Hey, Kansas, your beauty queen wears combat boots! And has big tattoos, too.
Photo source: ibtimes.com
She may not have won Sunday night's Miss America pageant - that honour went to Miss New York Nina Davuluri (the first winner of Indian descent) - but as an active member of the military, Miss Kansas, Theresa Vail has made an impact.
Army National Guard Sergeant Vail is also drop-dead gorgeous - literally. The slender blonde is an expert marksman who apparently knows her way around an M-16. She raced motorcycles as a teen until she broke her fingers. She is fluent in Chinese (she has a 3.8 GPA at Kansas State University) and likes to skydive and bow-hunt for deer.
She's even working on a hunting series in production for the Outdoor Channel. (She will be the host.)
While her Miss America profile head shot has her looking like a supermodel, decked out in a hot-pink outfit, fluffed hair, and dangle earrings, other promo websites feature photos of her in full camouflage garb sporting a hunting rifle, bow and arrow, even posing with her prey (a deer, a fox).
But Vail is among only a handful of Miss America Pageant contestants to have military credentials. She is a dental technician with a National Guard medical unit based out of Kansas. Five pageant women since 1992 have been active-duty military, and Miss Utah 2007, Jill Stevens, was the first to work in a combat zone.
Also, Vail, 22, competing this week in the 2014 Miss America Pageant, is the first contestant ever to sport visible tattoos. Sure, other contestants have had tattoos - tiny, hidden ones, according to pageant officials.
But Vail's big bold tat, of the Serenity Prayer, flanks her entire right midriff. She also sports the insignia of the Army Dental Corps on her left shoulder.
The university senior aspires to be an Army dentist. "No one expects a soldier to be a beauty queen. ... Right now, everyone thinks of Miss America as this girl on a pedestal, and I want her to come down from that. She is just a normal girl," Vail said in a recent interview with a newspaper in Kansas.
So there it was, the big tattoo, when she competed Tuesday night in the swimsuit portion of the three-night preliminary competition. She didn't win, wearing a bright-red bikini and the tattoo, done in scrolly vintage lettering. But she apparently scored one for the atypical beauty queen crowd.
With no beauty contest experience, Vail entered her first pageant just nine months ago and became Miss Leavenworth County before winning Miss Kansas in June.
Her pageant platform is "Empowering Women: Overcoming Stereotypes and Breaking Barriers, and she says she wants to show women that the best route is to just be themselves.
It's a subject Vail - who says she was bullied and teased through school - holds dear, hoping to inspire other young women to be whatever they choose.
Even for this weekend "Show Us Your Shoes" Parade - an all-out glittery spectacle where the contestants showed off their flashy sides - Vail is opting to wear her camouflage Army uniform and combat boots instead of the de rigueur five-inch heels and evening gowns being worn by most of the other women.
So she didn't win, but she did make waves. "I think Miss Kansas' participation in the pageant," said Sharon Pearce, president of the Miss America Organisation, "shows us the diverse women that are involved in the competition."
Source: Stuff