Miss Universe: Miss USA Slips, Japan Wins

Beauty Queen Ends Up On Her Bottom In Evening Gown Contest





Text Size:  A  A  A
Previous PhotoNext Photo

Miss USA, Rachel Smith, slips and falls during the evening gown competition at the Miss Universe pageant in Mexico City on May 28, 2007. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)



Answers.com

(CBS/AP) Japan's Riyo Mori was crowned Miss Universe in Mexico City Monday night, but the evening's most memorable moment came courtesy of Miss USA, Rachel Smith.

Smith, who was named fourth runner-up at the pageant, lived a beauty queen's worst nightmare during the evening gown competition: she slipped and fell on stage.

The tumble came after she'd taken only eight steps in her high heeled shoes. Smith landed on her bottom and broke the fall with both hands, but she immediately jumped right back up and took a few more steps before posing with one hand on her hip looking over her shoulder.

Smiling the whole time, she continued down the catwalk as the audience cheered, although she was later jeered by the crowd during the interview phase of the pageant.

Smith earned a respectable 8.547 score in spite of the fall, putting her in fifth place in the evening gown competition.

Mori, a 20-year-old dancer, is the second contestant from Japan to win the world beauty title.

Dressed in a black, red and purple Japanese-style gown, Riyo Mori nervously grabbed the hands of first runner-up, Natalia Guimaraes of Brazil, just before the winner was announced. Then she threw her hands up and covered her mouth, overcome with emotion.

But she gathered herself together enough to catch the diamond-and-pearl-studded headpiece valued at $250,000 as it slipped off her head when Miss Universe 2006 Zuleyka Rivera of Puerto Rico crowned her. Mori immediately placed it back on her head.

The last time Japan won the pageant was in 1959 when Akiko Kojima became the first Miss Universe from Asia.

"She is an amazing champion, an amazing woman and I hear that they go totally insane in Japan, so that's good," said Donald Trump, who co-owns the pageant with NBC.

Photos: Pageant Night
The ten semifinalists who took part in the evening gown competition were the contestants from Brazil, Venezuela, Korea, Japan, USA, Tanzania, Angola, India, Mexico, and Nicaragua.

Those contestants were whittled down to the five finalists from Venezuela, Korea, Brazil, USA, and Japan.

Miss Philippines, Anna Theres Licaros, won Miss Photogenic. Ningning Zhang, Miss China, was voted Miss Congeniality.

Mori, from the small town of Shizuoka at the base of Mount Fuji, won the cheers of the Mexico City audience when she opened her interview, saying 'Hola, Mexico!'

"I learned how to always be happy, be patient and to be positive, and this is what I want to teach to the next generation," she said during the interview competition.

The daughter of a dance school operator, Mori said her grandmother told her as a child that she wanted her to be Miss Japan before she turned 20.

"From the very beginning, I entered the competition with high hopes and an unswerving determination to make this dream a reality," she said in a pre-competition interview.

Continued

 1  |   2  >







Text Size:  A  A  A

Comments [ + Post Your Own ]

Now you're in the public comment zone. What follows is not CBS News stuff; it comes from other people and we don't vouch for it. A reminder: By using this Web site you agree to accept our Terms of Service. Click here to read the Rules of Engagement.

Back To Top Back To Top