ROSE OF SUMMER
As the Rose of Tralee beauty pageant concluded this week, the contestants in colorful ball gowns and silk sashes swayed as they sang the 19th-century ballad that inspired the competition.
“She was lovely and fair as the rose of the summer,” they sang as 2022’s winner was paraded through the town in County Kerry, southwest Ireland, which gave the contest its name.
When all 33 contestants departed the stage, fireworks burst overhead and ticker tape ribbon fell from the sky.
The beauty pageant returned to Tralee and Ireland’s living rooms after a two-year absence due to COVID-19 restrictions to fanfare from its legions of fans.
But critics have raised questions about the pageant’s relevance in modern Ireland and the diversity of its contestants, not least because of the show’s all-white lineup for 2022.
Created in 1959, the Rose of Tralee draws contestants, known as “roses,” from across Ireland and around the world from the Irish diaspora.
All of them are winners of local selections that draw thousands of participants.
New York Rose Cathrena Collins, a 24-yearold law student, told AFP it had been “really special” to represent her city’s Irish community, just as her grandmother had in 1965.
“It was huge for me. Growing up, I always heard stories. She always talked about what an honor it was,” she explained.
‘Rough around the edges’
The Rose of Tralee has been a major fixture on Irish television since it was first broadcast in 1967 and has had to adapt to the changing currents in Irish society to survive.
Mary McGill, an Irish lecturer and author, said it originates from a time when a “puritanical notion of Catholicism” was a “huge part” of Irish identity.
At the time, the church had an iron grip on Irish society and womanhood was put “under forms of extreme surveillance and extreme expectation around morality.”
“I think because of its origins, that baggage is still there,” she said, explaining, however, that Rose of Tralee is still “able to tap into the zeitgeist in a strange way.”
“[It is] something that’s uniquely Irish and quite traditionalist.
“It also has managed to have a new lease of life in the 21st century because of the connection it has to Irishness, nostalgia and the global community.”
In 2022, the contestants wanted the pageant to reflect modern Ireland as much as possible.
Ireland, home to some 5 million people, has traditionally been a country of emigration but that began to change when its economy took off in the 1990s, notably with immigration from the EU.
Most people still class themselves as white Irish but ethnic diversity is increasing.
At the same time it has seen once unthinkable social change, including same-sex marriage and the liberalization of strict abortion laws.
Wexford Rose Joy Quigley, a 26-year-old sometime bodybuilding competitor, showed off a sleeve tattoo on her right arm as she demonstrated muscle poses for the audience in a sparkling green evening gown.
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In December, a series of rule changes were announced, allowing married women and trans-women to enter and raising the age limit from 28 to 29.
Despite the efforts, former Sydney Rose Brianna Parkins criticized the all-white lineup during a radio debate for national broadcaster RTE.
“There just seems to be a lack of diversity across the board. It isn’t just a racial issue here,” the 2016 contestant said.
“We have some diverse people entering but I would love to see those numbers boosted because I don’t think they’re true reflections of Irish society at the minute.”
Executive chair of the Rose of Tralee Anthony O’Gara dismissed the criticism as “lazy” and “nonsense,” pointing out three of the last four winners had been of mixed ethnic origin.
“Frankly, I’m fed up with people... finding a different angle every year to have a go at the Rose of Tralee Festival,” he added.