Stabroek News

Nineteen-year Miss Barti

- By Joanna Dhanraj

Nineteen-year-old former St Stanislaus High beauty Arian Dahlia Richmond last Saturday evening bested seven other beauties and seized the Miss Bartica Regatta title and crown at the Bartica Community Centre Ground.

“I feel so happy and overwhelme­d right now to know that I am the queen but at the same time I am very excited about fulfilling the responsibi­lities that comes with it,” Arian said in an interview with The Scene.

The scheduled eight o’clock pageant began more than an hour late and went into the wee hours of Sunday morning when Arian was finally crowned by last year’s queen, Gabriella Chapman.

The week before the pageant there were preliminar­y segments at the same venue, which saw the sashing, introducti­on and displaying of costumes by the contestant­s. As the coronation night drew closer some other preliminar­ies were the intelligen­ce segment which was done at the Channel Five Studio in Bartica and the top model segment which took place at the Aruwai Resort where the contestant­s showcased their best struts modelling local designer pieces.

The coronation night saw an opening dance by the ladies.

During the talent segment Arian sang a cover od Maroon 5’s “She Will Be Loved”, which was dedicated to victims of sexual abuse. The segments to follow were swimsuit, evening gown and question and answer.

Arian won four awards: Miss Intelligen­ce, Miss Top Model, Miss Body Beautiful and Best Evening Wear.

The training running up to the pageant, the new queen admitted, was rigorous. She added that though training began three months prior, they weren’t always busy as they should have been and there were many things they needed to have that were delayed in getting to them and that slowed the process. This discourage­d many of contestant­s who were back and forth deciding whether they were going to go through with the pageant.

The pageant, it was said, was expected to have 12 finalists, but at one time this number dropped to nine then to four. Finally, eight contestant­s followed through with it.

However, through all of this, trainer Sonje Marslowe was said to have remained firm and Arian praised her for the hard work she put in despite all the challenges. As it grew closer to the big night, things got even more hectic and saw the Arian and other contestant­s putting in some grueling training hours. Many days saw them training from five or six in the afternoon up to midnight; other days demanded that they trained all day if they were ever going to be prepared.

Arian was somewhat upset that they had to take on most of the expenses themselves as she expected that the pageant committee would have gotten around to helping them find sponsors. Her expenses, she noted, included hiring some of Guyana’s finest designers to ensure she was properly outfitted. While she strutted a Randy Madray oneof-a-kind gown for her evening wear, her costume was another statement put together by designers Isaiah Luther and Paul Charles.

Ariel said that since she was old enough to watch television, she was always glued to the Miss Universe and Miss World pageants, watching them with her mother. Yet whatever fascinatio­n she had with watching pageants, it never went beyond that into participat­ing. At school, she said, only the light-skinned children were considered beautiful and though a stunner herself, she never saw her dark skin as beautiful. Because of this, just the thought of entering a pageant was intimidati­ng. Some years later, when she had built her confidence, she began wondering about the Miss Regatta Pageant. She learned that pageantry goes beyond beauty and promotes talent and intelligen­ce and women are expected to be selfless. By last year’s pageant she was certain that this year was hers.

Such an important moment was something she wished she could have shared with her father if only she could bring him back to life. Arian mentioned that he named her for the Arians, believed to be the first Christians who were persecuted for their faith yet remained strong. Dahlia, her middle name, is a flower and she added that she is just like that flower, wild and free. Both names, she said, describe her well. Arian lost her father when she was just two years old.

Another reason that she never saw herself in a pageant was the fact that coming from a single-parent home, she led a life that required more than just studying and at 12 years old she began selling egg balls. Some years later, after moving on from St Stanislaus to President’s College where her mother taught at the time, she sold at the school. By age 15, the little entreprene­ur widened her little business to selling makeup. Yet while she was tasked with extra responsibi­lities, she described herself as the class clown who always wanted to make others happy. Even today Arian remains her jovial self, always cheerful and excited about new challenges and adventurer­s.

Having a love for makeup artistry she took up the art five years ago and a few months ago, acquired a certificat­e through Makeup Artist Clinton Duncan who she deems a great inspiratio­n for his unorthodox work that steps away from tradition and gives a personal touch each time.

With Miss Body Beautiful on her list of awards, one would think this Bartica sensation hit the gym non-stop but all she does is jog every day. Jogging for her goes all the way back to school days when she ran distance races. She represente­d her school many times and was just one win away from making it to nationals. According to Arian, she needed three wins, but only managed two. Yet those years paved a way for this award. But jogging is where keeping fit and staying healthy stops because she loves Chinese takeout.

The pageant, the young woman said, bettered her as she gained the stamina needed

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