Vanessa Williams and Miss America
Vanessa Williams | |
---|---|
Williams in 2004. | |
Known for | Miss America (First African American) – 1984 |
Title |
Miss America 1984 Miss New York 1983 Miss Syracuse 1983 |
Term | September 17, 1983 – July 22, 1984 (resigned) |
Predecessor | Debra Maffett |
Successor | Suzette Charles |
Religion | Roman Catholic |
Awards |
Preliminary Talent (Voice), "Happy Days Are Here Again"[1] Preliminary Swimsuit[1] |
Vanessa Williams (born March 18, 1963) is an American actress, singer, and fashion designer. She initially gained recognition as the first African American recipient of the Miss America title when she was crowned Miss America 1984 in September 1983. Several weeks before the end of her reign, however, a scandal arose when Penthouse magazine bought and published unauthorized nude photographs of Williams. Williams was pressured to relinquish her title, and was succeeded by the first runner-up, Miss New Jersey 1983, Suzette Charles. Thirty-two years later, in September 2015, Williams served as head judge for the Miss America 2016 pageant. At the beginning of the event, Miss America CEO Sam Haskell made a public apology to Williams for the events of 1984.
Miss America 1984
[I had] no idea that winning a Miss America title in 1983 would actually be so significant to people that had lived through the civil rights movement. And that to me was such an honor but also something that I had no idea the weight, and that there might be some bad consequences. To have white people who wanted to kill me because I was black and to have death threats against my family because they felt that I was tarnishing the Miss America crown because I was a black person. So it was an incredible time.
—Vanessa Williams in 2011 (Who Do You Think You Are?)[2]
When she was 20 years old, Williams was approached by scouts from the Miss Syracuse pageant who had seen her perform while a student at Syracuse University. Despite their encouragement,[3] Williams was not interested in participating in the pageant. She later changed her mind when she realized that she could earn scholarship money.[3] Although she had never participated in a beauty pageant before, she won the title of Miss Syracuse in April 1983. She then went on to win Miss New York in July 1983[3] During the preliminaries for the Miss America pageant, Williams won "Preliminary Swimsuit" and "Preliminary Talent" (with a vocal performance of "Happy Days Are Here Again").[1] She was also crowned Miss America 1984 on September 17, 1983, becoming the first African American woman to win the title.[1][4][5][6][7][8]
During her reign as Miss America Williams was criticized in some venues for winning. She later stated that "there were a lot of people that did not want me to be representative of the United States and Miss America. And not just white people alone. There were a lot of people who had issues [...] I was too light. My eyes were the wrong color. My hair wasn't the right texture and getting criticism for being who I was."[9] She was also the target of persistent racist hate mail and death threats (which she documented in her memoir, You Have No Idea).[3][10][11] Thirty years later, when Miss America 2014 Nina Davuluri (who was also a former Miss New York and Miss Syracuse) became the target of a racist social media backlash, Williams stated:
- When I met [Davuluri] we were talking how coincidental it was ... It’s crazy. Same night, same locale, and same state. And unfortunately, same bashing as well ... I wrote a book about everything that I went through, and I spent a lot of time talking about the death threats, the FBI, the sharpshooters ... it was a graver situation and more dangerous years ago—the change that was happening and the uproar because of the color of my skin. I don’t know all of the negativity [towards Nina], and I frankly could care less, but I heard some of the comments about whether she’s Muslim and what religion she is, which is ridiculous.[11]
Williams would later comment that she was one of five minority contestants that year, noting that ballet dancer Deneen Graham "had already had a cross burned on her front yard because she was the first black Miss North Carolina [1983]."[3] She also pointed out that "Suzette Charles was the first runner-up, and she was biracial. But when the press started, when I would go out on the - on the tour and do my appearances, and people would come up and say they never thought they'd see the day that it would happen; when people would want to shake my hand, and you'd see tears in their eyes, and they'd say, I never thought I'd see it in my lifetime - that's when, you know, it was definitely a very special honor."[3]
Resignation
It began in the summer of 1982. I had finished my exams the first week of May at Syracuse University and came home to find a summer job. I saw an advertisement in a local newspaper reading "models wanted," so I called up and talked to Tom Chiapel, who was the photographer and part-owner of TEC studios. He said to come down for an interview ... When I returned later to pick up the proofs, Tom Chiapel indicated that he needed a makeup artist. He offered me an audition, so I came in and did a face. He decided to have me work for him as a makeup artist-receptionist ... I had worked there for a month and a half when Tom Chiapel mentioned several times that he'd like to shoot me in the nude. I had never posed nude and I was curious. I was 19 years old. I agreed. He assured me that none of the photographs would ever leave the studio. He assured me ... I trusted him not to do anything with the photographs. That was my error. I did not give my consent to him or Penthouse to ever have them published, used in any magazine or in any way. Nothing. I signed an application giving my height, weight, color of hair and my talents ... I never told anyone about the pictures, not even my parents. I did not think it was a concern. We had made an agreement they would never be published. I feel as if I were just a sacrificial lamb. The past just came up and kicked me. I felt betrayed and violated, like I had been raped.
—Vanessa Williams in 1984[12]
In July 1984, two months before the end of her reign, Williams learned that nude photos of her (taken before her involvement with the pageant) would be published without her consent in a future issue of Penthouse. Williams believed that the photographs (which were private) had been destroyed and stated that she never signed a release permitting publication or use of the photos in a public format.[13] In contrast, Hugh Hefner the publisher of Playboy, was also given the opportunity to publish these photos but turned it down stating: "The single victim in all of this was the young woman herself, whose right to make this decision was taken away from her. If she wanted to make this kind of statement, that would be her business, but the statement wasn’t made by her."[14][15]
The black-and-white photos dated back to the summer of 1982 (after her freshman year at Syracuse University) when she worked as an assistant and makeup artist for Mount Kisco, New York photographer Tom Chiapel. Williams stated at the time that Chiapel said that "he had a concept of having two models pose nude for silhouettes. Basically to make different shapes and forms. The light would be behind the models. I was reluctant, but since he assured me that I would be the only one to see them and I would not be identifiable in the photographs, I agreed. He had also gotten another model to agree to this."[12] In a 2012 interview with NPR, Williams discussed these events stating that her mother:
- Kept saying, 'you're just like your father; you're too trusting' And there's a part of me that, I do give people the benefit of the doubt ... it's also being free ... that was the mode I was in at that particular time, when I took those racy pictures, because I was already in college so you can't tell me what to do. So - I wasn't actually in high school - so my mentality was what - I'm living my own life; I'm a spirited, young woman; I can handle this; I can handle anything. And at 19, you think you rule the world, and you can control things. And a lot of times, you don't.[3]
After learning that Penthouse would be publishing these photos, the Miss America Organization responded by giving Williams 72 hours to resign.[16] Williams later stated that "the heightened spectacle and circus of it all was kind of crazy. I had people saying 'Fight for the crown! Fight for the crown!' and people chanting 'Don't give it up! Don't secede!' "[16] Williams also later noted that the situation was particularly hard on her mother Helen, who felt that she should not resign as Williams had performed her "duties and excelled at everything I was asked to do plus doing 50% more of appearances that were not scheduled because I was the first African American Miss America."[16] Helen was also upset that "the pageant did not come to my support, they felt I needed to resign."[16]
Williams, however, decided to resign and formally announcing her decision at a press conference held on July 23, 1984. The title subsequently went to the first runner-up, Miss New Jersey Suzette Charles who served out the final seven weeks of Williams' reign.[15][16][17] On September 7, 1984, Williams filed a $500 million lawsuit against Chiapel and Guccione, which she dropped a year later stating that she wanted to put the scandal behind her.[18][19] Ultimately, Penthouse published the unauthorized photos in its September 1984 issue which the PBS documentary Miss America described as "the most successful issue Penthouse magazine ever printed, netting publisher Bob Guccione a windfall profit of $14 million."[10]
Aftermath
After her resignation, Williams faced a long period of what she would later describe as "the betrayal, and the humiliation, that happened to me on a grand scale."[3]Essence magazine concurred stating that Williams was the subject of "public shaming and bullying from the public at large"[20] and The Philadelphia Inquirer noted that her "career and reputation tanked. Overnight, [Williams] went from being America's darling to a national disgrace."[21]
" 'I had so much trouble being taken seriously not only because I was a beauty queen but a scandalous beauty queen on top of that,' she said, later adding in relation to Gershwin’s reaction: 'Having that perception of me was when I realized what an obstacle I’d have.' "
—Vanessa Williams in 2016[22]
She would also later state that these events delayed her career by about ten years,[22] as "it seemed like an eternity in which I was the punch line to every late-night monologue ... Joan Rivers, whom I adored and met on The Tonight Show during my reign, was particularly relentless. Just when I figured she'd exhausted every possible Vanessa Williams joke, she'd have a whole new slew of them."[21] Williams would also later tell of one audition that she had during the late 1980s for a theatrical role. She was denied the role, however, because "the wife of lyricist Ira Gershwin decreed: 'Over my dead body will that whore be in my show.' "[22] In addition, her parents experienced "an incredible amount of shame and humiliation" and were equally the subject of harassment at the time.[16][21]
Thirty years after the scandal broke, Amanda Marcotte suggested in The Daily Beast that "we owe a lot to Vanessa Williams for being a pioneer when it comes to showing the world how to recover when you’ve been unjustly shamed for being sexual. Williams could have slunk off into the shadows in shame, which no doubt many people at the time expected her to do. Williams picked herself up and kept fighting for a career as an entertainer, first by becoming a successful singer and then becoming a well-known comic actress ... Sleazy people tried to drag Vanessa Williams down with accusations of being sexual 30 years ago, but she moved on, showing she had nothing to be ashamed of."[23] In addition, Williams commented on her ability to persevere after these events in a 2015 interview with Entertainment Tonight by stating that "you can't give up ... you always have to remember what you're made of and not let circumstances get in the way. They might delay your progress for the moment, but you always have to remember who you are, and that will give you the eyes on the prize."[24]
Miss America 2016
Thirty-two years later, Williams returned to the Miss America stage on September 13, 2015, where she served as head judge for Miss America 2016 and sang "Oh How the Years Go By."[16][25] After this performance, Miss America CEO Sam Haskell issued a public apology to Williams, stating:
I have been a close friend of this beautiful and talented lady for 32 years. You have lived your life in grace and dignity, and never was it more evident than during the events of 1984, when you resigned. Though none of us currently in the organization were involved then, on behalf of today's organization, I want to apologize to you and to your mother, Miss Helen Williams. I want to apologize for anything that was said or done that made you feel any less the Miss America you are and the Miss America you always will be.[25][26][27][28]
Williams responded by stating that she did the "best that I could, in my reign as Miss America, from 1983 to 1984."[25][27][28]
A few months after the pageant, Williams discussed the apology in an interview with Gayle King, Charlie Rose, and Norah O'Donnell for CBS This Morning. King asked her about the circumstances that led to it stating, "I think many people were touched when the Miss America pageant issued an apology to you.”[29] Williams credited Haskell (who was one of her judges during the Miss America 1984 pageant) for orchestrating her return. While both she and her mother initially responded with hesitation to the invitation, Williams finally agreed to participate on the condition that she could sing her song "Oh How the Years Go By" (to symbolize the passing of time since she was Miss America). She didn't know what Haskel would say, stating that she was simply told to stand and wait for him during the commercial break that would take place after her song. It was only when he arrived and placed his hand on her back (where she noticed that his hand was shaking) that Williams realized something significant was about to happen. Williams said that one of the most important outcomes of the apology was the positive impact that it had on her mother, who "endured a lot" during that period.[29]
After the pageant, Suzette Charles (Williams' replacement) stated in an interview with Inside Edition that she was perplexed over the apology and suggested that it was given for the purpose of ratings.[30] Williams had previously commented on the events surrounding her return, stating in an interview with Robin Roberts that "there's a lot of people who feel I should return, so the people who harbor the resentment I understand it but realize that all of those people that were part of the old guard are no longer there."[16] In the same interview, Roberts mentioned to Williams that in the present day (c. 2015), "people now release [similar] things to make a career."[16][31] Williams responded: "That's crazy. To think that oh you can look at a scandal and think that that would be good for your career, where for me it took every ounce of credibility and talent that I had and wiped it out."[16]
Further reading
Articles
- "Vanessa Williams: New Miss America (cover story)." Jet, October 10, 1983.
- "Here She is: Beautiful, brainy, and black, Vanessa Williams is by no means your ordinary beauty queen." Ebony, December 1983: 132-136.
- "Ex- Miss America Endures Pain, Embarrassment Sparked by Flap Over Nude Pictures." Jet, August 6, 1984: 60-62.
- "Letters to the Editor: Miss America." Ebony, October, 1984.
Books
- Shindle, Kate (Miss America 1998). Being Miss America: Behind the Rhinestone Curtain. University of Texas Press, 2014.
- Wiliams, Vanessa and Helen Williams. You Have No Idea: A Famous Daughter, Her No-nonsense Mother, and How They Survived Pageants, Hollywood, Love, Loss (and Each Other). New York: Gotham/Penguin Group, 2012.
Notes
- 1 2 3 4 Singleton, Don (1983-09-18). "Vanessa Williams is crowned the first African-American Miss America in 1983". New York Daily News. Retrieved 2015-09-14.
- ↑ "Who Do You Think You Are?: Season 2, Episode 1, Vanessa Williams (February, 2011)". Who Do You Think You Are?. 2011-02-04. Retrieved 2015-12-05.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Martin, Michael (2010-05-10). "Vanessa Williams On Scandals, TV And Her Mom". NPR (National Public Radio). Retrieved 2015-09-14.
- ↑ "Vanessa Williams's ancestry revealed: One great great grandfather escaped slavery... the other was a politician who left 'a legacy more precious than gold'". Daily Mail. London. February 6, 2011.
'As an African American growing up here in the States, there are a lot of records that we don't have.'
- ↑ "A New York Debut". People. Retrieved February 23, 2013.
- ↑ Wilson, Julee (September 17, 2012). "A Look Black: Vanessa Williams Crowned Miss America In 1983". The Huffington Post. Retrieved February 23, 2013.
- ↑ "Vanessa Williams". CBS News. Retrieved February 23, 2013.
- ↑ "This Day in History – Sep 17, 1983: Vanessa Williams becomes first black Miss America". History.com. Retrieved November 28, 2010.
- ↑ "Vanessa Williams on Her Faith". ABC News. 2010. Retrieved 2016-05-06.
- 1 2 "People & Events: Breaking the Color Line at the Pageant". PBS.
- 1 2 Stern, Marlow (September 21, 2013). "Vanessa Williams, the First Black Miss America, On Nina Davuluri and Racism". The Daily Beast.
- 1 2 Eady, Brenda (1984-08-06). "Vanessa's Story". People Magazine. Retrieved 2015-09-14.
- ↑ "Vanessa Williams Biography". biography.com. Retrieved 2015-09-15.
- ↑ Robinson, Joanna (2015-09-05). "Vanessa Williams Makes Peace with Old Nude Scandal, Returns to Judge Miss America Pageant". Vanity Fair. Retrieved 2015-09-14.
- 1 2 Latson, Jennifer (2015-07-23). "The Scandal That Cost a Miss America Her Crown". Time Magazine. Retrieved 2015-09-16.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Roberts, Robin (2015-09-11). "Vanessa Williams on Returning to Miss America After Scandal". ABC News. Retrieved 2015-09-11.
- ↑ "Vanessa Williams Resigns". Getty Images. Retrieved 2015-09-16.
- ↑ Stark, John; Alexander, Michael (January 30, 1989). "Ex-Miss America Vanessa Williams Overcomes Her Disgrace by Showing and Singing the Right Stuff". People. Retrieved September 25, 2011.
- ↑ "THE REGION; Ex-Miss America Sues Over Photos". The New York Times. September 8, 1984.
- ↑ Lewis, Taylor (2015-09-10). "Vanessa Williams Returns to Judge Miss America Pageant, 32 Years After Scandal". Essence. Retrieved 2015-09-18.
- 1 2 3 Armstrong, Jenice (2014-02-11). "Long past that Miss A scandal, Vanessa Williams is happy she - and pageant - are back in Atlantic City". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 2015-09-15.
- 1 2 3 Driscoll, Kathi (2016-07-12). "Vanessa Williams explores school days and beyond". Cape Cod Times. Retrieved 2016-07-13.
- ↑ Latson, Jennifer (2014-07-23). "Miss America Hypocrisy: The Vanessa Williams Nude Photo Shaming". The Daily Beast. Retrieved 2015-09-16.
- ↑ Chestang, Raphael (2014-11-13). "Vanessa Williams on Her Sexy Appearance on 'The Good Wife': 'It's Starting to Heat Up'". Entertainment Tonight. Retrieved 2014-11-14.
- 1 2 3 Kile, Meredith (2015-09-13). "Vanessa Williams Makes Triumphant, Musical Return to Miss America Pageant". Entertainment Tonight. Retrieved 2015-11-17.
- ↑ Yan, Holly (2015-09-14). "Vanessa Williams gets Miss America apology -- 32 years later". CNN. Retrieved 2015-09-14.
- 1 2 Rogers, Katie (2015-09-14). "Vanessa Williams Returns to Miss America and Receives an Apology". New York Times. Retrieved 2015-09-14.
- 1 2 Brammer, Imani (2015-09-14). "Vanessa Williams Gets An Apology from Miss America, 32 Years Later". Essence. Retrieved 2015-10-25.
- 1 2 "Vanessa Williams on Miss America apology, "The Good Wife"". ‘’CBS This Morning’’. 2015-11-12. Retrieved 2015-11-13.
- ↑ Inside Edition (2015-09-14). "Beauty Queen Who Won Vanessa Williams' Crown: Miss America Apology Was About Ratings". Inside Edition. Retrieved 2015-09-18.
- ↑ France, Lisa (2015-09-14). "Vanessa Williams and the declining scandal of nude photos". CNN. Retrieved 2015-10-02.
External links
Miss America 2016 video clips
- Vanessa Williams Sings Oh How the Years Go By - Miss America 2016, September 13, 2015 ("Oh How the Years Go By")
- Miss America CEO Sam Haskell Apologizes to Vanessa Williams - Miss America 2016, September 13, 2015
- Vanessa Williams and Her Mother Receive an Apology From Miss America Organization - ABC News, September 14, 2015.
Post-Miss America 1984 video clips
- "How Vanessa Williams Endured Her Miss America Scandal" - Oprah's Master Class, Season 4, Episode 7, July 13, 2014.
- "Vanessa Williams Reflects on Becoming the First Black Miss America – Oprah's Master Class, Season 4, Episode 7, July 13, 2014.
- Vanessa Williams at 25 - Singing her way up the pop chart - Journalist Marcus Jones 1988 interview
July 1984 resignation speech video clips
- Prep prior to and beginning of Vanessa William's Miss America resignation speech - Getty Images video, July 23, 1984.
- First half of Vanessa William's Miss America resignation speech - Getty Images video, July 23, 1984.
- Second half of Vanessa William's Miss America resignation speech - Getty Images video, July 23, 1984.
Miss America 1984
- Vanessa Williams crowned Miss America 1984 - Miss America 1984, September 17, 1983
- Vanessa Williams performs "Happy Days Are Here Again," - Miss America 1984, September 17, 1983.
- "Miss America 1984 Vanessa Williams Interview with Bill Boggs" - Bill Boggs 1983 interview
- "President Reagan and Nancy Reagan talking with Vanessa Williams during a state dinner for President Karl Carstens of the Federal Republic of Germany in the cross hall." October 4, 1983 - Ronald Reagan Presidential Library
Awards and achievements | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Debra Maffett |
Miss America 1984 |
Succeeded by Suzette Charles |
Preceded by Eileen Clark |
Miss New York 1983 |
Succeeded by Melissa Manning |