Miss Universe 2006 Preliminary Competition -

And when the fourth runner-up is called… then the third… then the second… leaving Kurara Chibana (Miss Japan) and Zuleyka Rivera (Miss Puerto Rico) holding hands, the tension is merely formality.

These are the women who will fade into the background on finale night, relegated to a brief group montage. Their nations will never know how close—or far—they truly were. By 4:00 PM, the stage goes dark. The scorecards are sealed. The top fifteen finalists are effectively already chosen.

The crown is placed on Zuleyka Rivera’s head. She faints moments later in the sweltering heat—a moment of human fragility that endears her to millions.

But here’s the secret she knows: She didn’t faint from heat. She fainted from relief. miss universe 2006 preliminary competition

A delegate from a small European nation trips on her hem—a tiny wobble, but in the silence of the preliminary focus, it echoes like a gunshot. Another, overwhelmed by nerves, rushes her swimwear walk, completing the course in 15 seconds instead of the practiced 20. The judges notice.

Because the real competition—the brutal, silent, high-stakes war of the Preliminaries—was already won 48 hours earlier.

Watch Alice Panikian (Canada). She walks with the precision of a gymnast—hips swaying not with seduction, but with athletic confidence. Her eyes never leave the judges’ table. Meanwhile, Tara Fares (Lebanon) uses her background in modeling to create “stop moments”—brief pauses that break the rhythm, forcing the judges to look at her face, not just her silhouette. And when the fourth runner-up is called… then

The competition is brutally simple: Swimwear (30% of the preliminary score) and Evening Gown (30%). The remaining 40% comes from the private closed-door interview held earlier in the week. Fail here, and no amount of charisma on finale night can save you. The first category is swimwear. As the delegates line up in the wings, the roar of the audience (tickets are sold to the public, but no TV cameras roll) is a dull thunder.

In the press row, one journalist leans over: “She’s just won the whole thing. Right here.” Not everyone shines. For every Puerto Rico, there is a heartbreaking stumble.

But the standout is undeniable: (Puerto Rico). When she steps out in a turquoise two-piece, the whispers start. Her curves are not the waif-thin ideal of early 2000s fashion magazines; they are powerful, Caribbean, and hypnotic. She moves like a salsa dancer who knows the music is only for her. The judges—including Donald Trump (then pageant co-owner) and Claudia Jordan —scribble furiously. Evening Gown: The Silent Speech After a lightning-fast costume change, the tone shifts. The music becomes orchestral. The lighting dims to jewel tones. This is the Evening Gown competition, and it is theater. By 4:00 PM, the stage goes dark

When the top five are announced—Japan, Switzerland, Paraguay, United States, and Puerto Rico—the script is already written.

That is where the queen is truly made. The 2006 Miss Universe preliminary competition was the last to be held under the full ownership of Donald Trump before he sold the pageant to IMG in 2015. Zuleyka Rivera’s gown also famously malfunctioned during the finale, nearly causing a wardrobe slip—a moment she credits to her quick thinking on live TV.