| Time to shine |
|
| Written by Danielle MacMurchy / Tracy Press / | |
| Tuesday, 29 April 2008 | |
|
Contestants make the final preparations for this weekend's Junior Miss pageant at the Tracy High student theater.
The girls have more talent, more confidence and much, much more on their plates. When Junior Miss was launched in the early 1970s, about 25 high school juniors cleared their schedules for two months of preparation for the pageant. Now, with teen schedules more packed than ever before, the number of practices and competitors has dropped by half, said Bob Haupt, who has chaired the pageant since its beginning here in 1971. But that hasn’t changed Haupt’s and other Junior Miss volunteers’ mission to offer the 11 girls who will compete in Saturday’s pageant a chance to gain life skills and win $4,500 in scholarships. "This program builds their self-esteem, which makes them better all-round people," he said. "And that’s the goal." Last year’s Junior Miss winners, Theresa Hoang and Kelsie Pombo, will pass on their pageant sashes to two new girls. Preparation for Junior Miss started four weeks ago with weekly practices. The girls learned a dance routine under the direction of Rene Fagundes-Coggins, Tracy’s first Junior Miss. She’s helped choreograph dances at local and state Junior Miss competitions for the past 37 years and has watched the teens’ talent skyrocket. "When we first started, you may have a singer or (pianist) that weren’t very good," Fagundes-Coggins said. "Kids are just so much more advanced now." Nicole and Alyssa Sterni, the first twins to compete in the pageant, will each show off their jazz dance moves as part of the talent exhibition, which counts for 20 percent of contestants’ final scores.
"We just have fun," she said. "It feels like we’re all in it together." A panel of five judges, all from Junior Miss programs outside the county, will interview each girl before the evening competition. The interview counts for 25 percent of the final scores. The group dance routine makes up 15 percent, grade-point average is 20 percent, overall self-expression is 20 percent and talent rounds out the total. Another constant in Junior Miss history is that the judges cringe at the phrase "beauty pageant." The teen girls don’t prance on stage in swimsuits, as the contestants do in the Miss America pageant, explained Haupt, who has judged hundreds of pageants throughout the state. He said judges don’t rate girls merely on appearance, either. "What you’re looking for is a well-rounded (contestant)," he said before Monday evening’s practice. "We’re trying to send these girls off to succeed in the world. A well-rounded girl will succeed." Pageant contestants Ilah Estrada, Tracy High Xiomara Fonseca, Tracy High Alysha Garrett, West High Pilar Gigliasso, Tracy High Lauren Knapp, Tracy High Melissa Lopez, West High Alena Skelton, Tracy High Alyssa Sterni, West High Nicole Sterni, West High Lindsey Thompson, Tracy High Mitra Vijeh, West High At a glance WHAT: Tracy Junior Miss pageant WHEN: 7:30 p.m. Saturday WHERE: Emma Baumgardner Theater at Tracy High School, 315 E. 11th St. INFO: Bob Haupt, 835-4587 or 479-1110
Set as favorite
Bookmark
Email This
Hits: 806 Trackback(0)
Comments
(3)
This content has been locked. You can no longer post any comment.
You must be logged in to a comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.
|