Miss America is a 2002 American documentary film directed by Lisa Ades that chronicles the Miss America pageant from its beginnings in 1921 to the present-day pageant.
The film was released as an episode of American Experience season 14 in January 2002.
The documentary explores how the Miss America pageant has reflected the countryâÂÂs views and where the country was moving towards by whom it chose as its winners each year. As the categories became more substantial and the requirements to participate more rigorous, the Miss America Pageant became much more than just a national contest to be AmericaâÂÂs female representative to the world. The pageant, hosted in Atlantic City every year since it started, transformed into a place where sexual politics as well as the position of women were subtly fought and battles against antisemitism and racism were won.
Bess Myerson won Miss America in 1945 and, after refusing to change her name, became the first Jewish Miss America in the same year that World War II ended. Lee Meriwether won Miss America in 1955 and was nominated for two Golden Globe Awards and an Emmy Award for her acting career following Miss America. Mary Ann Mobley won Miss America in 1959. After continuing on to acting, Mobley was awarded the Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year-Actress in 1965 and the Outstanding Young Woman of the Year Award by Claudia âÂÂLady Birdâ Johnson in 1966.