Lynnette Cole
Lynnette Cole | |
---|---|
Born | Lynnette Marie Cole February 9, 1978 |
Beauty pageant titleholder | |
Title | Miss Tennessee Teen USA 1995 Miss Tennessee USA 2000 Miss USA 2000 |
Agency | Greenwood Productions (State Titles) Miss Universe Organization (National Title) |
Major competition(s) | Miss Tennessee Teen USA 1995 (Winner) Miss Teen USA 1995 (Top 6) Miss Teen All American 1997 (Winner) Miss Tennessee USA 2000 (Winner) Miss USA 2000 (Winner) Miss Universe 2000 (4th runner-up) |
Lynnette Marie Cole-O'Nan (née Cole; born February 9, 1978) is an American television personality, actress, and beauty pageant titleholder who won the title Miss Tennessee USA in 2000. She went on to become the first woman from that state to win the Miss USA pageant,[1] which was held in Branson, Missouri on February 4, 2000.
Cole hails from Columbia, Tennessee and was twenty-one years old when she won the national crown.[2]
Family background
Cole is of Puerto Rican heritage.[2] At ten months old, she was living in foster care with her older brother when they were adopted by Gail and Larry Cole, who had to move interstate to circumvent a law prohibiting adoption of children from a different race. Her adoptive parents had previously been foster parents to a succession of over 100 children.[citation needed]
Pageants
Cole's first major pageant win came in 1995 when she won the title Miss Tennessee Teen USA.[3] She was a top six finalist at the Miss Teen USA pageant in that year, and won the Miss Photogenic award, finishing fourth overall. Cole would later win the 1997 Miss Teen All American title.
After winning Miss Tennessee USA Cole competed for and won the title of Miss USA 2000, becoming the second Hispanic woman to win Miss USA after Laura Harring in 1985. Cole went on to compete at the Miss Universe pageant, held in Nicosia, Cyprus later that year.[4] Her performance was enough to secure her a spot among the five finalists,[5] and brought the U.S. back into the semifinals (after Kimberly Pressler had failed to advance the year before, breaking a streak of consecutive placements that had been going since 1977). She also placed fifth overall. She became the first woman to place in the top five at all three pageants and her record was not surpassed until 2006 by Tara Conner. This was the first time in the Miss Universe pageant history that two women of Puerto Rican heritage (Cole and Puerto Rico's Zoribel Fonalledas) participated at the same time representing different countries.
As Miss USA, Cole was a representative of the Miss Universe Organization. Her "sister" 2000 titleholders were Lara Dutta (Miss Universe, of India) and Jillian Parry (Miss Teen USA, of Pennsylvania).
After the Crown
Since winning Miss USA, Cole has become a television host for NBC, CMT, ESPN, MTV, VH-1 and made many appearances on As the World Turns. Along with her hosting career, she has appeared in numerous print advertising campaigns and commercials.
Cole also directs a local preliminary for Miss Tennessee USA.[6]
References
- ^ (1 April 2004). Chattanooga’s Stephanie Culberson Representing Tennessee At Miss USA Archived 2011-07-08 at the Wayback Machine, chattanoogan.com ("In 2000, Columbia’s Lynnette Cole was the first from the state to win the coveted title.")
- ^ a b (27 February 2000). [1], Fayetteville Observer ("Lynnette Cole says she is half Puerto Rican and half white The 21yearold who was Miss Tennessee won the Miss USA crown on Feb 4")
- ^ (14 August 1995). TEEN USA CONTESTANTS SERIOUS ABOUT ISSUES, Wichita Eagle ("Miss Tennessee Teen USA - Lynnette Cole")
- ^ (4 February 2000). Tennessean Crowned Miss Usa 2000, Kingman Daily Miner (Associated Press)
- ^ (13 May 2000). Miss India Wins Miss Universe Pageant, Gainesville Sun (Associated Press)
- ^ (10 December 2008). A Gallery of Black Beauty Queens, PhilStar.com
- 1978 births
- American people of Puerto Rican descent
- Living people
- Miss Tennessee USA winners
- Miss Universe 2000 contestants
- Miss USA 2000 delegates
- Miss USA winners
- People from Columbia, Tennessee
- American adoptees
- 1995 beauty pageant contestants
- 20th-century Miss Teen USA delegates
- 20th-century American people