Miss France


Miss France is a national beauty pageant in France held each year in December, and the winner is designated by the year that begins in the ensuing January. The trademark is owned by the company Miss France SAS,. Local and regional pageants that provide entrants for the Miss France contest are organized by the Comité Miss France, whose emblematic president was Geneviève de Fontenay during 20 years.
The current Miss France is Clémence Botino of Guadeloupe who was crowned on 14 December 2019 in Marseille, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur. Her prizes included 100,000 euros in gifts, use of a Paris apartment for one year and a monthly net salary of 3,000 euros.
Miss France 2016, Iris Mittenaere of Nord-Pas-de-Calais, went on to win the title of Miss Universe 2016 in Manila, Philippines, on 30 January 2017. She is the second Miss Universe from France after 63 years. The first Miss Universe from France was Christiane Martel who wasn't a contestant from Miss France but the winner of Miss Cinémonde 1953.
The national director of France is Sylvie Tellier, former Miss France.

Rules

The pageant is contested by regional winners of local contests from Metropolitan France and its overseas territories. The method of choosing the winner has varied over the years, ordinarily with a jury of celebrities choosing a set of finalists. The winner in recent years was chosen by a weighting of the jury's opinion and votes of television viewers of the pageant. Since the Miss France 2010 contest, the winner is chosen entirely by the votes of viewers for the first time.
The following qualifications are required to become Miss France:
One should not:

La plus belle femme de France

The first organizer of the Miss France contest was Maurice de Waleffe, a journalist. In 1920 he organized a beauty contest whose winner was to be chosen by filmgoers. The contest was called "La plus belle femme de France" – "The most beautiful woman of France".
The first contest had 1,700 entrants, from which a jury chose 49 finalists. Each week for seven weeks, filmgoers received a ballot with seven different names. The winner was Agnès Souret. The contest was repeated in 1921, with the winner Pauline Pô, after which it was discontinued.

Miss France

In 1926, the contest winner was called "Miss France" for the first time. The contest was discontinued after the 1940 contest because of World War II, and de Waleffe died in 1946.
Starting in 1947, several different groups organized national beauty contests, some of which carried the name Miss France. One of them, founded by Jean Raibaut, was formally organized under the name "Club Charly's" in 1950. The contest organized by Endemol traces its roots to a contest run by an informal group led by Guy Rinaldo and Louis de Fontenay that called itself "Comité Miss France" and crowned its first winner in 1947. After the commencement of the Miss World contest in 1951 and the Miss Universe contest in 1952, the "Comité Miss France" formally organized in 1954, with Rinaldo as president, under the name "Comité Miss France – Miss Europe – Miss Universe."
In these early days, however, the organizers of the global contests did not necessarily have entrants who had won what might be considered the corresponding national contest. The entrant for Miss Universe 1953 from France, for instance, was Christiane Martel, who had won the Miss Cinémonde contest, also organized by Rinaldo, and not Sylviane Carpentier, who had won the Miss France contest. Similarly, the entrant for Miss World 1953 was Denise Perrier. As a result, even though France won both the Miss World and Miss Universe contests in 1953, two different women were the winners, and neither was the winner of the Miss France contest.

The Miss France War

The administrative secretary of the "Comité Miss France – Miss Europe – Miss Universe" was Geneviève Mulmann, who along with Louis de Fontenay ousted Rinaldo on 14 September 1956. Louis and Geneviève subsequently both took the name de Fontenay, presented themselves as a married couple and had two children together, though they never married. Rinaldo formed a rival association called the "Comité Miss France de Paris". And "Club Charly's" continued to name its own Miss France. Several lawsuits and countersuits ensued.
The war claimed its first injury in April 1983. The de Fontenay committee had deposed Isabelle Turpault for posing for nude photographs. After Turpault made some disparaging remarks about Geneviève de Fontenay, Turpault alleged that one of the de Fontenay children, Xavier, punched her on the Champs-Élysées.
In 1986, Geneviève de Fontenay registered the trademark "Miss France" with the Institut National de la Propriété Intellectuelle, and defended it from a challenge by the Rinaldo committee. She renewed the trademark in 1996.
In 1999, Eric Morley, founder and organizer of the Miss World contest, revoked the license of the de Fontenay committee and awarded it to the Rinaldo committee, headed by Antoine de Villejoie after Rinaldo's death in 1991. The license was subsequently awarded to Endemol, and starting in 2005 the winner of the Endemol contest or her designated replacement has participated in Miss World.

Big Four pageants

In the early years of the Miss Universe, Miss World and Miss International contests, it was rare for the winner of the Miss France contest to compete in both. From 1961 to 1993, however, the winner of Miss France, or her runner-up, generally competed in international pageantry.
In 1971, the Miss France winner, Myriam Stocco, competed in both the Miss World and Miss Universe contests. From then until 1993, 17 of the 23 Miss France winners competed in both global contests.
Starting in 1994, the de Fontenay committee stopped sending the winner or runner-up to Miss World, a situation that led to the shift of the license to the Rinaldo committee in 1999. Since 2005, however, the entrant in both global contests has been the winner of the Miss France contest organized by Endemol or her designated replacement.
Nowadays, Miss France Organization sends the country's representative to: Miss Universe and Miss World contests. If the reigning Miss France is unable to participate in one of the two contests, it is usually her première dauphine that represents France in the one that she doesn't take part in. However, it is not unusual that one of her other dauphines or even her Miss France predecessor can potentially take that vacant spot.

Titleholders

La plus belle femme de France

Pre-World War II

Post-World War II

;Note

List of Miss France winners by region

^ Resigned

Big Four pageants representatives

France has been represented in the Big Four international beauty pageants, the four major international beauty pageants for women. These are Miss Universe, Miss World, and Miss International and ever sent two delegates to Miss Earth.
The Boldface indicates winner of the Miss World or Miss Universe pageant : France has two Miss Universe, one Miss World and one Miss International.

Hosts

The title has been declared vacant on several occasions, with the runner-up generally fulfilling the term of the winner.
YearWinnerReplacementReasons
1935Elisabeth PitzGiselle PrevillePitz returned her crown after 2 hours and was replaced by Preville.
1954Irène TuncDanielle GénaultNo reason given, though Tunc was already starting to appear in movies.
1956Maryse FabreGisèle CharbitFabre's election rescinded after public protests. Charbit was elected the following evening.
1961Luce AugerMichèle WargnierAuger deposed for being a mother, even though she had informed the organizers.
1966Michèle BouléMonique BoucherNo reason given, although Boulé competed in both the Miss World and Miss Universe pageants.
1972Chantal Bouvier de la MotteClaudine CassereauResigned because of injuries from a fall from a horse.
1978Pascale TauruaBrigitte KonjovicTaurua resigned to return to New Caledonia rather than stay in France for a year. The first runner-up, Kelly Hoarau from Reunion Island, declined also, but competed in the Miss World contest. Konjovic, second runner-up, took the position and competed in Miss Universe.
1983Isabelle TurpaultFrederique Marcelle LeroyDeposed for posing nude in a magazine.
1988Sylvie BertinClaudia FrittoliniDeposed for refusing to participate in Miss Universe contest.
2004Laetitia BlégerLucie DegletagneDeposed for six months for posing nude in Playboy. Restored after apologizing. Successfully sued her agent for manipulating her.
2008Valérie BègueLaura TanguyRepudiated by Geneviève de Fontenay for "scandalous" photos in a magazine, but retained her title with the support of Endemol. She agreed not to compete in the global contests. The first runner-up, Miss New Caledonia, Vahinerii Requillart, decided to not compete in Miss Universe because she wanted to continue studying. Tanguy, the second runner-up, competed in the Miss World and Miss Universe contests.

Fictional portrayals