
Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
ALEX BOONE Palisadian-Post Intern Gilli Messer, 16, has been selected as one of six Los Angeles County representatives to attend the California Junior Miss Competition this August in Rohnert Park, north of San Francisco. The Palisades resident will be competing against 52 young women from all over the state for more than $10,000 in scholarships. Junior Miss began in the late 1920s as a local pageant in Mobile, Alabama, and turned into a nationwide event that drew more than 5,000 competitors from every state. The purpose of the competition is to promote education by providing college scholarships for ambitious young women. When Messer first heard about Junior Miss, she viewed it as an opportunity to get a scholarship for college. But once she began to learn more about the competition and meet some of the other people involved, her interest was piqued. ‘At first I was skeptical. It seemed really old-fashioned,’ she said. ‘But now that I’ve learned more about what it’s all about, I’m just really excited to go.’ The competition scores the participants in five different categories. The interview, which accounts for 25 percent of the score, evaluates the contestants based on their responses to a series of predetermined questions. The fitness category (15 percent), ranks the contestants based on their fitness, conditioning and stamina when going through a dance routine. Talent (25 percent) grades the young women based on a 90-second stage performance on a talent that they select. Self-expression (15 percent) ranks the contestants based on a choreographed group routine and a 30-second speech. Scholastics (20 percent) ranks the contestants based on their grades and test scores, and is already compiled when the contest begins. The Junior Miss competition in California this year will lack some of the luster of past years because the national Junior Miss program has closed its doors. There will be no future national competitions, although the state and local events will continue. This has not deterred Messer in the slightest. ‘It doesn’t really bother me,’ she said. ‘There are enough opportunities in the state competition.’ Messer’s record of community and extracurricular involvement is extensive. She is the co-founder and president of Palisades Charter High School’s ‘Knit 4 the Needy’ club, an organization in which the students knit various items of clothing and donate them to the needy. She sings in the Kehillat Israel synagogue choir and dances tap, ballet and jazz. Messer was a Music Center Spotlight Awards singing quarter-finalist and won the nationwide Oreo Cookies Essay contest in 2002. She is also a part of her school’s theater group and recently starred in its musical production of ‘The Pajama Game,’ playing the role of Babe Williams to rave reviews. Palisadian-Post senior editor Libby Motika wrote in a review of the play, ‘Gilli Messer, whether in solos or duets, delivers memorable tunes into the night. Messer, a modern-mezzo leading lady, never fails, when singing ‘I’m Not At All In Love’, or when she joins forces with Rosenstein in ‘Small Talk’ and ‘There Once Was A Man’.’ Messer’s talent and experience in dance and stage performance should pay dividends in the Junior Miss competition, with all of the emphasis on coordination and stage poise. ‘I feel like it has helped a lot,’ Messer said of all her stage experience. ‘I don’t get nervous onstage.’ The Junior Miss contestants will be holding a ‘Dance-a-thon’ on August 6 to help raise funds for the expenses they will incur in preparing for the competition. Messer will take donations made by August 2 directly to the competition. If you are interested in sponsoring Messer, you can contact Arnie Wishnick or Marilyn Crawford at the Palisades Chamber of Commerce by phone (459-7963) or mail: 15300 Antioch Street, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272.