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MISS FRANCE

Topless pics dash another French beauty queen’s hopes

A French regional beauty queen has had her title stripped after flouting one of the golden rules of the Miss France contest - no raunchy photo shoots. And she's not the first to fall foul of the rules.

Another year, another Miss France nudity scandal – and this time it comes from Miss Centre-Val-de-Loire Margaux Legrand.
 
The 22-year-old woman has been stripped of her royalty less than a month after she was crowned, and now won't have the chance to be named Miss France 2016. 
 
The reason: She had posed in nude pictures years before, which is strictly against the rules of the Miss France competition. 
 
The images were anonymously sent to Miss France director Sylvie Tellier, Legrand told La Nouvelle République.
 
Now booted out of the competition, Legrand decided to share the offending images on her Facebook page. 
 
“I've had a lot of support since sharing the true story with the media, but I've also had a lot of disrespectful comments, with some people even calling me a 'whore',” she wrote.
 
“These messages have been hurtful and inappropriate,” she added. 
 
Legrand noted that the pictures had been taken long before she had any ambition to enter the Miss France competition, and were taken at a time she was trying to build her modelling portfolio. 
 
“We shouldn't be associating nudity with eroticism or vulgarity anyway, but with freedom,” she wrote. 
 
“Let's not forget that being topless actually had a symbolic significance not too long ago.”
 
Legrand joins an ever-growing list of beauty queens in France who've ended up on the royal scrap heap over similar scandals, most recently including last year's Miss Brittany
 
 
The 23-year-old law student also posted a topless fashion snap on her Facebook page.
 
In 2013 Norma Julia was crowned Miss Roussillon but later dethroned when it emerged she had taken part in a photo shoot in scantily clad underwear.

Although she had posed in a studio, semi-naked for photos “that were not pornographic or erotic”, the rules are strict and “they must be respected”, Thierry Mazars, the regional Miss France delegate, told news agency AFP at the time.

And in 2012, Laury Thilleman, the 2011 Miss France champion, was also dethroned after a similar semi-naked photo shoot for Paris Match magazine.

 

 

MISS FRANCE

OPINION: In the year of #MeToo it’s time for the French to switch off Miss France

Eight million French people will watch Miss France on Saturday night but surely in the year that Harvey Weinstein's scandalous behaviour emerged and the #MeToo hashtag took over Twitter, it's time the annual degrading beauty pageant was confined to history, writes The Local's Evie Burrows-Taylor.

OPINION: In the year of #MeToo it's time for the French to switch off Miss France
Photo: AFP
Every year the Miss France contest draws in an astounding eight million viewers.  
 
And the final for Miss France 2018, which will air on Saturday night, is set to attract just as large an audience as previous years despite the spotlight on feminism in 2017 thanks in no small part to the women who exposed Harvey Weinstein.
 
Somewhat worryingly, the longevity of the French competition, now in its 88th edition, is in stark contrast to the story of beauty pageants in other countries, which have either been ditched after TV ratings plummeted or after they were slammed for being sexist and outdated.
 
But it isn't just the competition that's the problem, after all the people behind it aren't forcing millions of people to tune in. 
 
READ ALSO:
Miss France contest ridiculed for dedicating beauty pageant to women's rights Photo: AFP
 
One of the most bizarre aspects of the Miss France phenomenon is how much coverage it gets in the mainstream press. 
 
Some of France's most respected publications and news sites — including those that proudly exposed the stories of sexually abused and harassed women who came forward as part of the #MeToo and #BalanceTonPorc (Squeal on your pig) campaigns — dedicate article after article to the contest.
 
It's not just the articles that make you feel like you have travelled back to the 1950s, but also the photo galleries published in almost every media site that give readers a chance to check out each contestant.
 
This year these slideshows of swimsuit wearing women with beaming smiles sit alongside stories of French actresses accusing Harvey Weinstein of abuse and rape, exposés on harassment in the workplace and articles with stats on the number of women who expect to be groped when they get on the Paris Metro or who have died under at the hands of their partners. 
 
One of France's two newspapers of record saw fit to do a gallery on the contestants in their swimsuit (see below). 
 
 
And another of the country's major newspapers Le Parisien somehow thought it was a good idea to put their gallery of the contestants in the women's section La Parisienne
 
Who knows? Perhaps the people running these sites are choosing not to see the link between the way Miss France reduces its contestants to objects to be pitted against one another and the way women are regularly reduced to sex objects in their everyday lives. But it's more likely they don't care.  
 
One group in France that has drawn a connection between Miss France and the position of women in society at large are the organisers themselves. 
 
Miss France: Why 8.5 million French tuned in
Photo: AFP
 
National director of the competition Sylvie Tellier, who won the title herself in 2002, provoked ridicule when she said this year's “ceremony will be an opportunity to denounce violence against women during an hour of prime time television.” 
 
But this is nothing short of a cynical attempt to offer a salve to a problem that they themselves are contributing to. Trying to legitimise what is essentially a chance to watch women strut around in swimwear and judge them on their appearance with a nod to feminism is laughable.  
 
Unsurprisingly French feminist group Osez le Feminisme is no fan of the competition either.
 
“Sexism against women is still in the majority and its is supported in many ways including this way of valuing women as objects rather than subjects,” spokesperson for the group Raphaëlle Rémy-Leleu told The Local. 
 
To find out just how backward the pageant is, look no further than the guidelines contestants must adhere to if they want to compete. 
 
Contestants should never have been married and have no children. They should not have had any plastic surgery, visible tattoos or piercings and they should not have ever posed partially or completely naked. Several contestants have fallen foul of  that rule in the past and have lost their crowns as a result.
 
Miss France: Are we really still doing this?
Photo: AFP
 
So it seems the ideal “role model” for women should be someone who is untouched and unblemished and hasn't been sullied by previous ogling eyes, that way they're fresh for the audience of Miss France. How modern!
 
 
Clearly there are issues to be addressed in terms of how France sees its women. 
 
And in a year that has seen a wave of women around the world, including in France, show strength and solidarity in coming forward to denounce the aggressors in their lives, the country needs to acknowledge that Miss France is a part of its past, not future.