DeDee
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"What motivated Patsy to begin preparations at once was the consistently professional and polished calibre of the performances at the national pageant. She realized that being "good" was not "good enough" for an aspiring Miss America. The level of her presentation must be refined and redefined, revised and rehearsed until it was as nearly perfect as possible. After nearly a year of analyzing every inflection, expression and gesture of the characterizations, she continues to search for the smallest glint of an eye or toss of the head that might add dimension to her characterizations.
A certain amount of backstage nervousness is inevitable, says Patsy even desirable, since it "gets the adrenalin going." But on stage, she says, "I feel very relaxed about my talent. When I say the first few lines and get everyone else in the palm of my hand, then I go into my own little world. It's as if I'm completely alone. I know how large Convention Hall is, how many people there are in the audience. Thinking about it could make you panic. And talent counts 50 per cent in the judging, you know."
A certain amount of backstage nervousness is inevitable, says Patsy even desirable, since it "gets the adrenalin going." But on stage, she says, "I feel very relaxed about my talent. When I say the first few lines and get everyone else in the palm of my hand, then I go into my own little world. It's as if I'm completely alone. I know how large Convention Hall is, how many people there are in the audience. Thinking about it could make you panic. And talent counts 50 per cent in the judging, you know."