Press Clippings and Media Coverage
Globalization of Beauty Makes Slimness Trendy
October 3, 2002
By NORIMITSU ONISHI
LAGOS, Nigeria - With no success, Nigeria had been sending
contestants to the Miss World pageant for years. Winners of
the Most Beautiful Girl in Nigeria went year after year to
the Miss World competition, and year after year the beauty
queens performed remarkably poorly.
Guy Murray-Bruce, the executive director of Silverbird
Productions, which runs the Most Beautiful Girl contest,
said he had almost resigned himself to the fact that black
African women had little chance of winning an international
competition in a world dominated by Western beauty ideals.
Then in 2000 he carried out a drastic change of strategy
in picking the Most Beautiful Girl and Nigeria's next
international representative.
"The judges had always looked for a local queen, someone
they considered a beautiful African woman," Mr.
Murray-Bruce, 38, said. "So I told the judges not to look
for a local queen, but someone to represent us
internationally."
The new strategy's success was immediate. The Most
Beautiful Girl of 2001, Agbani Darego, went on to clinch
the Miss World title in Sun City, South Africa, last
October. She became the first African winner in the
contest's 51-year history.
Her victory stunned Nigerians, whose country had earned a
worldwide reputation for corruption and fraud. Now, all of
a sudden, Nigeria was No. 1 in beautiful women. Ms. Darego,
who was 18 at the time, instantly became a national
heroine.
But soon pride gave way to puzzlement. In a culture where
Coca-Cola-bottle voluptuousness is celebrated and ample
backsides and bosoms are considered ideals of female
beauty, the new Miss World shared none of those attributes.
She was 6 feet tall, stately and so, so skinny. She was,
some said uncharitably, a white girl in black skin.
The perverse reality was that most Nigerians, especially
those over 40, did not find the new Miss World particularly
beautiful.
The story does not end there, though. In the year since her
victory, a social transformation has begun to take hold
across this nation, Africa's most populous.
The change is an example of the power of Western culture on
a continent caught between tradition and modernity. Older
Nigerians' views of beauty have not changed. But among
young, fashionable Nigerians, voluptuousness is out and
thin is in.
"After Agbani won, girls look up to me and ask me how to
get slim," said Linda Ikeji, 22, an English major at the
University of Lagos.
"Before, fat girls were the rave of the moment," said Ms.
Ikeji, who is 5 feet 8, weighs 130 pounds and now finds
work as a part-time model. "Some fat girls thought they had
an advantage over me. But Agbani changed everything."
Here in Lagos, the commercial capital, the thin "It" girls
are now called lepa, using a Yoruba word that means thin
but that was not applied to people before. The lepa girl
has had a popular song written about her, called simply
"Lepa." Nigeria's booming film industry has capitalized on
the trend by producing a movie, "Lepa Shandi"; the title
means a girl as slim as a 20-naira bill.
To anyone who has traveled across the continent, especially
in West and Central Africa, the cultural shift is striking.
In the United States slimness may be an ideal, but many
ethnic groups in this region hold festivals celebrating big
women. In Niger many women take livestock feed or vitamins
to bulk up.
Among the Calabari people in southeastern Nigeria, fat has
traditionally held a cherished place. Before their
weddings, brides are sent to fattening farms, where their
caretakers feed them huge amounts of food and massage them
into rounder shapes. After weeks inside the fattening
farms, the big brides are finally let out and paraded in
the village square.
Ms. Darego, the same Miss World who has helped change young
Nigerians' perception of beauty, belongs to the Calabari
ethnic group - and thus may seem particularly unattractive
to her own people.
"If she was in a crowd of other African women, I wouldn't
regard her as a beautiful woman," said Ken Calebs-Olumese,
who does not belong to that ethnic group but, as the owner
of the exclusive Coliseum nightclub here, knows beautiful
women.
"The average African woman is robust, has big hips, a lot
of bust," he said. "That's what she offers in terms of
beauty. It's in our culture." Mr. Calebs-Olumese, who is
56, drew a blank at the mention of lepa. Still, he
acknowledged that he was "speaking from my generation's
perspective."
While the transformation in youthful tastes was linked to
the Miss World victory, it started, some said, with an
earlier event.
In 1998, M-Net, the South African network seen across
Africa on satellite television, opened a search for the
"Face of Africa." The winner was promised a three-year,
$150,000 modeling contract with the Elite agency in New
York.
Not surprisingly, M-Net, which shows mostly American movies
and TV shows, chose a skinny, 6-foot-2 teenager from Lagos,
Oluchi Onweagba, who was not considered particularly pretty
here but became a hit on the runways.
"That was the start," said Frank Osodi, 36, a fashion
designer whose studio in the Surulere district in Lagos was
a hive for models and beauty queens one recent morning.
"Before, if you were thin, people thought you were sick,
like an AIDS patient. Now if you have a skinny member in
your family, you don't have to be ashamed."
Indeed, parents are now urging their daughters to take part
in beauty pageants. In the past, the Most Beautiful Girl
competition drew just enough contestants to hold a pageant,
Mr. Murray-Bruce said. For the 2001 contest there were only
40; this year there were 400.
No one is predicting whether the youthful preference for
thinness represents a fad or a lasting cultural change. But
Maureen and Mary-Jane Mekowulu, slim 18-year-old twins who
are students at the University of Nsukka in southeastern
Nigeria and were visiting their parents here, said they
would continue to exercise every morning and abstain from
eating after 6 p.m.
"Because of Agbani, people have realized that slim is
beautiful," Maureen said of the Miss World.
And the Most Beautiful Girl of 2002 would reinforce that
impression, said the contest's producer, Mr. Murray-Bruce.
"She's even skinnier than Agbani," he said.
Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company
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