“My team and I were inspired by Ndebele people who have an extraordinary culture and authenticity. They are the most colourful tribe and truly South African. We fused this with a bit of Zulu culture to give the national costume a modern and young feel. The colours of our national flag give it a proudly South African look. We included a cape because this represents power and strength and is usually worn by Zulu queens," Matome said in a statement.
However, the dress was ridiculed on social media, with users claiming it made Adè look like a "low budget Superwoman".
947 presenter Anele Mdoda also slammed the outfit, claiming it looked like the brief for "if a Mahotella Queen had to be an Avenger".
"So our outfits are also junk status. It's so bad! I hope it's not too late to change it. The brief was clearly if a Mahotella Queen had to be an avenger," she wrote.
Miss SA spokesperson Claudia Henkel said that the organisation had noted the social media backlash to the outfit but claimed it was difficult to create an outfit that represented all of South Africa.
She said the organisation asked the designers to return to the drawing board and "streamline" the outfit ahead of the pageant.
"The outfit needs to be more focused and follow either a traditional theme or a 'Superwoman' theme. We have taken people's views into consideration and these will be minor tweaks," Claudia added.
Adè will represent South Africa at the Miss World pageant while Miss South Africa, Demi-Leigh Nel-Peters will be competing at Miss Universe next month.
0 comments:
Post a Comment