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Showing posts with label Valérie Bègue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Valérie Bègue. Show all posts

Tuesday, 30 November 2010

Miss France - Miss Ile de France, when third place finishes first

Not a lot seems to be going right for the organisers of this year's Miss France.

At least not as far as determining who's going to represent the region of Ile de France in the beauty pageant this weekend.

After the resignation of the region's first-placed Miss and the disqualification of her runner-up, the area surrounding the French capital will now be represented by its third choice beauty.

Bikini-clad contestants for Miss France 2011 - screenshot from TF1 video

Put aside for the moment the confusing peculiarity that there will be two contests organised this year.

There's the official one by the Dutch TV production company Endemol which holds the rights to the trademark and that's the one viewers will be able to watch on TF1 on Saturday December 4.

Meanwhile a rival pageant run by the lady with the hat, Geneviève de Fontenay who, after donkey's years of organising it had a mighty falling out with Endemol and set up her own "label" so-to-speak, and her "girls" will be "strutting their stuff" a day later away from the glare of national TV.

Forget how much ink column writers have gleefully spilt over the potential string-pulling that could go on around two of the candidates because they have "connections".

Miss Rhône-Alpes, 21-year-old Elise Charbonnier, is the niece of the former international footballer Lionel Charbonnier. Who? Oh yes, the third choice goalkeeper in the squad that won the World Cup in 1998.

And Miss Normandie, Juliette Polge, is the great-niece of the former French president, Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, who is reported to be "delighted" over the participation of the 22-year-old.

Take a deep breath and consider the trials and tribulations of who'll be representing the Ile de France region (that's the area around Paris).

A little bit of background before you plunge into the murky waters as to which girl the region will be sending to join the other 32 in Caen at the weekend.

In their infinite wisdom, the organisers decided that last year's Miss Paris, Kelly Bochenko, would be the last lass to represent the French capital after she posed for saucy pictures of a "pornographic nature" in the monthly magazine Entrevue.

Harsh perhaps as it was certainly not the first time (and doubtless not the last) that a contestant's past, present or future caught up with her.

Undeterred, Bochenko went on to make a name for herself by appearing in that cultural spectacle that was la Ferme Célébrités en Afrique (the French version of The Farm - produced by.....you guessed it...Endemol) and later revealing that she'd had a boob job and now "Felt closer to her ideal of what a woman should look like."

Are you still awake?

Right back to this year's Miss France and the problems surrounding Miss Ile de France.

Initially it was to have been Pauline Darles. The 22-year-old won her passage to the finals back in October.
But she decided to quit while the contestants were going through their paces in the Maldives because she reportedly didn't "appreciate the organisation and spirit" of the competition.

Up stepped her replacement Jessica Muzaton, who was quite literally flown in to fill her shoes.

But horror upon horrors, just as she was getting into her stride it was revealed that the 22-year-old had previously modelled sexy lingerie in a show which took place in a Paris night club last year, according to the national daily Le Parisien.

In case you haven't realised by now each candidate must declare when signing up for the regional competitions that she has never posed for erotic photos or taken part in racy video and the like.

Muzaton had fallen foul of the same regulation that had got Bochenko, Valérie Bègue (Miss France 2008) and Lætitia Bléger (Miss France 2004) among others into hot water.

So now it'll be Sabine Hossenbaccus, who finished third in the competition to find Miss Ile de France election who'll be representing the region in Caen at the weekend to find a successor to Malika Ménard.

Unless, of course, she has a skeleton or two in her cupboard.

Sunday, 14 June 2009

Chloé Mortaud keeps Miss France crown

The battle of the beauty queens here in France is over!

The reigning Miss France, Chloé Mortaud, is being allowed keep her title after a court rejected claims that she had been ineligible for the finals held last December.

They had come from Marine Beaury, the runner-up to Mortaud in the regional contest for Miss Albigeois Midi-Pyrénées in September 2008, a win which had secured the 19-year-old her place in the final.

Beaury maintained that the vote in the regional competition had been rigged and that some members of the jury had close personal ties to Mortaud's parents and that contravened regulations.

But on Friday a court decided otherwise and ruled that there had in fact been insufficient proof to suggest that there had been any influence on the part of Mortaud or her parents on the jury's final decision.

Indeed it went further and ordered Beaury to pay €3,000 towards legal fees, although it stopped short of finding her guilty of "abuse of procedure" as had been counterclaimed by the Miss France organising committee's lawyers.

"The ruling is proof that there's no trickery involved in how the Miss France competition is run," said Geneviève de Fontenay, the president of the committee, who has been organising the contest for 53 years.

"My only regret is that the court didn't split the legal costs equally as this case has cost me a lot even though we won it," added the 76-year-old.

So that would seem to be the end of the matter and the way is now clear for Mortaud - who holds dual French and American citizenship; her mother, Brenda, is an African American who emigrated to France 25 years ago and her father, Jean-Marie, is French - to take part in Miss Europe, World and Universe, the three international beauty pageants later this year.

The whole case might not exactly have done the reputation of the Miss France contest much good, but there again it has been no stranger to controversy in recent years.

Although she kept her crown, the 2008 winner, Valérie Bègue (the former Miss Réunion), was banned from representing France at international level after "suggestive" pre-competition photographs appeared in a monthly glossy magazine.

And the 2004 winner, Lætitia Bléger, was stripped of her title just six months into the job after she posed naked for a well-known monthly magazine.

Wednesday, 29 April 2009

Chloé Mortaud's Miss France crown hangs in the balance

The reigning Miss France, Chloé Mortaud, could lose her title if a case which appeared before the courts on Wednesday goes against her.

The challenge isn't from any of the other 35 competitors Mortaud beat to win the crown on December 6 last year.

Instead it's coming from Marine Beaury, who is disputing Mortaud's eligibility for the final in the first place.

Beaury was the runner-up in the regional qualifying competition, "Miss Albigeois Midi-Pyrénées", a contest won by Mortaud in September 2008 and which secured her place in the final.

In an interview with a monthly glossy magazine, which ironically appeared just after Mortaud had lifted the national title, Beaury claimed that the vote in the regional contest had been rigged.

Some members of the jury, she maintained, had close personal ties to Mortaud's parents and that contravened the regulations of the competition.

Her claims were rejected by the organisers of the regional pageant, but Beaury didn't let the matter lie there.

She got in touch with a group which represents disgruntled ex-Misses in France - yes such a thing exists, "Collectif des Miss en colère" and the upshot has been the case reaching the courts.

Should it go against her, Mortaud could be stripped of her title and forced to return any prize money she has earned or give back gifts she has received.

In recent years, the Miss France competition has been no stranger to controversy just ask the 2008 winner, Valérie Bègue (the former Miss Réunion).

She was involved in a tussle with the doyenne of the organising committee, Geneviève de Fontenay, after “suggestive” photographs of her appeared in the very same magazine to which Beaury initially took her case, just a month after her election December 2007.

Bègue was allowed to retain her title but banned from representing France at international competitions.

And the 2004 winner, Lætitia Bléger, was stripped of her title just six months into the job after she posed naked for a well-known monthly magazine.

A decision on the case "Beaury versus Mortaud" is expected on June 12.

Friday, 13 March 2009

Ouhlala, Miss France faces legal action!

It can sometimes be a tough job being a beauty queen.

Just ask last year's Miss France, Valérie Bègue (the former Miss Réunion) who was involved in a tussle with the doyenne of the organising committee, Geneviève de Fontenay, after “suggestive” photographs appeared in a monthly magazine shortly after her election in December 2007.

Bègue was allowed to retain her title but banned from representing France at international competitions.

And now her successor, 19-Year-old Chloé Mortaud, could be facing a similar fate, but for quite different reasons.

It's a long and convoluted tale - of course - and one that's only slowly unravelling. But here's the story so far.

Mortaud, you might or might not remember, was crowned Miss France 2009 back on December 6 last year.

You can read all about her victory here if you're up for it.

Born and brought up in France, Mortaud actually holds dual French-US nationality.

She’s of mixed race (or métisse as the French say – as was Bègue) with a French father and an African-American mother from Mississippi who emigrated to France 25 years ago.

So Mortaud is in every sense of the word very much a French-American Miss and even attended the inauguration of the US president, Barack Obama, back in January.

Indeed she popped up on French television screens during the proceedings, rather tearfully expressing her pride.

At the election for Miss France she represented the region of Albigeois-Midi-Pyrénées in the southwest of the country, where she qualified back in September 2008.

And that's apparently where her problems started.

Her runner-up at that election, Marine Beaury, claimed in an interview with a magazine - ironically enough the very same glossy monthly that had been Bègue's undoing a year earlier - that the vote had been rigged.

Some members of the jury, she maintained, had close personal ties to Mortaud's parents and that contravened the regulations of the competition.

Her claims were rejected by the organisers of the regional pageant, but Beaury didn't let the matter lie there.

She got in touch with a group which represents disgruntled ex-Misses in France - yes such a thing exists, "Collectif des Miss en colère" and the upshot is that the case is going to court.

It's due to be heard on April 27 - a date for your diaries (if you're interested) and it could result in Mortaud being stripped of her title AND having to return any prize money she earned or give back gifts she received.

So the challenge at the moment isn't coming from any of her 35 other competitors in the Miss France contest in December, but from one who is disputing Mortaud's eligibility to have been representing her region in the first place.

But wait, that's not the end of the story (don't groan). There's more, but there again there would be, wouldn't there?

You see Mortaud's election in December was decided by a combination of votes from viewers 'phoning in to choose their "favourite" and a hand-picked seven-strong celebrity jury.

Now another magazine, Télé 2 Semaines, says it has got its hands on information which reveals that Mortaud only won because she had the backing of that panel.

It claims that Mortaud only garnered 40,000 of the public's 'phone-in vote, placing her fourth of the five finalists. That was almost half the votes received by the runner-up, Camille Cheyere (Miss Lorraine) and the third-placed Élodie Martineau (Miss Pays de Loire).

In effect it was the vote of the seven-strong jury that tipped the balance in her favour, says the magazine, raising even more doubt as to whether Mortaud should even have been crowned the winner.

It wouldn't be the first time such a turnaround has happened in the final according to the magazine. Back in 2006 when that year's Miss France, Alexandra Rosenfeld, finished plumb last of the five finalists among the public's vote, she found herself elevated to the crown by the vote of the jury.

So even if the court decides in April that the disgruntled Misses don't have a case against Mortaud, the rumblings about whether she should be the reigning Miss France could well continue.

Ouhlala indeed!

Monday, 8 December 2008

A French-American Miss for France

This weekend saw the election of Miss France 2009 – an affair carried live on TF1 national television, watched by over nine million viewers, and won by Chloé Mortaud.

Just a week before Miss World 2008 is due to be chosen in South Africa, this country was busy deciding who would carry its crown for next year and, in the words of the organisers, become the face of France and in a sense an ambassador to the rest of the world.

The winner – a 19-year-old with dual French-US nationality.

Whether the whole idea of beauty pageants belong to a bygone era is of course up for debate.

Views range as to whether they really have any relevance to the place of women in the 21st century.

There are those who might see them as degrading, a meaningless jamboree of airheads with legs and other prominent bits and pieces looking for the fast track to domestic and international “stardom” based primarily on their looks.

And then there’s the opinion, as expressed at least by the organising committee here in France, that it’s the chance to find a face, a young woman who can act for a year as a goodwill ambassador for the country both at home and abroad while dedicating time to charitable causes.

You takes your pick and you makes your choice.

Whatever the case, this weekend’s competition and the eventual winner are perhaps both quite revealing in what they say about the make up of France.

For starters take the candidates – 36 of them representing the country’s different regions here in metropolitan (or if you like mainland) France and its overseas departments and territories.

In a real sense, Miss France is a mini Miss World, with contestants coming from around the globe, because French borders aren’t confined to Europe.

Be warned, you might have to reach for your atlas to find some of these places.

From the Caribbean there were Misses Guadeloupe and Martinique (who will also be sending different contestants to Miss World). South America was represented by Miss Guyana.

The Indian ocean island of Mayotte (between northern Madagascar and Mozambique) sent its Miss as did “nearby” Réunion, and from the Pacific ocean there were representatives from New Caledonia and Tahiti.

Let’s not forget North America either while we’re at it, in the shape of the Saint Pierre and Miquelon just south of Newfoundland, whose candidate was making a first time appearance at the event.

And that takes us nicely on the winner, 19-year-old Chloé Mortaud or Miss Albigeois-Midi-Pyrénées as was – that’s a region in the southwest of (mainland) France for those of you still stuck with your noses in an atlas, incorporating the city of Toulouse.

Born and brought up in France, Mortaud actually holds dual French-US nationality. She’s of mixed race (or métisse as the French say – as was last year’s winner, Valérie Bègue, but more on her in a moment) bilingual in English and French and is an undergraduate studying business management in Toulouse.




While the crowning of Miss France 2009 might have been the highlight of the three-hour television spectacle, the anticipated and much touted confrontation between last year’s winner, Valérie Bègue, and the president of the organising committee, Geneviève de Fontenay, never happened.

The two women had a very public falling-out shortly after last year’s event when “suggestive” photographs of Bègue, the former Miss Réunion, appeared in a monthly magazine, Entrevue.

They had been snapped privately a few years earlier and sent anonymously to the magazine after Bègue’s “coronation”, leading to calls from de Fontenay for her to resign as they had contravened a pre-competition contract that contestants sign to guarantee they had never been photographed in compromising positions.

The stand off was eventually resolved with Bègue retaining her title but being banned from representing France at international competitions (such as Miss World or Miss Universe) and de Fontenay instead focussing her efforts on promoting last year’s runner up, Vahinerii Requillart (Miss New Caledonia) and preparing for the 2009 event.

De Fontenay is something of an institution here in France. The outspoken 76-year-old, who’s never seen in public without her trademark hat, has been organising the Miss France competition for 53 years.

She had steadfastly refused to share the stage with Bègue during this weekend’s show and her wish was respected, with the presenter, Jean-Pierre Foucault, informing viewers that “Valérie isn’t here this evening because Geneviève didn’t wish her to be.”

Instead there was a live link to Los Angeles where Bègue said she was “currently in negotiations for a role in a film.”

So peace has returned to the Miss France world for the moment, with the newly crowned Mortaud taking on the coronet for the next year and beginning the endless round of television and newspaper interviews that immediately followed.

Meanwhile next week in Johannesburg, the French contestant will not be Bègue or even Requillart, who has withdrawn from international competition for “personal reasons” but the 2008 third-placed, Laura Tanguy.

One aside to the whole pageant perhaps was its somewhat incongruous TV scheduling.

Not for the first year, while TF1 was showing the event live, over on France 2 and France 3 public television the annual telethon was underway to raise money for medical research.

After more than 30 hours of continuous broadcasting, it finished at 1am on Sunday morning and raised promised donations of more than €95 million.

Finally, back on TF1, perhaps the most memorable moment of the evening belonged to Miss Mayotte, 20-year old Esthel Nee.

When asked what her plans for the future were the first year old law student didn’t hesitate.

“I would like to be in politics – perhaps in the cultural field, and maybe who knows, even become president of France,” she replied.

“This is my first election and maybe not my last.”

Nee finished fourth.

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