Showing posts with label Karla Paula Henry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karla Paula Henry. Show all posts

24 July 2009

Karla Paula Henry Graces Miss USA Earth 2009


Miss Earth 2008 Karla Paula Henry of the Philippines graced the coronation night of Miss USA Earth 2009 pageant that took place in Nevada, USA. The pageant was won by Amy Diaz of Rhode Island. She's US representative to the 9th edition of Miss Earth in Manila, Philippines in October this year.

Another beauty who graced the event is Miss Cuba Earth 2009 Jamillette Gaxiola. Jamillette and Amy will be battling each other at the Miss Earth 2009 for the crown.

15 July 2009

Miss Earth Gets a new crown?

Miss Earth 2008 Karla Paula Henry of the Philippines with the new Ramona Haar-made crown

Miss Earth's official website has a new look. You gonna love it. It has a new domain name also - from www.missearth.tv to www.missearth.info.

I was looking for updates about this pageant when I discovered this. But there is one thing that I'm curious about. Miss Earth will reveal its new crown soon.

The teaser goes like this, "Over 80 gems from all over the world on one coveted headpiece - The NEW Miss Earth crown, Unveiling soon"

We all knew that the crown lying on the head of Karla Paula Henry, the current Miss Earth, is new as it was only introduced in November during the latest edition of the pageant. It was designed by Ramona Haar Fine Jewelry and its value is US$25,000.

The new crown is still a masterpiece of Ramona Haar.

11 May 2009

Sandra Inez Seifert Wins Miss Philippines Earth 2009: A Sweet Revenge

Sandra Inez Seifert wins the right to represent her country, the Philippines, at the 9th edition of Miss Earth, the third biggest beauty pageant in the world, sometime in October this year in Manila.

Seifert was crowned last Sunday night. May 10, as Miss Philippines-Earth 2009 in the Arena Entertainment and Recreational Center of the People in San Juan City and aired over ABS-CBN Channel 2. She represented the province of Negros Occidental.

The beauty queen, 24-year old Filipino-German nurse, bested more than 40 candidates.

This is definitely a big victory for Sandra after she was disqualified last month from the rival beauty pageant that selects Philippines' representatives to Misses Universe, International and World.

Just two days before the coronation night of Binibining Pilipinas 2009 (Miss Philippines 2009), Sandra was disqualified after she was discovered to have posed for a men's magazine. In fact, her pictures that appeared in Maxim (Philippine edition) are not scandalous. She was just wearing what beauty contestants definitely wear during swimsuit competitions. The pictures were just made controversial by the hypocrites of the Binibining Pilipinas.

Indeed, this victory is a sweet revenge for Sandra who is now aiming the title of Miss Earth 2009. Another Filipina beauty queen, Karla Paula Henry, is the current titleholder.

Going back to the result of the pageant, aside from Seifert, Grezilda Adelantar was named Miss Phillipines Eco Tourism; Miss Philippines Fire is Patricia Marie Tumulak from Quezon City; Miss Philippines Air is Michelle Martha Braun of Aklan and Miss Philippines Water is Catherin Loyola of Sydney, Australia.

Miss Philippines Earth is now claimed by many beauty fans as the biggest beauty pageant in the Philippines drawing around 40 candidates every year.

The semi-finalists who made to Top 10 are Alexis Go of Manila, Tessa Kruger of the Filipino community in Canada, Monique Teruelle Manuel of Bataan, Vanessa Johnson of Pampanga (She is also a semi-finalist of Binibining Pilipinas 2009) and Kirstie Joan Babor of Alegria.

Miss Earth-Philippines titleholders dedicate their year to promote environmental projects and to address issues concerning the environment. The winners also serve as the spokesperson for the Miss Earth Foundation, the United Nations Environment Programme and other environmental organizations.

17 November 2008

Karla Paula Henry - Miss Earth 2008



Everything is interconnected. Talk about replanting trees on hillside watershed areas and the issues of overdevelopment and climate change arise. Recall a seminal childhood experience and conversation touches upon the poor public educational system we have. Look for an exemplary environmental advocate willing to tackle the grim and grimy details among the grassroots and you uncover a gorgeous beauty queen.

The Miss Earth Pageant proves that no degree of separation removes divinely gorgeous beauty queens from the world and its troubles. We all share the same planet, the pageant highlights. Sultry allure, regal composure, keen intellect, disarming candidness, down-to-earth humility and genuine conviction can coexist in the same woman. So proves 22-year-old Karla Paula Ginteroy Henry, newly crowned Miss Earth 2008.

Well beyond putting a pretty face on environmentalism and lending her name to projects, Miss Earth wants to be directly involved in programs. She wants to get her hands dirty, be it with planting trees, cleaning up shores or educating youths in depressed areas. Speaking on an audacious plan to plant 20,000 trees, “If we get others to help it should be very easy. But what my group and I are talking about is that the point is that we do it ourselves. We represent. I don’t mind the sun.”

Beyond the initial excitement of starting projects and ribbon-cutting ceremonies, Henry demonstrates concern for the long-term perpetuation of her various projects. “That’s what we ask from the government. We’ll do that. But in return, they have to make sure that the trees will not be chopped down.”

The land on which the 20,000 trees are to be planted has yet to be decided. Though she hopes for public land, she is open to the idea of a reforestation effort in private property. Her preference for location highlights her roots: “The mountain areas of Cebu.” The island she fondly calls home has been almost completely denuded and overpopulated, rendering the island dry and hot. Ironically, it is those same hillsides—the island’s watershed that is vital to all—that are being bulldozed and developed as luxury residences today to benefit the few. “That’s why we have our work cut out for us,” she says.

Henry is aware of the issues that surround the seemingly uncomplicated effort of planting trees. She insists on planting only indigenous tree species. Imported fast-growing trees such as gemelina do not support local wildlife. She has learned much about the environment since her entry as a contestant to this year’s pageant.

Asked if she had prior involvement in any environmental advocacy before the beauty contest, she confesses, “To be really honest with you, no. I didn’t. Actually, since I joined this, I really have become aware. I don’t just talk about it. We have been doing a lot for the environment.”

Such candor is refreshing most especially for a beauty queen, the stereotype for which has been less than intellectual or sincere. When Miss Earth talks, it’s definitely not some canned spiel about world peace.

She recalls how the pageant awakened her passion: “When I joined Miss Philippines, there was a very funny story about the first day I saw the other girls, the contract-signing day with Carousel [pageant organizer]. Ms. [Cathy] Untalan [executive director of environmental projects] warned me, ‘If you’re here for the fame and glamour of being a beauty queen, then you’re in the wrong pageant. Here, we’re really serious about our advocacy. We really do get down and dirty with the activities that we do.’ I said, these guys are really serious. I should really join this. I pursued it and I have no regrets.”

“As I went through the pageant, the schools and barangays we visited and the environmental activities we did as a candidate, it awoke something in me,” she reveals.

Back to school

“The one thing that I would like to pursue even after the pageant is the school course [Miss Earth Foundation’s I Love My Planet Earth School Tour]. They really matter. It doesn’t take a lot of your time even after your reign. We go around public school once a week a teach grade-school kids,” she says.

Despite living in the rarified atmosphere of beauty queens she is free from any of airs. Her voice, free from the petty bourgeois (kikay) inflection so common in other candidates, allows her to connect and disarm. This half-Canadian Cebuana is quite comfortable speaking in Tagalog. Though conspicuously stunning, she does not allow vanity to mar her beauty.

More than just an outreach, Henry’s involvement with public-school children is a return of sorts. She studied in a public school in Cebu as a 14-year-old for one year upon her family’s return from Canada. “My dad thought public schools here were the same as those abroad. My father travels a lot, and I really had to transfer school most of the time,” she explains. Her father, Dennis Henry, is in the business of exporting handicrafts to Canada. Her mother Nanette Ginteroy is a Filipina.

Her year at a public school was a formative experience. She confides, “It was uncomfortable at first. To my classmates, I was more white than Filipino. It was more of curiosity than anything. But it turned to be my funnest year in high school. I made a lot of friends there. We still keep in touch even now. They knew me before all the fame and attention of being a beauty queen.”

There are many little bits of this archipelago in Henry. Born in Limay, Bataan, she was raised by her grandparents until the age of four when her family went to reside in Tsawwassen, Canada until she was 14. Even then, she would visit the Philippines every summer and Christmas. Upon her family’s return to the country, they first lived in Albay, Bicol for a year before residing permanently in Cebu City.

Nonetheless, it is advocacy and not fondness for her roots that has led to her preference for environmental values formation for public-school children. “There is a lack of awareness about climate change and global warming even in some private schools,” she notes, adding, “It’s all about promoting the green lifestyle. Of course the children aren’t the ones buying for the family. But they are innocent voices that can influence parents.”

Children can insist that their parents buy products in bulk; doing so means less packaging that ends up as post- consumer waste. They can also insist on products certified as eco-friendly such as tuna that was caught without injury to dolphins or organic vegetables raised without artificial pesticides, herbicides or fertilizer. And as Henry notes children themselves can collectively make great reductions in waste. She examples: “They can choose not to get plastic straws for their drinks, unless they’re drinking them in the car. Miss Earth promotes practical ways to minimize our impact on the environment.”

The Miss Earth Pageant has transformed Henry’s own lifestyle as well. “The greatest change I’ve had is realizing the need for not using plastics. It’s amazing how when you buy even the smallest items in a mall, they have to put it all in plastic bags. Now I’m more conscious about these and say, ‘No, I don’t need those.’ Little things like that really matter.”

My generation

As the first Philippine candidate to win the Miss Earth pageant, Henry has not only brought honor to the country, she has also highlighted a new assertive multicultural generation.

She has a global outlook. She began studying for a degree in Tourism at the University of Cebu in 2005 and was working with Marco Polo Plaza Hotel when she was invited to join the Miss Earth pageant. She recently studied the Spanish language. Her closest friend among this year’s top four runner-up winners—named after the four elements—is Miriam Odemba, Miss Earth-Air from Tanzania. She plans to visit Odemba’s homeland soon. “We plan to climb Mount Kilimanjaro,” she reveals.

Tellingly, her winning answer to the pageant’s final question touched upon another icon of the multicultural generation: Barack Obama.

The finalists were asked, “What would you tell US President-elect Barack Obama about the state of the global environment if ever you were to meet him?”

Henry answered, “Environmental knowledge is something that all of us must share, but most importantly we must teach the youth that this is something that we should instill in them so that in the near future they will be the ones to take care of our mother Earth.” Fittingly, Henry’s statement is backed up by her actions.

“It’s been surreal. All I ever wanted was to compete on the international stage. To win against 85 beautiful women from across the globe—I thought it wasn’t possible,” she says.

Her first foray into the world of beauty pageants was as a student representing her school for Miss Intramurals and Miss Milo Olympics. She joined her first professional beauty contest at age 17 in October 2003. However, her next foray would not be until 2006 when she placed second runner-up in the Miss Cebu pageant.

Undaunted

Henry’s win is also a personal vindication. She has achieved all this success despite many heartaches.

Her parents’ marriage fell apart a few months after they returned to the Philippines when she was but 13 years old. She confides, “I stayed with my father after they separated. I was given a choice and I opted to stay with my dad.”

In March 2008, she competed for the title of Miss Philippines but failed to place. “After Binibining Pilipinas, a lot of people were telling me not to join pageants anymore,” she reveals. Undaunted, she enters Miss Earth despite her father’s disapproval—the same reason for the long pause between her win at Miss Cebu and her forays this year.

“I did not get his blessing for Miss Philippines, Binibining Pilipinas or any other pageant before that. He never watched a single pageant, not even Miss Earth,” she reveals. Further angering her father was the fact that her busy schedule as a beauty contestant took away from their time together during his brief stays in the country.

Nonetheless, after her coronation, she received a call from her father congratulating her. “I am very proud you did what you wanted to do and you didn’t listen to anybody else,” he said. She declares, “The one thing I learned from my dad is to think for myself. He’s stubborn sometimes. He goes his own way and that’s something I really admire.”

It will take a strong will and willingness to go against the tide to heal this planet. It is with her character and independent spirit that Karla Paula Ginteroy Henry best exemplifies Earth’s best hope: a new generation with a new way of thinking and living.
By: Rome Jorge, Lifestyle Editor of  Manila Times

09 November 2008

Miss Philippines Reacts After Winning the Miss Earth 2008 Title




Miss Philippines Karla Henry (2nd R), 22, poses for photographers after winning the Miss Earth 2008 beauty pageant at the Expo amphitheatre in Clark air base in Pampanga, north of Manila November 9, 2008. Henry beat around eighty-five beauties from around the world declared their personal environmental campaigns, with the theme for this year's competition focused on "green lifestyle" during the coronation night on Sunday. In photo from L-R: Miss Brazil Tatiane Kelen Alves, 24, who won Miss Earth Fire, Miss Mexico Abigail Elizalde Romo, 23, Miss Earth Water, Miss Philippines, and Miriam Odemba, 25, of Tanzania, who won as Miss Earth Air.


Miss Philippines Karla Henry, 22, holds her crown after winning the Miss Earth 2008 beauty pageant at the Expo amphitheatre in Clark air base in Pampanga, north of Manila November 9, 2008. Henry beat around eighty-five beauties from around the world declared their personal environmental campaigns, with the theme for this year's competition focused on "green lifestyle" during the coronation night on Sunday.




Miss Philippines Karla Henry (C), 22, reacts after winning the Miss Earth 2008 beauty pageant at the Expo amphitheatre in Clark air base in Pampanga, north of Manila November 9, 2008. Henry beat around eighty-five beauties from around the world declared their personal environmental campaigns, with the theme for this year's competition focused on "green lifestyle" during the coronation night on Sunday. At right is Miriam Odemba, 25, of Tanzania, who won as Miss Earth Air.




Miss Philippines Karla Henry (L), 22, reacts to winning the Miss Earth 2008 beauty pageant at the Expo amphitheatre in Clark air base in Pampanga, north of Manila November 9, 2008. Henry beat around eighty-five beauties from around the world declared their personal environmental campaigns, with the theme for this year's competition focused on "green lifestyle" during the coronation night on Sunday. At right is Jessica Nicole Trisko, Miss Earth 2007.




Miss Philippines Karla Henry (C), 22, is congratulated by other beauty contestants after winning the Miss Earth 2008 beauty pageant at the Expo amphitheatre in Clark air base in Pampanga, north of Manila November 9, 2008. Henry beat around eighty-five beauties from around the world declared their personal environmental campaigns, with the theme for this year's competition focused on "green lifestyle" during the coronation night on Sunday.




The Miss Earth 2008 stage at the auditorium of the Clark Expo in Angeles City, Pampanga, Philippines. At the background are the ladies in their evening gowns.

Video Clips of Miss Earth 2008



Since most of us who live outside the Philippines are not able to watch the final night of the Miss Earth 2008 pageant, I searched and found out some clips from youtube. Though the quality is not good, it is worth watching still. So, I decided to post them here. Have fun.

Miss Earth Opening Intro




Announcement of the Winners




Pictures of Miss Earth 2008 Winners



The Philippines got its first Miss Earth title ever after 8 years of the history of the pageant in a glittering and extravagant finals night in Clark Expo Auditorium in Angeles City, Pampanga, Philippines.


Karla Paula Henry is one of the early favorites to win the title. This is the first win of the Philippines this year in any international pageant and the first title in Miss Earth in particular.


This means another victory for this country after Patricia Fernandez made Philippines proud in the Miss International 2008 just last night in Macau, China by placing as one of the semi-finalists.








Miss Earth 2008 is Miss Philippines




 Official Results

MISS EARTH 2008: PHILIPPINES, Karla Henry
Miss Earth Air: TANZANIA, Miriam Odemba
Miss Earth Water: MEXICO, Abigail Elizalde
Miss Earth Fire: BRAZIL, Tatiane Alves

Top 8 Finalists

COLOMBIA, SPAIN, SWITZERLAND, VENEZUELA

Top 16 Semi Finalists

CZECH REPUBLIC, KOREA, NIGERIA, POLAND, ROMANIA, RUSSIA, THAILAND, USA

Special Awards

Miss Photogenic - Miss Philippines
Best in National Costume - Miss Panama
Best in Swimsuit - Miss Mexico
Miss Talent - Miss Australia
Best in Long Gown - Miss Venezuela
Miss Friendship - Ecuador

12 October 2008

Philippine Beauty In PageantsTidbits



MISS Earth Jessica Nicole Trisko (left), returned to Manila with reigning Miss Philippines-Earth Karla Paula Henry, posed for photographers during the press conference and launching of Miss Earth 2008 held at Traders Hotel Manila. PHOTO BY ROY DOMINGO

It’s Pageant Time
Written by C. Mendez Legaspi
for businessmirror.com

Danielle Castano is the complete antithesis of Janina San Miguel. When the beleaguered beauty queen resigned her Miss World title because of family duties, the Binibining Pilipinas first runner-up stepped into San Miguel’s high-heeled shoes. Pageant watchers rejoiced no end. At least, they reasoned, the country won’t be the subject of ridicule because our representative can’t speak English straight. Castano, raised abroad, has a commanding grasp of the language.

A proficiency in English can work wonders, of course. Ruffa Gutierrez and her Little Prince quote came close. Cara Subijano, despite her atrocious gown, cracked the top 10, and Mafae Yunon slipped into the top five thanks also to text votes. But at Miss World, intelligence is hardly a factor in winning. Even at Miss Universe. Have you ever witnessed a UP or Ateneo alumna getting crowned?

EARTH MOTHER

Meanwhile...Karla Paula Henry joined the Binibini contest this year. She cruised into the semis. That’s how far she got. So what’s a beautiful girl going to do? Sign up for the next prestigious pageant, of course! When she competed for the Miss Earth Philippines title, the perky Cebuana won. At a recent press call at Traders Hotel by Shangri-La, Henry was on hand to welcome her new “sister,” the reigning Miss Earth 2007, Jessica Trisko of Canada, who is half-Pinay. The Miss Earth pageant is in full swing as contestants from the four corners of the earth ensconce themselves in the hotel by the bay, which serves as their second home while in the country.

“Karla represents what’s really progressive about the Philippines,” Trisko says of her possible successor, who went with her as the Canadian visited some countries to attend to several ecological activities and environmental projects as part of her duties as Miss Earth. “She has a lot of surprises in store. If she wins, then it’s meant to be. All I can do is give her advice and see what she does with it.”

Miss Earth 2008, the eighth year of the fastest-growing pageant in the world, will be held on November 9 at the Clark Expo Amphitheater, Pampanga, and will be aired over ABS-CBN.

MUTYA IN MY MIND

After the Miss Earth girls complete their swimsuit competition in Puerto Princesa, another bevy of beauties will be in Palawan to lend their overwhelming presence. Contestants from the Ruby Year of Mutya ng Pilipinas will be on the island. It is the first time that the Mutya eliminations and finals night will be held on the same location, a development that delights Mayor Edward Hagedorn. “This is a special moment for Puerto Princesa. Everyone appreciates beauty and ours is a beautiful city. We are happy to host this pageant. This is a strong signal to grab our place in the world of destinations.”

Renee Salud, who has discovered and nurtured the finest beauty queens of our time, heads the screening committee of Mutya, which culminates on December 7, also the fiesta of the city. “I have been with Mutya for six years now. If not for the other pageants, I would not be here today,” the engaging “Mama Renee” said at the press conference to announce a call for contestants.

A wannabe must be a natural-born Pinay (no trannies, please), a high-school graduate, 18 to 25 years old, at least 5'5"—and for aspirants coming from overseas, at least with Pinoy blood (not blood transfusion from a Pinoy, please). “Speaking in Tagalog is not a big issue. Here, we encourage the girls to speak even in their own dialects, but it should not be colloquial or slang, as long as they can express themselves with sense and substance,” Salud emphasized.

A prospective candidate would be wise to visit www.mutyapilipinas.com for more information.