October 31st, 2005

 

 

 

Virginia Nguyen said competition was fierce at Miss Vietnam USA. 

"When I started to win . . . some of the girls wouldn't talk to me," she said. 

(By Katherine Frey For The Washington Post)

 

 

 

 

» Ethnic Pageants Restyle the American Beauty Contest 

By Darryl Fears/Washington Post Staff Writer

Robertha Budy heard the insult when she was a little girl, and now, even at Georgia State University in Atlanta, she still hears it. "You're Liberian? Isn't that in Africa? You don't look like it. You're pretty." She put the negative thought out of her mind while winning the Miss Liberia USA pageant last year, calming her nerves for the judges the way she did while facing students. "I said I was going to keep on smiling," said Budy, 21, a dead ringer for the singer/actress Brandy. "There wasn't a moment when I felt defeated." In recent years, ethnic immigrant women of a wide range of hues have been flocking to nationalist pageants that ramp up their confidence and that of their communities by embracing their distinctive features. The proliferation of these pageants also reflects the reality of an America more ethnically diverse than ever.

Miss Vietnam USA, a pageant that is only three years old, crowned its 2006 winner, Virginia Nguyen, this summer in Costa Mesa, Calif. Miss Ethiopia North America crowned its first queen, Medhanite Tekle, in Crystal City in September. And Budy handed over her Miss Liberia USA 2004 crown to this year's queen, Delcontee Glekiah, at a ceremony in Philadelphia.

Also crowned this past summer were Miss India USA in Tampa; Miss Asian America, in San Francisco; Miss Latina U.S., at the Barcelo Maya Beach Resort in Mexico; and Miss Haiti in New York City, to name a few. Few of the pageants date back more than a decade.

 

 

The shows are "a validation of beauty and culture that's not seen in the American mainstream," said Shilpa Dav, an assistant professor of American studies at Brandeis University. "It gives a lot of confidence to women because they are seeing other women who look like them, and their looks are validated," said Dav, who helped produce a 1997 documentary of the Miss India Georgia pageant. The contests, which are growing in popularity even as traditional beauty contests are losing their allure, are patterned after the Miss America pageant, yet include colorful twists that recall tradition. Young, often brainy contestants wear an Ethiopian Absha Kamise or similar culture-specific outfits that their mothers and great-grandmothers would have worn. At immigrant pageants, beauty has a browner, more worldly tinge. Noses are wider and eyes are a gooey chocolate brown, framed in various almond-like contours. Hips sway more in talent segments, such as an adaptation of a Bollywood performance at Miss India or a belly dance at Miss Liberia. 

 

 

"It's just as important as Miss America, if not more," said Reshoo Pande, 22, Miss India USA 2004, who brought down the house by dancing like her Bollywood idol, actress Madhuri Dixit. "This is not our homeland. We get to share our common experiences, our beliefs, our confusion about living here. It's good knowing your culture is appreciated."

But the pageants also bring intense debates within these ethnic communities -- discussions that reflect the age-old split among immigrants over assimilation and retaining cultural mores. Some, especially feminists, believe the pageants are more about assimilation than heritage. "In Little Tokyo beauty contests in the '90s, the women who were selected turned out to have more Caucasian features," said Kyeyoung Park, an associate professor of anthropology and Asian American studies at the University of California at Los Angeles. "They tended to select more mixed-race people." Dav said the disconnect might reflect tension between old-world immigrant parents and their Americanized children, many of whom intermarry.

"The first generation wants to see in their children a continuity of the place from which they came," she said. "The second generation has to deal with being a minority among people who don't understand their home, and that's the dichotomy."

Cosmetic surgery is another touchy subject. Like white Americans, ethnic immigrants and their American-born progeny seek out plastic surgeons. But because many Asian Americans are prone to change their eyelids and enlarge their chests, and some black people streamline their broad noses, they are accused of trying to look white. 

 

 

Nguyen is a natural beauty with no surgical touch-ups. But she did engage in another pageant hot-button practice, showing skin in a yellow bikini. "Part of being in a public crowd . . . is you have to be comfortable in your own skin," said Nguyen, a medical student who is svelte and fit. "Whether I'm fat or whatever, I have to love myself." Miss India organizers would have no part of such displays, a cultural taboo. And conservative-minded Ethiopians, said Tekle of Alexandria, would rather not. "If it is a competition to show skin, then it's not a competition worth having," said Tekle, who grinned and bared it for a cause. "The ultimate goal is to represent your country." The goal at Miss Liberia was simple: instill pride in Liberian women, said Agnes Donaldson, a pageant organizer. Days before the contest, two teenage girls approached Miss Liberia in Pennsylvania. "You're so pretty," Donaldson recalled one girl's comment. "You don't look African." It was an echo of the remarks Budy heard all her life from black Americans and white Americans, and now they were coming from two Liberians. The media stereotype of barely dressed Africans, living Tarzan-like in the jungle, was alive in their minds, Donaldson said. "In America, Liberian women hide their identity," she said. "What we want to do with the pageant is say, 'Yes, you're Liberian. Yes, you're beautiful. And yes, you're different.' These girls' complexions are darker, and we want them to appreciate that and themselves, to know that they're as beautiful as anyone."

Guy Hua, co-founder of Miss Vietnam USA, echoed that, saying the pageant was formed because "we have a lot of beautiful Vietnamese women. We want them to go out and represent the community." To entice participants, Hua and his partners stage an elaborate show, costing $300,000 this year, down from a half-million in 2004.

 

 

In its three-year history, about 1,000 women have competed each year. The grand prize, $10,000 and a new Mercedes-Benz C-Class sedan valued at more than $35,000, provided a strong incentive. "This is one pageant that unites us," Hua said. "It brings tears to your eyes. The Vietnamese people here, we're stuck together because we got kicked out of the country. We have no one but ourselves." Nguyen, of Newark, Calif., used the money to pay for school and said the car rides smoother than her old Honda Civic. But she had to work hard to get it, because with so much loot on the line, the competition got fierce. "When I started to win . . . some of the girls wouldn't talk to me," she said. "My whole motto was, 'If I'm going to be Miss Vietnam USA, I'm going to be an ambassador for Vietnamese women.' If other girls didn't like me, it really didn't matter." Contestants either have that type of take-charge confidence or they lose, said Miltonia Warner, Miss Liberia Virginia, who lost to Budy in the national contest. When Budy took the stage, she glowed. "If you come out there, and you feel that you are confident, you know that you are," Warner said. "You smile more, you swing your hips a little more because you know that you have it." Pande said the Miss India pageant made her a more complete person. "I don't believe I was the prettiest one or the most talented," she said. But she worked the judges with moxie and a smile that lit the stage. Studying Indian culture gave her a winning edge. "After they asked the questions about culture, I had a good feeling about it," she said. "I knew what the judges wanted."

 

 

 


 

 

» Forbes' Star On The Rise

 

 

RISING STAR— Model and Fort Walton Beach High School senior, Tricia Forbes, 17, is the daughter of Rita and Jamie Forbes of Destin, Fla., and granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. R.L. Johnson of Meridian

Tricia Forbes placed First Runner-Up and was named Most Photogenic in the Miss Florida Teen USA Pageant held Oct. 1-2 in Hollywood, Fla. She is the daughter of Rita and Jamie Forbes of Destin, Fla., and the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. R.L. Johnson of Meridian.

“This was only the second pageant I've ever been in,” Tricia Forbes said in a telephone interview last week. “I've had a bit of beginner's luck.” Forbes, 17, was crowned Miss Florida Panhandle Teen last October. She said her grandfather sponsored her in both pageant competitions.

A senior at Fort Walton Beach High School, Forbes also has embarked on a modeling career. She plans to attend college either in New York or the University of Georgia. Her mother, the former Rita Johnson of Meridian, said Tricia will be seen on the covers of two Florida-based magazines soon - the upcoming issues of “Emerald Coast Magazine” and “Tallahassee Magazine.”

In 2004, Forbes was a finalist in the national Elite Model Look competition held in Las Vegas. She worked with Click Model Management Inc. in New York, a worldwide modeling agency that has represented some of the most famous faces over the past 25 years - including Isabella Rossellini, Uma Thurman, Whitney Houston, Elle MacPherson, Phoebe Cates and Grace Jones.

Forbes also has been selected as a spokesmodel for “V Jeans,” a new line of jeans, with advertising plans in place that will include 5-foot cutouts of Forbes in window displays.
For more information about Forbes, visit her Web site at www.triciaforbes.com

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

» Julie Kroenig To Compete In Miss West Virginia USA


WTRF anchor Julie Kroenig competes this weekend in state pageant held in Flatwoods, West Virginia.

For the past several weeks, our own Miss Julie Kroenig has been sweating, running, dieting, and practicing for her, first-ever shot at a scholarship pageant. For this 24-year-old, it's a new challenge she's facing in her life. After making the decision she wanted to compete, Julie had to, first, be accepted by the pageant committee. Julie had to submit answers to questions like, "What's one of the greatest accomplishments in your life?" to, "What is there about you that would surprise people?" For Julie, it's traveling around the world in a program called Semester at Sea. When Julie was accepted, the rigorous training began. 

 

Miss Kroenigs official news site headshot.

 

 

Even though Julie works out on a regular basis, she stepped it up a notch to compete against 41 other girls around the state. From running, to body toning, to those annoying sit ups, Julie has been hard at work at the Elm Grove YMCA for weeks. Of course, a pageant couldn't be a pageant without hair and makeup. And the good people at LaCarezza Hair Salon in Elm Grove have formed a team of specialists to take care of the more visible side of Julie that the judges will see.

Then there are the all-important gowns, dresses and other outfits that will be needed for the big night. This Friday night will be the swimsuit competition. On Saturday, Julie will answer questions from the judges and the evening gown competition. Then Sunday's the big day, when the group will be narrowed down to 10 finalists, then to five, then the winner will be crowned. Jim Forbes has accepted the tough assignment of covering the pageant for his buddy Julie so you'll know each night the status of how she's doing. 

 

 

 


 


» Pageant News Wanted!

Are you a titleholder or at large delegate who is making appearances or doing good things in the community? We would love to tell all of the Miss Florida USA Family your story. Send pictures and updates to telair@aol.com as we feature everything Miss Florida USA on Friday’s at Faces & Places.


 


   

» Alumni News Wanted!  

If you know of any Miss Florida USA alumni in the news please drop us an email to feature them in future articles. Email all info to info@missfloridausa.com! Until next week here to good pageantry!

 

 


 

 

PICTURE OF THE WEEK!

In this time of helping and giving after Hurricane Wilma 

I thought a pageant photo with contestants and needy children might put us all 

in the helping mood. So here are some of the Miss Earth delegates 

greeting the children of Manila this past weekend. 

 

IMG_0667.jpg.JPG (42769 bytes)

 

 

 


 

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 HEY GIRLS!  ARE YOU A HILLARY DUFF FAN?

ARE YOU LOADED WITH ACTING, SINGING OR DANCING TALENT?

 

This week the John Robert Powers school system is  hosting auditions with Hollywood Casting  Director, Kim Bennink.  

Kim helped cast the hit movie Raise Your Voice with Hillary Duff  and has cast for TV shows like That’s So Raven and Even Stevens.

 

TAKE THE FIRST STEP TOWARDS BEING ON SOME OF YOUR FAVORITE TV SHOWS 

AND SCHEDULE YOUR AUDITION APPOINTMENT TODAY!

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