Miss Teen USA 1994
Miss Teen USA 1994, the 12th Miss Teen USA pageant, was televised live from the Mississippi Gulf Coast Coliseum in Biloxi, Mississippi on 16 August 1994. At the conclusion of the final competition, Shauna Gambill of California was crowned by outgoing queen Charlotte Lopez of Vermont.
Miss Teen USA 1994 | |
---|---|
Date | August 16, 1994 |
Presenters | Bob Goen, Daisy Fuentes and Jamie Solinger |
Venue | Biloxi, Mississippi |
Broadcaster | CBS, WHLT |
Entrants | 51 |
Placements | 12 |
Winner | Shauna Gambill |
Congeniality | Mary Elizabeth Stevenson |
Photogenic | Anjelie Eldredge |
The pageant was hosted by Bob Goen for the first of three years, with color commentary by Daisy Fuentes and Jamie Solinger, Miss Teen USA 1992. Music was provided by the Gulf Coast Teen Orchestra.
This was the fifth and final year that the pageant was held in Biloxi.
Results
Placements
Final results | Contestant |
---|---|
Miss Teen USA 1994 | |
1st runner-up |
|
2nd runner-up |
|
Top 6 |
|
Top 12 |
|
Special awards
- Miss Congeniality: Mary Elizabeth Stevenson (South Carolina)
- Miss Photogenic: Anjelie Eldredge (Washington)
- Best in Swimsuit: Shauna Gambill (California)
- Minolta Photo Contest: Denise Fisher (Maryland)
Scores
|
|
Preliminary competition
The following are the contestants' scores in the preliminary competition.
|
|
Historical significance
- California wins competition for the first time. Also becoming in the 11th state who wins Miss Teen USA.
- Georgia earns the 1st runner-up position for the second time. This was last placed in 1991.
- Kansas earns the 2nd runner-up position for the second time. This was last placed in 1992.
- Missouri finishes as Top 6 for the first time.
- South Carolina finishes as Top 6 for the first time.
- Tennessee finishes as Top 6 for the first time.
- States that placed in semifinals the previous year were Georgia, Indiana, Pennsylvania, South Carolina and Tennessee.
- Indiana placed for the fourth consecutive year.
- Georgia, Pennsylvania, South Carolina and Tennessee made their second consecutive placement.
- California, Kansas and Mississippi last placed in 1992.
- Louisiana and Missouri last placed in 1991.
- New Jersey last placed in 1988.
- Florida last placed in 1986.
Delegates
The Miss Teen USA 1994 delegates were:
Alabama - Melanie McLin Alaska - Kristina Bellamy Arizona - Missy Kline Arkansas - Rebecca Hall California - Shauna Gambill Colorado - Angie Payne Connecticut - Stacey Raffone Delaware - Celina Delgrossa District of Columbia - Tamara McDowell Florida - Christy Fatzinger Georgia - Whitney Fuller Hawaii - Emily Huff Idaho - Sarah Elizabeth Polk Illinois - Charlotte Martin Indiana - Nicolette Van Hook Iowa - Erika Miller Kansas - Melissa Hurtig Kentucky - Crystal Batahvie Louisiana - Sarah Miriam Louther Maine - Jennifer Hunt Maryland - Denise Fisher Massachusetts - Michelle Neves Michigan - Melissa Jackson Minnesota - Paige Swenson Mississippi - Angie Carpenter Missouri - Tiffany Meyer Montana - Desiree Gravelle Nebraska - Elizabeth Schmidt Nevada - Heather Kittrel New Hampshire - Keri Lynn Pratt New Jersey - Kelli Lynn Paarz New Mexico - Samantha Sengle New York - Kimberly Pressler North Carolina - Valarie Beasley North Dakota - Allison Nesemeier Ohio - Rebecca Reed Oklahoma - Summer Riley Oregon - Jodi Ann Paterson Pennsylvania - Nicole Bigham Rhode Island - Nicole Coletti South Carolina - Mary Stevenson South Dakota - Autumn McKinney Tennessee - Allison Alderson Texas - Jacqueline Pena Utah - Heather Henderson Vermont - Christel Marquardt Virginia - Christin Wilson Washington - Anjelie Eldredge West Virginia - Jonelle Spiker Wisconsin - Tara Llewelowitz Wyoming - Whitney Ahlstrom
Judges
- Marco St. John
- Donna Richardson
- Dean Kelly
- Kate Linder
- John Frazier
- Angela J. Harrington
- Cobi Jones
- Brandi Sherwood
- Sean Kanan
Contestant notes
- Allison Alderson (Tennessee) later won the Miss Tennessee 1999 and Miss Tennessee USA 2002 titles, becoming only one of seven Triple Crown winners. She went on to marry Jay DeMarcus of the band Rascal Flatts.
- One other contestant also competed at Miss America: Michelle Ann Neves, who was Miss Massachusetts 2000.
- Contestants who later competed in the Miss USA pageant were:
- Allison Nesemeier (North Dakota) - Miss North Dakota USA 1998
- Kelli Paarz (New Jersey) - Miss New Jersey USA 1998
- Shauna Gambill (California) - Miss California USA 1998 (first runner-up at Miss USA 1998)
- Kimberly Pressler (New York) - Miss New York USA and Miss USA 1999
- Angie Carpenter (Mississippi) - Miss Mississippi USA 2000
- Jennifer Lyn Hunt (Maine) - Miss Maine USA 2000
- Paige Swenson (Minnesota) - Miss Minnesota USA 2000
- Tiffany Meyer (Missouri) - Miss Kansas USA 2000 (finalist at Miss USA 2000)
- Nicole Bigham (Pennsylvania) - Miss Pennsylvania USA 2002
- Jodi Ann Paterson (Oregon) was Playboy's' Playmate of the Year 2000 and is the first contestant who not born in USA who competed in the pageant. Jodi was born in Indonesia. The others is Rachel Smith (Miss Teen Tennessee USA 2002), Paromita Mitra (Miss Mississippi Teen USA 2009), Thatiana Diaz (Miss New York Teen USA 2010), Kimberly Lane (Miss Idaho Teen USA 2012), Jacqueline Cai (Miss New Mexico Teen USA 2012) and Valentina Sanchez (Miss New Jersey Teen USA 2014).
- Charlotte Martin (Illinois) went on to become a successful singer-songwriter.
- Shauna Gambill (California) went on to win the Miss World USA 1998 title. She was chosen to represent the United States at Miss World 1998 where she placed in the Top 10.
- Keri Lynn Pratt (New Hampshire) is a television and movie actress. She has appeared in the movies Drive Me Crazy and America's Sweethearts. She has guest starred on hit television shows 7th Heaven and Brothers & Sisters.
- Emily Huff's (Hawaii) sister, Ashley, won the titles of Miss Nevada 2001 and Miss Nevada USA 2003.
gollark: That wouldn't be "meta evidence".
gollark: COVID-19 doesn't *always* clear that fast.
gollark: There was something where it killed COVID-19 in vitro at unreasonable (and unsafe) concentrations.
gollark: People do *not* seem very excited about... fluvoxamine or whatever... despite that actually having efficacy.
gollark: Anything for COVID-19, I mean.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.