Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Miss USA first Filipina American to win Miss Universe title

- By Joyce Lau and Jennifer Hassan

Miss Universe R’Bonney Gabriel, the first Filipina American to win Miss USA, will be “a voice for Asian Americans” who “opens the door for more diversity and representa­tion in society,” according to the Miss Universe website.

Gabriel beat out 83 other contestant­s to be crowned Miss Universe on Saturday night in New Orleans. She has spoken before about her immigrant roots.

“My dad moved to America from the Philippine­s on a college scholarshi­p with about $20 in his pocket,” she said last year when she was crowned Miss USA. “I’m a very proud Filipina American.”

The news made a splash in her father’s home country. The Philippine Star wrote about her background, while the Manila Times

said Filipinos had been “rooting” for her after the nation’s own contestant did not make the finals.

At 28, Gabriel is at the top of the age limit set by the competitio­n. “Delegates must be at least 18 years of age and under 28 years of age on the date the National competitio­n commenced,” the official website reads.

When asked during the pageant what change she would make to the contest, she said she would raise the age limit.

“I am 28 years old. That is the oldest age to compete. And I think it’s a beautiful thing,” she said, according to CNN.

This year’s Miss Universe pageant allowed married women and mothers to compete for the first time in its 70-year history.

Gabriel, a Houston native, is the chief executive of a sustainabl­e clothing line, R’Bonney Nola. She earned her bachelor’s degree in fashion design from the University of North Texas.

Last week, Gabriel walked onstage at the competitio­n’s costume show wearing a NASA-inspired outfit, which featured thighhigh metallic boots, a moonlike headpiece and wings made of silver stars. It was created by Filipino designer Patrick Isorena, according to Philippine media.

Isorena wrote on Instagram that the costume weighed about 14 pounds.

The costume show is a chance for candidates to show off their cultural heritage and honor their home countries. But Gabriel’s ensemble drew backlash on social media, where some said it suggested that the United States was laying claim to the moon.

“You know what’s American? the moon!” one Twitter user said in response to the outfit. “The United States of America, a country known for restraint and modesty,” another said.

Explaining her costume choice on Instagram, Gabriel said that as a native of Houston, where NASA’s Johnson Space Center is located, she was “proud to be from a city working to send the first female to the moon.”

“On July 20, 1969 two US astronauts became the first humans to step foot on the moon accomplish­ing one of the most remarkable achievemen­ts in human history,” she wrote. “Fast forward to today and women are involved more than ever in the Artemis program aiming to send the US back to the moon.”

NASA is several years into the Artemis program, which aims to return astronauts to the moon in a series of missions, the first since Apollo in the 1960s and ’70s. The program has promised to include an astronaut of color and a woman on its missions this time around.

In New Orleans on Saturday, the first runner-up in the Miss Universe competitio­n was Miss Venezuela Amanda Dudamel, and the second runner-up was Miss Dominican Republic Andreína Martínez.

 ?? Gerald Herbert/Associated Press ?? Miss USA R'Bonney Gabriel was named Miss Universe on Saturday night in New Orleans.
Gerald Herbert/Associated Press Miss USA R'Bonney Gabriel was named Miss Universe on Saturday night in New Orleans.
 ?? Gerald Herbert/Associated Press ?? Miss USA R'Bonney Gabriel, left, and Miss Venezuela Amanda Dudamel wait to hear which one will be crowned Miss Universe.
Gerald Herbert/Associated Press Miss USA R'Bonney Gabriel, left, and Miss Venezuela Amanda Dudamel wait to hear which one will be crowned Miss Universe.

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