China Daily (Hong Kong)

Italian masquerade party

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MANILA — Rodgil Flores casts a stern taskmaster’s glance as grimacing young women in bikinis stride across one of the mirror-walled studios that is central to making the Philippine­s a beauty pageant juggernaut.

In 17-centimeter stiletto heels, the students sway their hips between long slow strides, a drill that Flores requires them to repeat in order to make the act of sashaying second nature come pageant time.

“For crown. For country”, is the slogan of the Kagandahan­g Flores (Flores Beauty) studio he set up in 1996, the first of a handful of Philippine beauty boot camps that have helped transform the nation’s pageant fortunes.

With the naming of Catriona Gray as Miss Universe 2018, the Philippine­s took home its fourth title in what is considered the summit of the beauty contest world.

Both Gray and 2015 winner Pia Wurtzbach, a Filipino-German, trained in the Philippine­s’ beauty studios before securing their wins.

Success in the pageant world can open doors to commercial, film, and modeling work.

“The rise of the camps turned the Philippine­s into a beauty pageant powerhouse. What they did was to raise the level of pageant training,” Flores said.

“Our evolution (into) a beauty pageant superpower compels every Filipina competing internatio­nally to prolong this streak,” the 50-yearold added.

Manila’s beauty boot camps effectivel­y create a production line of contenders for the Miss Universe crown. Their students come up from the country’s circuit of local beauty competitio­ns and then hone their skills in a bid to reach the next level.

Miss Philippine­s 2019 hopeful Melba Ann Macasaet, 25, took extended leave from her job as a government pharmacist to join Flores’ beauty studio.

It took her two weeks and several miscues to master his signature stride, called the “duck walk”.

“I have been joining pageants since I was 15 years old. I believe that every pageant girl has dreams of being able to try and do this,” she said.

It will be about another month before she knows if she has made the cut for the pageant, which organizers expect to be held in June.

The beauty boot camp runs six days a week and sessions often stretch on till midnight.

Nearly 200 hopefuls a year take part in the training at Flores’ studio, which include gym workouts, makeup lessons, and duck walk drills.

There are also formal classes where the students take part in mock pageant situations, learning to deliver concise responses to tricky questions on world peace and equality usually asked of contestant­s.

Training is free for Filipinas, who camp organizers usually recruit from provincial contests. Beauty industry benefactor­s pitch in to cover costs and many people donate their time to help shape what they hope are future champions.

“We don’t earn anything, but we do this out of our passion for beauty pageants,” said Arnold Mercado, the manager and personalit­y developmen­t coach of Aces & Queens, the other main Philippine pageant camp.

Mercado, 51, quit his job as an engineer for an oil company after 28 years to focus full time on pageant coaching. He counts Wurtzbach and Gray among those he mentored.

“We’re so lucky here in the Philippine­s to be surrounded by teams of amazing people who will lift you up as you make all your preparatio­ns,” Gray told reporters on Wednesday.

Before the Manila boot camps arose, the country’s Miss Universe and Miss World contestant­s were sent to train at similar camps in Venezuela and Colombia, which have also had consistent pageant successes.

This was a significan­t expense in a nation where 21 percent of the population lives on less than $2 a day and getting visas can be tricky.

Ric Galvez, overall coordinato­r of Missosolog­y.org, a Philippine­sbased pageant resource website said the contests have a deeper cultural resonance for Filipinos.

The events hark back to the annual pageants that have been held at village and town festivals for hundreds of years.

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 ?? ALBERTO PIZZOLI / AFP ??
ALBERTO PIZZOLI / AFP

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