On
September 8, 1921 lovely young 16 year old Margaret Gorman won not one,
but two beauty pageants on a visit to Atlantic City, New
Jersey. Just a wisp of a girl,
108 pound soaking wet—if you didn’t count soggy
pounds of the voluminous bathing
suits of the era, Gorman had been declared queen of her home town Washington, D.C. where she was still
an athletic school girl with a sparkling personality.
As Miss
District of Columbia she had been invited to the sea side resort for the Atlantic City Beauty Pageant. While
she was there she was also invited to compete in a rival event then known as
the Inter-City Beauty Pageant. It was there that she was declared Inter-City
Beauty, Amateur. The fledgling
contest also had a new wrinkle, perfect of its beachfront home—a bathing beauty contest. She won
that, too, and was proclaimed The Most Beautiful Bathing Girl in America
and awarded the Mermaid Trophy.
Due to the diligence of some hard working flack, Miss Gorman’s picture was splattered
on the front pages of newspapers up
and down the east coast and the fledgling pageant was featured in newsreels shown
in theaters around the country.
The local
Atlantic City boosters who sponsored
the contest were delighted and recognized that the beauty pageant could become
a major draw for tourist dollars.
They planned a second pageant for the next year.
Gorman was
invited back in 1922 to defend her title. But there was a problem.
Another girl had since been elected Miss D.C. Almost as an afterthought,
pageant officials let her compete as the reigning Miss America.
Despite being a favorite of both fans and photographers she did not win. Mary Katherine Campbell,
Miss Columbus, Ohio unseated her.
Gorman became a rich and fashionable Washington socialite and dog fancier. |
Gorman
returned to Washington and continued to compete successfully in other pageants
and worked as a professional model. She married Victor Cahill and
settled into a life as a fashionable
Washington socialite. She died in her home town in 1990.
As for Campbell,
she accomplished what Gorman could not, returning to take the title in
1923. She competed one more time in 1924, becoming First Runner Up
after which the rules were changed
to prevent competing for more than one year. She was also the last young
woman to compete in a system where professional models, amateurs, and bathing
beauty winners competed for the Miss
America Crown.
The pageant
eventually took the name of its crowned
winner. It had an up and down
history, tainted by occasional
scandals and changes in management.
The contest was suspended for a few
years in due to the Depression.
A few years
later it was back in business and promoting a Hollywood screen test as
one of its major prizes. Among
girls competing was Dorothy Lamour who managed to get into films on her
own.
The pageant
didn’t really become the American
institution most of us recognize until 1945 when the top prize became a
$5,000 college scholarship and Bess Myerson, Miss New York
became the first—and only—Jew wear the tiara.
The first and only Jewish Miss America ushered in the modern era of the Pageant in 1945 and launched a long career as a model/spokeswoman and later New York City Consumer Protection Commissioner. |
In 1952
pageant co-sponsor Catalina Swimwear pulled out of the contest when the
final announcement of the runners up and winners was conducted in evening
gowns instead of bathing suits. The company set up a rival pageant program—Miss USA/Miss Universe which dispensed with Miss America’s
Talent completion and emphasized flesh
in sexier bathing suits, eventually
including rather modest bikini.
In 1955
annual national television broadcasts began and host Bert Parks
crooned There She is, Miss America for the first time.
The winner was Lee Merriweather who, like Myerson,
would go on to a successful TV career.
Burt Parks announcing a winner in his long run as Miss America host. |
Through the
50’s and into the 70’s the Miss America Pageant was annually the most popular show on television,
beating events like The Oscars, and baseball’s World Series games
in those days before the Super Bowl became an unofficial national holiday. The show promoted solidly conservative values and
although scholarships were the prize, it was made clear that contestants had no career ambitions beyond marriage and raising a family.
Changes in cultural attitudes began to batter the pageant in the late 1960’s.
There were protests against exclusion of Black contestants.
But it really drew the ire of Feminists
who derided it as a meat
market. There was a protest outside the contest in Atlantic City in
1967. The next tumultuous year, 1968 had an even bigger protest that
attracted wide-spread attention. 400 protesters from the New York Radical
Women crowned a sheep queen
and trashed beauty products
including make-up, false eyelashes, wigs, and bras.
They wanted to burn the items in a
barrel, but no permit could be
obtained. Just the suggestion of
a conflagration caused the press to
proclaim the protestors bra burners and add a new pejorative to
the American lexicon.
Reports that 1968 feminist protests to the Miss America Pageant would include burning beauty products including bras made the term Bra Burner a popular epithet for years. |
Although
still hugely popular, producers began to fret that the pageant was losing its appeal to younger viewers.
Before the 1980 pageant iconic host Parks was unceremoniously fired setting off wide spread protests led by Johnny
Carson on the Tonight Show. Despite the backlash, pageant officials stuck by
their guns. Former Tarzan Ron Ely became the first of a string of hosts and co-hosts, none of whom were able to stem the tide. For the 70th
anniversary in 1991, Parks was brought on by host Gary Collins to sing
his famous anthem for the last time. A year later he was dead.
In 1984 Vanessa
Williams finally became the first Black to win the pageant. But her reign was cut short when she was forced to resign after nude pictures from an earlier photo shoot appeared in Penthouse.
Despite the scandal Williams has had perhaps the most successful post-Miss America career ever as a model, recording artist, actress, and business
executive. Several other African-Americans have since won.
Vanessa Williams's Penthouse photos caused the first Black Miss America her crown. But she went on to the most successful career of any winner as a singer, actress, model, and buisnesswoman. |
The pageant
never really recovered from the Parks debacle and rating for the TV broadcast
fell for several years despite increasingly frantic attempts to breathe new life into the franchise.
After only 10 million households tuned in for the 2004 show, ABC dropped it like a hot potato.
Officials
had to scramble to find a home on Country Music Television (CMT)
and tinkered with the format. They also abandoned the pageant’s roots in Atlantic
City for the glitzy casino glamor of Las Vegas. After only
two years CMT declined to pick up its options through 2011.
After
having to delay the traditional post-Labor Day program until January
2008 when TLC finally picked it up.
In the
meantime the MissUSA/Miss Universe pageants had been picked up by Donald
Trump who pumped them up with gaudy productions and lots of skin. Those shows
remained popular draws. But several scandals and quirky selections of host cities—including for a time scenic Gary,
Indiana for Miss USA have damaged that property. The Miss Universe
Pageants decision to stick by production in Moscow despite systematic
oppression of Gays, drew sharp criticism from activists.
When Trump
launched his notorious Presidential
Campaign in 2015 with outrageous
slurs against Mexicans outraged
protests from across Latin America where
the Miss Universe Pageant had become a revered contest of national pride and NBC and Univision—part owners with Trump—announced that they would refuse
to air the pageants. Trump first bought
back NBC’s shares and days later, only able to put the shows on the low rent, low prestige Reelz channel suffering
disastrous ratings, sold the whole business
to a modeling agency.
By contrast
the Miss America pageant where winners dedicate themselves to promoting personal “platforms” during
their year long reign looks like a model
of social responsibility. It returned to its Atlantic City
roots. In 2010 the show came back to
network TV on ABC where it is produced with the slick Dick Clark Productions and has once again become a major ratings winner.
If
you are interested, you can see this year’s pageant Sunday night, September 11
capping a full week of hoopla on the
Boardwalk. The show will be hosted by Chris Harrison and co-hosted by Sage
Steele, whoever the hell they are. Evidently
ABC/Disney go-to-host Tom Bergeron is busy.
Among the celebrity judges will be Olympic Gold Medalist Gabby
Douglas, musician and actress Laura Marano, sports
team owner and celebrity rich dude Mark Cuban, actress Sara Foster fromVH1’s aptly named Barely Famous, singer-songwriter Cole
Swindell, Grammy Award winning
entertainer and tertiary super star Ciara, and
former Miss America Sharlene Wells
Hawkes. That’s less star power wattage than a basic cable
reality show, although Cuban at least, has been a reality show judge.
Miss America 2015 Kira Kazantsev of New York, 23, a
daughter of Russian immigrants, broke the mold and made headlines by
making ending domestic violence her Platform and pulling no punches in press interviews
and
social media posts.
Could Missouri's Erin O'Flaherty make history be becoming the first out lesbian to win the Miss America crown this year? |
After a safe year with a Broadway infatuated Georgian,
this
year Miss Missouri, Erin O’Flaherty will be the first out
lesbian contestant in the pageant which is rumored to have had several former
in-the-closet competitors, winners, officials, and judges.
Miss
America has come a long way from Margaret Gorman.
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