
A travel back to three years in the 1960s when beauty queens
congregated in Huntington to vie for the crown of Miss USA and Miss United
States of America.
By Joseph Platania
West Virginia and national beauty pageants
usually are not thought of together. Traditionally, these pageants are
held in sunny seaside resorts such as Atlantic City, New Jersey and Miami
Beach, Florida, or in glamorous venues such as New York City and Los
Angeles. However, this tradition took a hiatus when in mid-September 1962,
the 12th annual Miss USA Pageant was held in Huntington, and 44 young
women who were contestants from throughout the nation arrived in town. The
pageant was followed by two more held in the Jewel City: in August 1963
and August 1964.
For several weeks each summer in the early 1960s,
Huntington became "a beauty capital."
In early September 1962, children were heading back to
school while Marshall fans were anxiously awaiting the start of the
football season. Huntingtonians also were anticipating the beginning of a
much-heralded new event. For the first time in its history, Huntington was
to be the host for a national beauty contest: the Miss USA-World Pageant
that would be in town September 16 - 23.
At the conclusion of the first pageant in 1962, Alfred
Patricelli, the executive director of the Miss USA part of the Miss World
pageant, stated in a newspaper article: "Huntington gave the pageant more
newspaper and television coverage in the immediate locality than any other
city that has staged such a contest. That includes Miami, Atlantic City
and Long Beach, California."
West Virginia Governor W.W. Barron said: "It was a
first class promotion that brought West Virginia a great deal of national
attention and publicity."
According to an article, Larry Glick, then chairman of
the Cabell-Wayne Tourist and Vacation Bureau, said the pageant was "the
greatest thing that ever happened to Huntington."
The morning of the pageant's last full day, Saturday,
September 22, the contestants were in a two-mile long parade of 85 cars
that proceeded along Fourth Avenue from Seventh to 16th Streets and then
on Fifth Avenue to 29th Street. Police estimated the size of the crowds
that lined the parade route as more than 20,000. An article reports that
"the enthusiastic sideliners 'oohed and ahed' as the 44 beauties passed
along in convertibles."
Other participants in the parade included ten high
school bands, pageant judges, six floats, the current Miss USA, JoAnn Odum,
Frankie Avalon, antique cars, equestrian units and area civic and
government leaders.
The previous night, a "Grand Ball" was held at the
Memorial Field House at Fifth Avenue and 26th Street.
The 10 days of pageant-related activities were action
packed. "The girls attended three dances, a Marshall football game, church
services; greeted visiting newsmen; attended the dedication of a new
tourist information center; participated in television shows; took part in
a golf tournament; were taken on a river cruise; watched a boat race;
attended the opening of the local Democratic Party headquarters; were
guests at a rock-and-roll show; participated in a fashion show; attended
two western barbeque picnics; went horseback riding; took part in two
parades; visited Gov. and Mrs. Barron in Charleston for a reception and
tea; attended numerous luncheons and dinners given to them by area clubs
and posed for scores of photographs."
The article adds that such celebrities as Dagmar, Dale
Robertson, Troy Donahue, Frankie Avalon, Bobby Vee, Johnny Tillotson, Hank
Snow and Carl Belew added glamour and glitter to the beauty festival.
That year Miss USA headquarters was at the new Uptowner
Inn, located in the 1400 block of Fourth Avenue. The pageant's executive
director was local businessman Keith L. Black.
On Saturday, September 22, the finals began at 8:45
p.m. at the Field House. The emcee was TV game show host Woody Woodbury.
Following the playing of the National Anthem and with the flags of all 50
states on display and the Field House decorated with red, white and blue
bunting, the contestants left the stage to prepare for the judging.
For the finals, the twelve judges included Dagmar,
Frankie Avalon, Dick Hinds (Dagmar's husband), several local men and
women, California Congressman James Corman, newspaper columnist Peter
Mastronardi and William D. Birke, president of the Huntington Publishing
Company.
After the first round of judging, half of the
contestants, 22, returned on stage for the evening gown competition. "They
were introduced individually as they neared the judges' section," states
the story. They then returned to the dressing room to prepare for the
swimsuit competition.
During the long evening, the field of 44 was narrowed
to five finalists. At 12:20 a.m., Sunday, September 23, the winner was
announced "amid the applause of 6,000 enthusiastic spectators," states a
front-page article published along with several large photographs of the
crowning of the new beauty queen. Miss USA-World for 1963 was Amedee
Chabot, Miss California, an 18 year old with long blonde hair from
Northridge, California. She was described as being 5'8" and "wearing a
stunning red swimsuit," adding that "she keeps her form by lifting
weights."
The winner won a new wardrobe and an all-expense paid
trip to Europe, first to Paris for a week and then to London in early
November for the Miss World contest. An article states that the 1962
pageant was "one of the most spectacular events ever held in West
Virginia."
That the Miss USA-World contest came to Huntington in
the first place is attributed to the persistence of JoAnn Odum, a
Huntington woman who was Miss USA for 1961-62. Odum won her title in the
pageant held in New York City's Carnegie Hall in August 1961. Also
involved in bringing the pageant to Huntington was Keith L. Black.
An article explains that "The Miss USA franchise had
been offered to the city of Huntington by the Miss World directors in
London by virtue of JoAnn Odum's success in winning 1962s contest and then
placing sixth in the Miss World competition."
The article adds that the offer was "turned down by the
city but Miss Odum did not want to let such an opportunity slip by her
home town. She called Black, who had just finished last year's Teenage
Miss America Pageant, and he flew to a meeting with Miss World officials.
He came home with the franchise and the responsibility of staging Miss USA
of 1962-63." Because of the pageant's success, the beauty contest returned
to Huntington the following year for the last two weeks of August.
As was the case in the 1962 contest, more than a month
prior to the 1963 pageant, photographs of contestants, usually clad in a
swimsuit, and with a brief amount of information about each young woman,
began prominently appearing in either the morning Herald-Dispatch or in
the afternoon Huntington Advertiser. This publicity generated a great deal
of interest in the upcoming event.
As early as August 7, 1963 (ten days before the arrival
of the first contestant), "downtown Huntington began to take on a festive
air. Banners and bunting were flying on Third Avenue." The beauty festival
began on August 18 with the arrival and checking-in of contestants at
pageant headquarters at the Frederick Hotel on Fourth Avenue and 10th
Street.
Beauty contest winners representing 36 states and more
than half a dozen major cities sent their candidates to take part in the
pageant.
During the first week the contestants were taken on a
three-day tour of the state that included Parkersburg and Blennerhassett
Island, Charleston and the State Capitol, and Beckley for the outdoor
drama "Honey in the Rock" and a tour of an exhibition coal mine.
Other pageant-related activities included "The World's
Largest Championship Rodeo" at the Field House, an event that featured TV
"Bonanza" star Lorne Greene; a golf tourney at the Glenbrier Country Club
on Route 2, bowling, a barbeque, a fashion show, a high school football
game, a nighttime gathering of the beauty contestants, a U.S. Navy air
show featuring the flying team of the Blue Angels, a Miss USA Grand Ball
and a Grand Parade.
Celebrities involved in the pageant were TV Western
star Clint Walker, of "Cheyenne" fame, actress Patty Duke, and stage,
movie and television star Gordon MacRae, who headlined the entertainment
program for the finals.
A fashion show took place on the Thursday night before
the finals with the contestants as models at the Field House event which
drew an audience of almost 4,000, states an article. On Friday night
contestants and celebrities joined the public at the Field House for the
Grand Ball with entertainment by local bandleader Mel Gillispie and his
orchestra. Contestants were escorted by members of a Marshall fraternity.
According to a news story, there were eleven judges for
the finals including JoAnn Odum, Huntington's former Miss USA who captured
the title in 1961; Eva Gabor, TV entertainer and actress; Milton Ferguson,
Huntington and Wayne attorney and former state tax commissioner, Fred
Haddad, president of Heck's Inc. of St. Albans; and Cecil Thompson of Ft.
Lauderdale, Fla., a former Huntington mayor.
Amedee Chabot, Miss USA for 1963 who had won her title
in Huntington the previous year, was at the 1963 finals to help crown her
successor. A crowd of 6,000 filled the Field House for the finals that
began at 8:30 on Saturday night. The contestants were introduced
alphabetically by state and paraded in swimsuits of red, white and blue.
Shortly after 10 p.m., the field was narrowed to 15
semi-finalists. The winner and Miss USA-World for 1964 was 18 year old
Michele Metrinko, Miss New York City and a student of foreign service at
Georgetown University. Miss Metrinko was described as 5'8" with blonde
hair and blue-eyes.
In late August 1964, Huntington again geared up for
another national beauty contest. This time it was the Miss United States
Pageant. Pageant headquarters were in the Prichard Hotel at 6th Avenue and
9th Street.
The pageant had its share of celebrities including
six-foot-six TV Western star Clint Walker, who fell off his horse at the
rodeo for the 1963 Miss USA Pageant. It adds that at the 1964 pageant,
Walker "declined to get on a horse."
A new feature in the pageant was that 12 of the 29
contestants were selected as semi-finalists in the first round held on
Friday night, August 28, at the Field House. "The public and contestants
won't know who the 12 finalists are until the Saturday night finals,"
states an article.
During the semi-finals, entertainment was furnished by
The Lawrence Welk Trio featuring songs by Jimmy Roberts and Joe Feeney and
backed up by local bandleader Mel Gillespie's orchestra.
On Saturday morning, there was a parade with 46 cars
including eight high school bands that moved along Fourth Avenue from
Seventh to 16th Street, while the contestants rode in a fleet of white
convertibles.
In an August 29 news story, pageant executive director
Keith L. Black predicted that "If all went well, the pageant would surpass
the Miss America contest in Atlantic City within a few years."
For the Saturday night finals, Michael Landon, "Little
Joe" of the TV Western "Bonanza," Donna Douglas, "Elly Mae" who was on the
TV series "The Beverly Hillbillies," and Jim Roberts of "The Welk Trio,"
were on the entertainment program between segments of the competition
leading to the selection of the new Miss United States.
Rick Jason of the TV series "Combat" was emcee for the
finals.
An article reports that the pageant winner and new Miss
United States would receive a $10,000 prize -$5,000 in cash and $5,000 in
scholarship money to the accredited college of her choice.
Unlike the Miss USA pageant finals in 1962 and 1963,
there was a question-and-answer segment of the Miss United States finals.
Around midnight, August 29, 1964, the pageant winner
and Miss United States for 1964-65 was selected by the panel of judges.
The new beauty queen was Miss Illinois, Donna Rae Wood, "a blonde beauty"
from South Holland, Illinois.
Miss West Virginia was named "Miss Photogenic."
During all three national beauty pageants held in
Huntington, newspaper articles reported contestants commented how much
they liked the state of West Virginia, its climate, scenery and,
especially, the people.
In a telephone interview, Mrs. JoAnn Odum Aldrich, of
Wilmington, Del., recalled the 1962 and 1963 Miss USA pageants in
Huntington. She explained that she was actively involved in the 1962
pageant, mainly helping Keith Black, who was the pageant's executive
director. Black, who was a personal friend and who died in 1996, "got the
business community behind the pageant," but it was a difficult job to
bring it to Huntington, says Aldrich. "It was a miracle it happened," she
recalled.
Aldrich's brother, Jim Odum, Jr., of Huntington, drove
cars in the 1962 and 1963 pageants. He recalls that Bob Hope was at the
1962 pageant finals. Traditionally, the winner of the Miss USA crown went
with Hope on one of his tours, says Odum.
Willard Harrison was a pageant director during the
three years they were held in Huntington. He states that he was loaned
from his job in the advertising department at the Huntington Publishing
Co., to work with the pageants. He explains that he handled publicity,
which included furnishing information to contestants' hometown newspapers
and providing public relations for contestants.
Harrison stated that "all of the girls" were impressed
with Huntington. They liked its location on the Ohio River, its street
layout, scenery, and the downtown where they thought everything was so
convenient including hotels, clubs, restaurants, movie theaters and
department stores.
Harrison said that there was a lot of volunteer work on
the part of individuals and businesses to make the pageants a success.
He adds that local companies were actively involved
both in bringing in and promoting the pageants.
Also, in 1962, the pageant was "tied in with the
opening of the Uptowner Inn on Fourth Avenue," says Harrison.
Most of the contestants brought their mothers as
chaperones. There also were local women and members of auxiliaries of
service organizations who volunteered to act as chaperones.
All the contestants and their chaperones stayed in the
hotel that was pageant headquarters. The cost of lodging, meals and other
expenses were paid by either the pageant, the girl's sponsor back home or
local sponsors. He recalls that it often was a job for pageant officials
to get contestants and their chaperones to a specific spot on time for an
interview, an appearance or a parade.
Even though it was the first time away from home for
most of the contestants, "No one left here with a bad feeling," says
Harrison. The pageant "brought Huntington together in a special way."
For those weeks during the three years the pageants
were in town, "Huntington was truly the Jewel City," states Harrison. "It
was an experience for the city that can never be repeated."
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