Out of all beauty pageants, Miss
Universe, which began in 1952, makes the boldest claim: that it can single out
one person to represent an idealized vision of womanhood suitable for the
entire world (or more grandly, the “universe”).
اضافة اعلان
Last week, R’Bonney Gabriel, Miss USA, was
crowned the 71st Miss Universe, beating out 82 rivals in a three-hour Mardi
Gras-themed extravaganza in New Orleans.
By today’s standards, looking for a single
ideal of beauty feels antiquated and unenlightened. This year, Miss Universe
felt troubling for reasons beyond the objections one might have to scantily
clad young women being assessed by so-called experts before an audience of
millions.
This year, no amount of glitter could
distract us from the darker issues just beneath the surface, including climate
destruction, human rights abuse, the 2022 suicide of Cheslie Kryst, Miss USA
2019 (and a Miss Universe finalist that year), and, especially, Russia’s war
against Ukraine.
One of the stranger moments of the show
happened when Viktoriia Apanasenko, Miss Ukraine, received the “Spirit of
Carnival Award”, presented by Carnival Cruise Lines to the contestant who
embodies “fun, friendship, diversity, and inclusion”. Christine Duffy, the
president of Carnival, lauded Apanasenko’s “mission to remind us that the war
is ongoing”. A resort company was rewarding Miss Ukraine for fun, friendship
and for reminding the world of war’s devastations.
Stranger still was the “National Costume
Show”, held three days before the main pageant. For this, contestants modeled
comically outlandish outfits that hovered somewhere between surrealism, ethnic
stereotyping, and Hollywood set design.
This year, no amount of glitter could distract us from the darker issues just beneath the surface, including climate destruction, human rights abuse… and, especially, Russia’s war against Ukraine.
Miss Belize honored her nation’s rainforest
and jaguar reserve by bedecking herself with trailing jungle vegetation, a
spotted cat-print leotard, and what looked like a miniature jaguar’s head
affixed to her lower abdomen. Miss Indonesia was a ship at sea, Miss
Netherlands a jaunty Stroopwafel. Miss Guatemala turned into an entire pyramid
temple; and Miss USA portrayed the 1969 NASA moon launch, in a 13.5-kg costume
including a metallic spacesuit-style leotard, illuminated headdress, and a 3D
replica of the moon hanging above her head.
Pageant or political seminar?But all this campy extravagance could not
hold off the specter of war. Anna Linnikova, Miss Russia, defiantly wore a
costume entitled “The Crown of the Russian Empire”, consisting of a pearl- and
jewel-embossed satin minidress topped with a sweeping red velvet cape and a
crown — an unabashed advertisement for Russian imperial aggression.
In counterpoint, Apanasenko channeled the
archangel Michael, considered the defender saint of Kyiv, the capital of
Ukraine. Dressed as a “Warrior of Light”, she was resplendent in a gold unitard
and halo, floating white overdress, brandishing a sword, and framed by
astonishing 5-m feathered wings in the blue and yellow of her country’s flag.
It was hard to know how to respond. Were we
meant to delight in the Stroopwafel and then lament the spoils of empire and
the ravages of war? And did putting three days between the national costume
show on Wednesday and the main event on Saturday succeed in helping us overlook
all the unease that had been stirred up? (Neither Miss Ukraine nor Miss Russia
made the finals.)
All beauty pageants turn women into places to some extent. Those sashes they wear announce the names of regions or cities, never their names.
In fact, the discordant nature of Miss
Universe 2023 was just a heightened version of the tension that routinely
pervades any beauty pageant. Such competitions strive for gravitas,
interviewing women about world peace or domestic policies. But it is hard to
turn a pageant into a seminar on global politics. And it is also hard to turn
women into abstract symbols of nationhood.
A festival of uniformityAll beauty pageants turn women into places
to some extent. Those sashes they wear announce the names of regions or cities,
never their names. But in the case of Miss Universe, each woman becomes an
entire country — a tricky task. It is true, of course, that nations have long
been called “she” and imagined themselves as feminine figures: France uses
“Marianne” to symbolize its lofty republican ideals. The US has Lady Liberty.
But beauty pageants complicate the
woman-as-country motif. Contestants, however accomplished or philanthropic they
may be, are not there to represent noble virtues, remind us of suffering, or
incarnate a nation’s character. They are there to be eye candy, to create
watchable programming that sells products (mineral water, skin care, and
upcoming Roku series were among the commodities hawked onstage during the
pageant).
And despite the insistence on
internationalism, this pageant, like all pageants, is really a festival of
uniformity. Virtually every participant is a tall, slim, young woman with long
legs, long hair, long (false) eyelashes, perfect white teeth, and
precision-sculpted features — all poured into skin-tight, extremely revealing
sequined dresses, atop vertiginous stilettos. The effect is more Rockettes than
United Nations.
Citizens of commerce… and their queenYet Miss Universe 2023 leaned heavily into
its cultural and ethnic variety, seeming to offer it as evidence of a new,
progressive agenda. Anne Jakkaphong Jakrajutatip, a Thai billionaire and CEO of
JKN Global Media, is Miss Universe’s new — and first female — owner.
In her onstage speech Saturday,
Jakrajutatip (who at 43 looked like a contestant herself) made the pageant
sound like an updated Lilith Fair, proclaiming it would, from now on, be “run
by women… for all women around the world to celebrate the power of feminism!”
Beyond its claims of feminist solidarity, uplift, and national heritage, this is a giant branding opportunity for an ambitious, global media platform, a commercial empire.
In a news release at the time of the sale,
Jakrajutatip said: “The global reach of the organization, its relationships
with global partners and brands, and its wealth of content, licensing, and
merchandising opportunities make this a strong, strategic addition to our
portfolio.”
Acquiring Miss Universe is about commerce.
And this, in the end, explains the curious tone of the pageant. Beyond its
claims of feminist solidarity, uplift, and national heritage, this is a giant
branding opportunity for an ambitious, global media platform, a commercial
empire. And like all empires, it needs a royal figurehead, an empress or queen.
The nostalgic royalism of a beauty pageant,
with the jeweled crown that rewards the winner, provides a perfect vehicle for
this 21st-century form of monarchy. That the contestants struggle to embody
nationhood or signal selfless virtue while parading half-naked in heels does
not matter. They are perfect embodiments, wittingly or not, of the ideals of
their sponsors. They are less citizens of specific, individual countries than
they are of the marketplace writ large, with its standardized beauty
conventions and practices — our new (and also our old) universe.
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