Nelson Mail

#MeToo has little impact on Venezuelan beauties

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At a small home with a leaking tin roof near Venezuela’s capital, Johandrys Colls proudly shows off two metal crowns with plastic gemstones and nine satin sashes won in local beauty pageants.

The 16-year-old daughter of a butcher and a teacher is pinning her hopes for a future free of poverty on a single goal: rising through the world of pageants and becoming an internatio­nal beauty queen.

‘‘These sashes represent a huge accomplish­ment for me,’’ says the skinny teen with dark brown eyes as she pushes her long black hair from one side to another. ‘‘I accomplish­ed what I set out to achieve.’’

While growing concern about sexism and the rise of the #MeToo movement recently led the Miss America contest to drop swimsuit competitio­ns and emphasise personal accomplish­ment, in Latin America young women continue to flock to competitio­ns where good looks are unabashedl­y championed above all else.

In Venezuela, competing comes at a high price: Elaborate sequined gowns and pricey cosmetic surgeries are out of reach for most in a country where inflation is running in the five digits and state workers earn about US$3 a month.

Earlier this year the Miss Venezuela pageant was rocked by accusation­s that some contenders finance their journey to the crown by finding wealthy men to pay for gowns and surgeries in exchange for sex.

But even alarming charges like those have done little to deter young women like Colls, whose parents have enrolled her in one of Venezuela’s top modeling schools despite their modest income in hopes of transformi­ng their daughter into a beauty queen.

‘‘I hope the values and education I am instilling in my daughter serve her well,’’ said Lisbeth Linarez, the teen’s mother. ‘‘So that in the future if anything bad might come her way, she knows how to ward it off.’’

After oil, beauty queens may be Venezuela’s biggest export: Women from the South American nation have captured seven Miss Universe titles and crown holders have gone on to notable careers as actresses, journalist­s and even presidenti­al candidates.

When the annual Miss Venezuela pageant is aired on television, millions tune in, paralysed in suspense as contestant­s parade on stage in neon-colored bikinis while their measuremen­ts are read aloud and they answer questions like how they would draw people back to the waning Roman Catholic church.

As the nation plummets into economic ruin, even more young women are holding fast to dreams of becoming beauty queens.

At a recent casting for the Nuestra Belleza Venezuela contest, a pack of teens and 20-something women donned towering heels and coated their lips in glossy pink hues before strutting in front of judges. Among them was Oxlaniela Oropeza, a law student, who said the recent Miss Venezuela scandal hadn’t quashed her ambitions.

‘‘My values are intact and noone can take that away from me,’’ she said. ‘‘From the time I was 6 years old, my goal has been to become Miss Venezuela.’’

But Patricia Velasquez, a contestant in the 1989 Miss Venezuela pageant, wrote in her memoir about feeling obliged to enter a relationsh­ip with an older man who found her an apartment in Caracas and paid for breast implants. ‘‘I quickly learned that getting into the Miss Venezuela contest meant I would have to start prostituti­ng myself in order to find a sponsor,’’ she wrote. ‘‘Not everyone needed to go to such lengths, but that was my reality.’’

 ?? AP ?? Johandrys Colls, left, speaks with her sister Camila on the balcony of their home, in a slum on the outskirts of Caracas, Venezuela.
AP Johandrys Colls, left, speaks with her sister Camila on the balcony of their home, in a slum on the outskirts of Caracas, Venezuela.

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