolaGiovana Leite[20]18Luanda
Antigua and BarbudaAisha Ralph[21]24St. John's
ArubaDeyanira Frank23San Nicolaas
AustraliaSarah Davies[22]19Brisbane
The BahamasNadia Albury[23]21Nassau
BelgiumAnn Van Elsen[24]22Mol
BoliviaPaola Coimbra[25]21Santa Cruz de la Sierra
BrazilJoseane Oliveira[26]20Canoas
British Virgin IslandsAnestasia Tonge18Tortola
BulgariaElina Georgieva19Sofia
CanadaNeelam Verma[27]26Montreal
Cayman IslandsShannon McLean24East End
ChileNicole Rencoret[28]25Santiago
ChinaZhuo Ling[29]19Shanghai
ColombiaVanessa Mendoza[30]20Unguía
Costa RicaMerilyn Villalta[31]22Cartago
CroatiaIvana Paris[32]18Pazin
CuraçaoAyanette Statia19Willemstad
CyprusDemetra Eleftheriou[33]19Nicosia
Czech RepublicDiana Kobzanová[34]20Roudná
Dominican RepublicRuth Ocumárez[35]20Santo Domingo
EcuadorIsabel Ontaneda-Pinto[36]23Quito
EgyptSally Shaheen[37]24Cairo
El SalvadorElisa Sandoval[38]22San Salvador
EstoniaJana Tafenau[39]19Tallinn
FinlandJanette Broman[40]20Lieto
FranceSylvie Tellier[41]20Nantes
GermanyNatascha Börger[42]21Bönningstedt
GhanaStephanie Walkins-Fia22Accra
GreeceLena Paparigopoulou[43]21Athens
GuatemalaCarina Velasquez[44]21Zacapa
GuyanaMia Rahaman[21]22Georgetown
HondurasErika Ramirez[45]18Atlántida
HungaryEdit Friedl23Budapest
IndiaNeha Dhupia[46]21Delhi
IrelandLisa O'Sullivan[47]20South Dublin
IsraelYamit Har-Noy[48]20Oranit
ItalyAnna Rigon[49]23Vicenza
JamaicaSanya Hughes[21]19Kingston
JapanMina Chiba[50]24Tokyo
KenyaJulie Njeru19Laikipia
MalaysiaKaren Lit Eit Ang25Kuching
MauritiusKaren Alexandre[51]22Port Louis
MexicoEricka Cruz20Mérida
NamibiaMichelle Heitha[52]26Windhoek
NetherlandsKim Kötter[53]19Losser
NicaraguaMarianela Lacayo[54]21Managua
NigeriaChinenye Ochuba[55]18Lagos
Northern Mariana IslandsVirginia Gridley[56]22Chalan Kanoa
NorwayHege Hatlo[57]21Rogaland
PanamaJustine Pasek[58]22Panama City
PeruAdriana Zubiate[59]20Callao
PhilippinesKaren Loren Agustín[60]19Manila
PolandJoanna Dozdrowska[61]23Szczecin
PortugalIva Lamarão[62]19Ovar
Puerto RicoIsis Casalduc[63]21Utuado
RussiaOxana Fedorova[64]24Saint Petersburg
SingaporeNuraliza Osman[65]25Singapore
SlovakiaEva Džodlová[66]19Prešov
SloveniaIris Mulej[67]20Kranj
South AfricaVanessa Carreira[68]22Boksburg
South KoreaKim Min-kyoung20Seoul
SpainVania Millan[4]24Almería
SwedenMalou Hansson[69]19Järfälla
SwitzerlandJennifer Ann Gerber[70]20Aargau
ThailandJanjira Janchome19Phitsanulok
Trinidad and TobagoNasma Mohammed[21]23Princes Town
TurkeyÇağla Kubat23İzmir
UkraineLiliana Gorova20Kyiv
United StatesShauntay Hinton[71]23Washington, D.C.
United States Virgin IslandsMerlisa Rhonda George[72]26Saint Croix
UruguayFiorella Fleitas[73]20Canelones
VenezuelaCynthia Lander[74]19Caracas
YugoslaviaSlađana Božović[75]21Kragujevac

Notes

References