Sunday, February 18, 2007

Miss Utah not afraid to be herself

By Sharon Haddock and Amy Choate-Nielsen

Deseret Morning News
HIGHLAND — Katie Millar was really an outside-the-box contestant for Miss America.
Katie Millar
Katie Millar
Not only was Miss Utah the only one to wear a one-piece, modest swimsuit in the physical fitness segment, but she played her electric violin with only three working strings. (The fourth broke just as she started the fast-paced "Souvenir d'Amerique.")
She put her $700 beaded gown up against dresses that easily cost $10,000 or more. It wasn't slit or low-cut, and where it criss-crossed in front, she sewed it up.
She's not accustomed to wearing makeup or flashy jewelry.
Add that to the fact that she's young — only 19 at the time of the competition — and this is her first time competing in any beauty pageants.
That didn't stop her from securing a place among the top 10 or from winning over not only judges but fellow contestants at the January event. (A number of the other women told the TV cameras they would vote for Miss Utah for Miss Congeniality.)
She was fine with fielding the traditional "Mormon" questions from pageant judges: What do you think of polygamy? What's your opinion on abortion? Would you vote for Mitt Romney for president?
Millar knows the path she is pursuing is different, maybe even seen as odd by the rest of the world.
"I wanted to represent BYU, my church, my family and be who I was. I told them at the pageant I'm probably the meatloaf mom from Utah," Millar said.
She was surprised to find herself at the Miss America Pageant. It was never one of her original goals.
"I'm not title-hungry," she said.
More at the Source


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