Helen Morgan (Miss World)
Helen Morgan (born 29 September 1952)[1] is a Welsh actress, model, TV Host and beauty queen who won the 1974 Miss Wales, Miss United Kingdom and Miss World pageants. Morgan became the first winner to resign, and the second (after Marjorie Wallace) not to finish her reign as Miss World.
Helen Morgan | |
---|---|
Born | Helen Elizabeth Morgan 29 September 1952 |
Height | 1.73 m (5 ft 8 in) |
Beauty pageant titleholder | |
Major competition(s) | Miss Universe 1974 (1st Runner-up) Miss World 1974 (Winner; resigned) |
Biography
Born in Walsall, she worked in a bank. Entering modelling competitions on a part-time basis, she won the Miss Wales and Miss United Kingdom titles in 1974.
Morgan represented Wales in the Miss Universe 1974 pageant, where she finished first runner-up to Amparo Muñoz of Spain. When Muñoz resigned as Miss Universe before the end of her reign, the crown was not offered to Morgan or any other runner-up.
Miss World 1974
Winning Miss United Kingdom earned Morgan the right to represent the United Kingdom in Miss World. She had originally been reluctant to enter the Miss Wales competition, and was eventually paid £30 as a last-minute stand-in when another competitor dropped out.[2] Morgan became the second Welsh woman and the fourth UK representative to win the competition in 1974.
However, she was forced to resign only four days after winning the pageant, upon the media creating extremely negative and lurid headlines as she was an unwed mother with an 18-month-old son. This had never been hidden from the time she was crowned Miss Wales, but the lurid headlines in the hours immediately following her win at Miss World, particularly interviews given by the wife of the child's father, created extreme pressure on Morgan and the Miss World organization.[3] Although this did not violate any of the competition rules (which stipulated only that entrants must be unmarried), pressure was placed on her by the Miss World Organisation that she should resign to save them from further potential embarrassment.
The first runner-up, Anneline Kriel of South Africa, succeeded her. Morgan became the first winner to resign, and the second Miss World titleholder not to finish her reign. The first case was that of Miss World 1973, Marjorie Wallace, who, according to pageant officials, was stripped of the crown for "failing to fulfill the basic requirements of the job" a few months into her reign.
After Miss World
Threatened with being a named party in a divorce – an action which was later dropped – Morgan was allowed to keep her other titles. She resigned from the bank, and undertook a career in modeling, TV and films.[3]
After modelling
Morgan married and moved to Surrey in the 1980s, and had two more children, Poppy and Ben.[3] She later left the UK, and now lives in Spain with her husband Ronny Lamb and family.
In 2004, Morgan agreed to judge the 2004 Miss Wales competition in Swansea,[4] the 30th anniversary of her competition win, won by Amy Guy.[2]
References
- "Wales Assembly with a difference for Miss Wales". BBC Wales. 1999-08-26. Retrieved 2009-04-15.
- "Ex-Miss World in a different era". BBC Wales. 2004-09-10. Retrieved 2009-04-15.
- "Search for 'missing' Miss World". BBC Wales. 2004-07-23. Retrieved 2009-04-15.
- "'Lost' beauty queen is found". BBC Wales. 2004-09-01. Retrieved 2009-04-15.
External links
Preceded by Deidre Greenland |
Miss Wales 1974 |
Succeeded by Gina Kerler |
Preceded by Veronica Ann Cross |
Miss United Kingdom 1974 |
Succeeded by Vicki Harris |