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Exclusive: A Beauty Queen Who Broke Colour Bias, Meet Miss South India Gayathri
In a world that still measures beauty through rigid lenses of colour, height and perfection, 23-year-old Gayathri is rewriting the script one confident stride at a time. Crowned Miss South India, her victory is not just a title, but a rebellion against the beauty norms that once made her feel "not enough."
In an exclusive conversation with Boldsky, Gayathri opens up about growing up as a village girl with no fashion background, fighting colourism, standing tall against misogyny, and carving her own place in the glamour world.
"I didn't even have proper heels... but I had a dream"
Gayathri's journey began far away from runways and spotlights.
She grew up in a small village in Kerala, where fashion was never a part of daily life. "I didn't know anything about the fashion industry. I just had a small dream inside me but no idea where to start," she says. Life took a turn after she completed her B.Tech in Kochi. She began observing fashion shows, backstage environments and how the modelling world worked. Soon after, she came across the auditions for Miss South India Fashion Awards-a decision that changed everything.
With no professional training, limited resources, and deep insecurities about her dark skin, Gayathri walked into the audition hall.
"I didn't have proper heels, expensive outfits, nothing. But I still showed up as myself. I told them about my passion and where I come from. And they saw something in me." The pageant team recognised her spark and trained her in posture, communication, walking and presentation.
Practising on public roads to overcome fear
After receiving initial guidance, Gayathri returned to her PG and practiced relentlessly-sometimes even on public roads. "I used to practise walking on the road outside, just to lose the fear of people watching me. I wanted to overcome every hesitation." But self-doubt still crept in. "When I saw other participants-experienced models, fair-skinned girls-I felt I wasn't good enough. But the moment I stepped on stage, I told myself: Give your best. And I did."
A win she hid from her family
Gayathri's victory was not just unexpected-it was something she kept secret from her family. "I didn't tell my parents I was participating. After I won, I went home and said, 'I won this title.'" But the reaction wasn't what she hoped for.
"My father still doesn't accept this. He wants me to get a secure government job. He doesn't believe modelling is a stable career," she shares honestly. Yet, the emotional support came from her mother and elder sister. "They are my backbone. Without them, I wouldn't have survived these challenges."
"Their misogyny gives me strength"
Like many women in the fashion and entertainment world, Gayathri has faced judgement, unsolicited comments and casual misogyny. But she refuses to crumble. "People judge girls who dream big. They comment on our clothes, our skin colour, our choices. But their misogyny gives me strength. It reminds me why I need to shine even brighter."
Her message to women struggling with beauty standards is simple but powerful: "Beauty is not fairness, perfection or money. Beauty is confidence. Everyone is beautiful when they believe in themselves."
What's next for Miss South India?
Gayathri hopes to use her platform to inspire girls from small towns to dream without fear. "I want them to know that even if the world tells you you're not enough, you still can be more than enough."
With her resilience, authenticity and unapologetic courage, Gayathri is not just a beauty queen-she's the face of a new era where beauty is no longer defined by colour or conformity.



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