‘Uncle Jimmy’ and Miss USA do Cranston

Pageantry
By PHILIP EIL  |  September 13, 2012

MissRI_Kent26_main
ALL FOR ONE The contestants congratulate the winner.

"We've had a few people pass out. We've had a few people jump off the front of the stage because the lights are so bright . . . We've had a few wardrobe malfunctions," Jim Donovan says. It's intermission at Cranston's Park Theatre and the tuxedoed, clean-shaven, perfectly-coiffed host of today's Miss Rhode Island/Miss Teen Rhode Island USA pageant has stepped off the stage to tell war stories. He's been in the spotlight for the last hour, surrounded by 60 women in evening gowns, but he isn't sweating. Donovan, a consumer reporter for CBS 3 Eyewitness News in Philadelphia, has been hosting beauty pageants as a side gig for over a decade.

> PHOTOS: Miss Rhode Island/Miss Teen Rhode Island USA pageant by Natalja Kent <

And it shows. He is a welcome dose of humor in this world of frozen smiles, spray tans, wrist-pivoting waves, and marches around stage in bikinis and high heels. He calls himself "Uncle Jimmy" and holds onto the prize for "Miss Photogenic" (a certificate for a $600 photo shoot) until after the pageant has ended, explaining to the contestants that the winner will lose track of the envelope if he hands it out now. He spices up the long list of sponsors he is obligated to read — dentists, personal trainers, dress boutiques, speech coaches, photographers — with comments like, "We're not sending anyone to the pageant with a unibrow." At one point, he shouts at the guys in the sound booth to turn down the synth-heavy background music. It's like Who Wants to Be a Millionaire on crack, he says.

The stakes in Rhode Island pageantry don't come any higher than today's gauntlet; here on Sunday afternoon, it's all about the crown. The auditorium is brimming with screams and dreams. The screams erupt whenever a contestant struts across the stage or completes an answer featuring Sandra Bullock ("If you could have dinner with one celebrity, dead or alive, who would it be and why?"). The dreams are omnipresent. A song blasting from unseen speakers advises, "If you just believe, you can move mountains with dreams." The contestants' adages include "Don't ever let your fears hold you back from pursuing your dreams" and "If you can dream it, you can believe it and you can achieve it."

But even the most brutal cynics are quiet today. There is a walking incarnation of these dreams in the room: Olivia Culpo, the 20-year old Cranstonian who wore a $25 rented gown in last year's Miss Rhode Island competition (her first-ever pageant), then went on to Vegas to be crowned Miss USA. Tall, tan, with flawless features, Culpo is Rhode Island royalty. She appears in three different outfits throughout the afternoon: a leather skirt and white Chanel shirt; a sky-blue cocktail dress; and a silver, floor-length evening gown. She glides through the auditorium, smiling, attracting shrieks and camera flashes at every carefully placed step. Onstage, she is ceremoniously presented with a miniature doll replica of herself. Offstage, before the competition starts, she tells me about her new life sharing an apartment in New York with the reigning Miss Universe and her sadness over giving up her Miss Rhode Island crown. "It's not even bittersweet; it's just bitter," she says. Even the fathers in the audience, who were sneaking to the lobby to catch glimpses of football games, are impressed. I heard one say that Culpo could have won last year's contest wearing a burlap bag.

1  |  2  |   next >
  Topics: This Just In , Cranston, pageant, Miss USA,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY PHILIP EIL
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   THE REAL RHODE ISLAND  |  May 22, 2013
    There are no red carpets, flashing cameras, stilettos, or sparkling dresses tonight. Instead, at the Woonsocket Public Library on an overcast Wednesday evening, a small group hovers around a metal A/V cart, trying to figure out the right combination of wires to make the digital projector spark to life.  
  •   WHAT TO WATCH  |  May 22, 2013
    From 'Hope City' to "WaterFire: Art & Soul of a City'
  •   AN OPEN CASTING CALL (WITH BACKGROUND CHECKS) IN PROVIDENCE  |  May 22, 2013
    "You gonna apply?" Providence Police Chief Hugh T. Clements Jr. says. We're in his office at the Providence Public Safety Complex and he's talking about the department's current recruiting drive — its first since 2010.
  •   YOUNG DEMS AND DANCE DADS  |  May 22, 2013
    "Hypothetically, in an alternate universe, if you were governor," a college-age guy with tousled hair is asking Providence Mayor Angel Taveras, "if you were sent a bill that would regulate and tax marijuana, would you be willing to sign that bill?"
  •   EQUAL, AT LAST  |  May 14, 2013
    On May 2, Gov. Lincoln Chafee made Rhode Island the tenth state in the United States of America to legalize same-sex marriage. The law doesn't officially go into effect until August 1, which gives us a chance to check in with some of the people whose lives changed that day at the State House.

 See all articles by: PHILIP EIL