Miss America 1933

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Miss America 1933
DateSeptember 5–9, 1933
Venue Boardwalk Hall, Atlantic City, New Jersey
Entrants31
Placements18
Winner Marian Bergeron
Connecticut
  1927
1935  

Miss America 1933, the eighth Miss America pageant, was held at the Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey on Saturday, September 9, 1933. This was the first competition since postponing the event after the 1927 contest. Armand Nichols attempted to organize it with the support of the Mayor and City Council, [1] but without support from either the Atlantic City Chamber of Commerce. [2] or the Hotelsmens Association, [1]

Contents

While the contestants of the pageants of the 1920s mostly represented cities, usually sponsored by local newspapers, 1933 marked the change to exclusively state queens with little newspaper sponsorship. The lack of organizational infrastructure together with the decline of (free) newspaper support and advertising resulted in state qualifying contests that varied widely - from multi-day multi-city contests involving thousands, to a simple selection from a photo array.

The 1933 pageant, a five-day extravaganza on Tuesday-Saturday, September 5–9, 1933, was the first to be held at the Convention Hall (later renamed the Boardwalk Hall). Promised grand prizes (including a RKO screen test, theatrical contracts, Ford automobile, diamond wrist watch and a trip to Bermuda) enticed 31 contestants from 30 states nationwide, [2] far fewer than the 48 state contestants originally planned.

Marian Bergeron, Miss Connecticut, was chosen Miss America but there was so much confusion during and after the vote tabulations that nobody informed Marian she had won. [3] She was unaware of her victory until the dressing assistants placed the banner on her. [3] At age 15 she is the youngest winner in the history of the Miss America Pageant.

The pageant was a public relations nightmare, financially unsuccessful, with a "Keystone Kops series of mishaps" [4] including a stolen crown. Two contestants withdrew, four were disqualified, four were underage, four represented states they did not reside in, and 18 states sent no contestant. Amid the contention and bickering there were allegations the contest was not on the "up and up" [5] and judge Russell Patterson alleged undue influence, stating that Atlantic County treasurer and political boss Nucky Johnson tried to pressure the judges to choose his favorite. [6] The pageant went on hiatus again the following year but was revived permanently in 1935 with new organization.

Results


Marion Bergeron crowned as Miss America of 1933; first runner-up Miss New York State Florence Meyers on the right and second runner-up Miss California Blanche McDonald on the left. (See reference #7 below). Marion was so petite that she was dwarfed by the mammoth crown: "It was so big it came right down over my eyes," Marion recalled with a laugh. Then, during the rush of post-coronation activities, the crown was stolen from Miss America's suite at the Ritz Carlton. Marion Bergeron crowned as Miss America of 1933.jpg
Marion Bergeron crowned as Miss America of 1933; first runner-up Miss New York State Florence Meyers on the right and second runner-up Miss California Blanche McDonald on the left. (See reference #7 below). Marion was so petite that she was dwarfed by the mammoth crown: "It was so big it came right down over my eyes," Marion recalled with a laugh. Then, during the rush of post-coronation activities, the crown was stolen from Miss America's suite at the Ritz Carlton.

Placements

PlacementContestant
Miss America 1933
1st Runner-Up
2nd Runner-Up
3rd Runner-Up
Top 18

Other awards - September 6: Most Beautiful Girl in an Evening Gown Competition


Sep 6 Evening Gown Competition at the American Beauty Ball Gala, Gateway Casino, Somers Point, NJ - from left: third place Miss CA, winner Miss NYS, second place Miss NJ. (see picture of all contestants at the bottom of the page) Evening gown competition.jpg
Sep 6 Evening Gown Competition at the American Beauty Ball Gala, Gateway Casino, Somers Point, NJ - from left: third place Miss CA, winner Miss NYS, second place Miss NJ. (see picture of all contestants at the bottom of the page)
ResultContestant
Winner of the Evening Gown competition
Second Place
Third Place
Semi-Finalists

Contestants


1933 Miss America panorama.jpg
29 Miss America contestants with Pageant Organizer Armand Nichols and hostess Miss Atlantic City (Miss Maine is missing as she had no bathing suit; Miss Oklahoma had withdrawn due to hospitalization with appendicitis). Thank you to Louis K. Meisel for sharing this from his Miss America panorama collection.
State/CityNameHometownAgePlacement
Flag of Arkansas (1924-2011).svg Arkansas Vivian FergusonLittle Rock21Disqualified - married [8]
Flag of California (1924-1953).png California Blanche McDonaldHollywood, Los Angeles182nd runner-up, #3 Evening Gown competition
Flag of Connecticut.svg Connecticut Marian Bergeron West Haven15Winner
Flag of Delaware.svg Delaware Victoria GeorgeNewark19
Flag of Washington, D.C. (1917).png District of Columbia Rita BurnsWashington, D.C.19Top 18
Flag of Idaho (1927-1957).png Idaho Margaret Wittman [9] Spokane, Washington19Disqualified - residency
Flag of Illinois.svg Illinois Lillian Mary Kroener [10] St. Louis, Missouri18Disqualified - residency
Flag of Iowa.svg Iowa Eleanor Alma DankenbringManning, Iowa20Disqualified - residency [11]
Flag of Kansas (1927-1961).svg Kansas Pauline SayreWichita23
Flag of Kentucky.svg Kentucky Lucille RaderBerea14Top 18
Flag of Louisiana (1912-2006).svg Louisiana Marjorie HaglerWinnfield18Top 18
Flag of Maine.svg Maine Iva Stewart Hebron19Top 18
Flag of Maryland.svg Maryland Dorothy DennisBaltimore16
Flag of Massachusetts (1908-1971).svg Massachusetts Elsie TaylorSouth Walpole23Top 18
Flag of Michigan.svg Michigan Barbara StrandDearborn17Top 18
Flag of Mississippi (1894-1996).png Mississippi Dorothy EleyMoss Point24Top 18
Flag of Missouri.svg Missouri Marie LaTourette MarksSt. Louis15Top 18
Flag of New Hampshire.svg New Hampshire Letha Langley [12] Caribou, Maine19
Flag of New Jersey (1896-1965).png New Jersey Gertrude ChristmanRidgefield15Top 18, #2 Evening Gown competition
Flag of New Mexico.svg New Mexico Julia ValdezAlbuquerque18
Flag of New York City (1915-1977).svg New York City Elsa DonathBronx, New York City19withdrew [13]
Flag of New York.svg New York State Florence MeyersEast Rockaway, Long Island211st runner-up, #1 Evening Gown competition
Flag of North Carolina (1885-1991).svg North Carolina Leola CouncilmanBonlee20
Flag of Ohio.svg Ohio Corinne PorterYoungstown19Top 18
Flag of Oklahoma (1925-1941).svg Oklahoma Joanne AlcornPonca City16withdrew [14]
Flag of Pennsylvania.svg Pennsylvania Geraldine GlassmanPhiladelphia18Top 18
Flag of Vermont.svg Vermont Nettina Anne Rich [15] Norton, Massachusetts19
Flag of Virginia (1861).svg Virginia Evangeline GlidewellDanville183rd runner-up
Flag of Washington (1923-1967).png Washington Gladine SweetserSeattle22Top 18
Flag of West Virginia.svg West Virginia Mildred FettyClarksburg20Top 18
Flag of Wisconsin (1913-1981).svg Wisconsin Marie Marguerite HuebnerPortage19Top 18
program of the 1933 Miss America Pageant - history, program of events, advertisements, but nothing on the contestants (18-page pdf) 1933 Miss America program.pdf
program of the 1933 Miss America Pageant - history, program of events, advertisements, but nothing on the contestants (18-page pdf)

Notes and references

  1. 1 2 "Miss America The Dream Lives On", by Angela Saulino Osborne, p. 84
  2. 1 2 "Stage, Screen Offers Made Miss America". Atlantic City Press. 1933-09-11. p. 1.
  3. 1 2 "Miss America History 1933". Archived from the original on 2013-05-29. Retrieved 2013-07-14.
  4. "Miss America The Dream Lives On", by Angela Saulino Osborne, p. 85
  5. "Beauty Title Lines Field Against N. Y." Atlantic City Press article, September 9, 1933
  6. circa 1955 gossip magazine story by Russell Patterson - "I was in the lobby of the Ambassador Hotel with another first-time judge, artist Peter Arno, when we were buttonholed by two rough-looking agents from Nucky Johnson's office. 'This is the name of the winner Johnson wants you to pick,' they said, flaunting a piece of paper at us. 'If you know what's good for you, you'll vote for this girl.'" [Patterson and Arno did not]
  7. "Connecticut Platinum Blonde, Sweet 16, Is 'Miss America'", the Philadelphia Inquirer, September 10, 1933, p. 1 - "Miss New York State" - "Florence Meyers, 19-year-old brunette, was the runner-up". (Note: several 1933 newspapers reversed the names on first and second runners-up, so MAO had them reversed until 2005 when MAO historian Ric Ferentz corrected it. Previous to 2005 virtually all sources, including MAO and Osborne's 1995 "Miss America A Dream Lives On" (appendix, p.5), list the finalists' order incorrectly as Bergeron, McDonald, Meyers, and Glidewell. The 1933 Los Angeles Times confirms that hometown contestant Blanche McDonald was the second runner-up.
  8. Both Miss AR Vivian Ferguson and Miss KY Lucille Rader were chosen in photo arrays in May to the prestigious Court of Honor of the International Exposition (1933 World's Fair) in Chicago, to compete on May 26 for Queen to dedicate its opening. Although single when she applied, Vivian married Charles Stanley on May 20 prior selection of the Queen. In Atlantic City Vivian admitted she was married and stated that Miss America MidWest promoter Jimmy Carrier simply chose her to be Miss AR.
  9. Miss ID Margaret Wittman said she met Carrier in 1931 in Washington State when he was with a theatrical organization; he sent for her to be a contestant in the Miss America Pageant. (Sep 10th Marion OH newspaper)
  10. Miss IL Lillian Kroener had competed in the Miss MO contest and lost to Marie Marks! (St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 13 July 1933). She authored an 8-page article published in newspaper installments in October 1933 and in the magazine "Romantic Confessions" in May 1934 titled "Beauty and the Beasts: The Amazing Adventures of Miss Illinois In a Recent Beauty Pageant". In the expose she stated that MidWest promoter Jimmy Carrier was one of the judges at the Miss Missouri contest (so he was very well aware in July that she was from St. Louis), and "showed me letters from an alleged pageant promotion director authorizing him to appoint any girls he thought suitable to wear the banners of those states not holding local beauty contests for the purpose of selecting a representative to the National Pageant."
  11. When asked to prove residency, a third of the contestants could not, including Miss IA Eleanor Dankenbring. Director Armand Nichols sent telegrams to those ten hometown mayors for confirmation; seven were returned and three were not -- ID, IL and IA -- and they were disqualified. While ID and IL were not from those states, IA was from IA; perhaps Mayor Albert Wiese had trouble verifying Eleanor's residency as she was the only Dankenbring in Manning IA, orphaned and living with her married maternal aunt's family for the past six years. Similarly to AR, ID, IL and KY, Eleanor Dankenbring was informed by MidWest promoter Jimmy Carrier that she had been selected as Miss IA, apparently noticing her in the Valparaiso IN June 16 newspaper where she was pictured as winner of a photo-array beauty contest at Valparaiso University.
  12. 1933 newspapers spelled her name as Leita Laugley/Laughley. Despite much research by many, she was not positively identified as Letha Langley until October 2023 when two 1933 Bangor, Maine newspaper articles were found listing her as winning the title of Miss Eastern Maine; her obituary did not mention her participation in the pageant. It seems that the New England promoter John Welch simply replaced her Miss Eastern Maine sash with a Miss New Hampshire one in Atlantic City.
  13. Sep 11 Atlantic City and Sep 10 Philadelphia newspapers: Miss NYC Elsa Donath withdrew at 5 p.m. on Sat., Sep 9 just before the final judging. The Atlantic City newspaper stated her manager Harry Arder, publicity man for RKO, told Armand Nichols the Pageant "was not on the up and up". The Philadelphia newspaper stated that Hal Olver was Elsa's manager and he double-crossed on the screen test agreement between Olver and Nichols, calling the Pageant "100 per cent phoney". Nichols' aide Noel Sherman claimed RKO wanted to sabotage the Pageant in order to take it to NY in 1934. RKO, who had sponsored both New York contestants, gave the screen test prize to Elsa.
  14. Atlantic City and Philadelphia newspapers: Miss OK Joanne Alcorne was hospitalized with appendicitis the first day of the pageant
  15. Miss VT Nettina Rich was the last 1933 contestant to be identified; in 2016 her 2005 Norton MA obituary was found by Daryl Schabinger and Donna Hay. She was crowned Miss New England on August 11, 1933 at a regional pageant in Fall River, MA. As with Miss New Hampshire, it appears New England promoter John Welch simply swapped her Miss New England sash for a Miss Vermont one in Atlantic City. She gave several newspaper interviews in November calling the Pageant "a racket".

Secondary sources

Sep 6, 1933 American Beauty Ball Gala, Gateway Casino, Somers Point, NJ. Dinner and judging for the "most beautiful girl in an evening gown". 1933 American Ball Gala.jpg
Sep 6, 1933 American Beauty Ball Gala, Gateway Casino, Somers Point, NJ. Dinner and judging for the "most beautiful girl in an evening gown".


  • Osborne, Angela Saulino (1995). "Miss America The Dream Lives On" "A 75 Year Celebration" p.84-85. Taylor Publishing Company. ISBN   0-87833-110-7.