Mrs India Worldwide is a renowned beauty pageant that celebrates the strength, confidence, and achievements of married women from around the world.
This pageant provides a platform for women to showcase their talents, intelligence, and cultural values while also promoting personal development and community involvement.
Participants compete in various segments, including traditional wear, talent, and interview rounds, to win the prestigious title. The event emphasises personal growth and empowerment, encouraging contestants to embrace their individuality and make a positive impact in their communities.
Winners of Mrs India International often gain opportunities to represent their country on global stages, furthering their influence and inspiring others.
The competition’s age limit of 50 years old allows a broad range of viable contestants to enter and compete.
Su-Ann Joseph-Mouttet, T&T’s contestant and the eventual winner of the 2024 international competition, saw the advertisement for the competition online and, at 45 years old, felt that this was her opportunity to try new things.
“So I entered, not expecting anything, and it turns out I was accepted!” Her husband was extremely supportive of her when she decided to enter the pageant and took care of their four-year-old son while she prepared for the show.
The local pageant’s national director, Ms Neha Karina, helped encourage Joseph-Mouttet and build her confidence during the local leg, as she gained experience for the first time in the modelling world.
Laughing that her only previous experience in modelling was at a UWI fashion show during her university years, Joseph-Mouttet marvels at how far she has come, initially having doubts about herself, to winning the pageant among contestants from all over the world.
Born and raised “in humble beginnings” as one of eight children in Manzanilla, Joseph-Mouttet went to North Eastern Secondary School and then onto UWI, St Augustine, where she pursued pharmacy studies and graduated with honours.
After she finished university, she moved to Spain, where she worked in the business sector, and as a result, became fully bilingual. Upon returning to T&T, she returned to the pharmacy sector as the pharmacy manager for SuperPharm, where she remained for five years.
At present, she is now the Regional Coordinator for Pharmacy at the North Central Regional Health Authority (NCRHA). As part of the executive management, Joseph-Mouttet is in charge of the pharmacy divisions in all health centres and hospitals in the North Central division.
During the course of her training for the pageant, Joseph-Mouttet learnt communication skills and pageant walking, participated in cultural activities, and became acquainted with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Joseph-Mouttet’s platform for the pageant was based on SDG 3, Health and Wellbeing, and she became an advocate for women’s mental health, with a special focus on postpartum anxiety and depression. As she is part of the health industry locally and also suffered with her own battle with postpartum anxiety for three years, she became acutely aware of the lack of support systems in place for women.
After three years of suffering in silence, she visited a psychiatrist, and “in six months I was already 85 per cent better than I was before.” Her role in the pageant has given her a renewed sense of independence and confidence, which she hopes to share with other women.
Additionally, Joseph-Mouttet has two other major causes that she uses her platform to advocate for.
Together with the National Director of the pageant, she has also honed in on climate change awareness, involving and encouraging primary school-age children to make differences that can support the fight against global warming.
In collaboration with the president of the T&T Chapter of Disabled Persons, she has begun conceptualising a fashion show for disabled people to showcase fashions that they can easily wear.
“This will empower the parents and disabled persons to make decisions on things that may be considered simple for abled persons, but can be a challenge for them.”
Joseph-Mouttet shares her beauty secrets, which keep her looking youthful at 45. “Aside from good genetics, I try to maintain a youthful appearance by keeping active, going to the gym, and trying to have a balanced diet.”
She stresses the importance of a routine of removing make-up and cleansing the face at night and a morning routine that always includes applying sunscreen and very simple make-up for a fresh look. Although many women think they need heavier make-up looks to be beautiful and glamorous, she suggests that those heavy make-up looks affect the skin’s health.
In terms of her fashion sense, she focuses on a classy and elegant style but sometimes admits she likes to throw in some elements to “look sexy and original.” Her advice to young women, acknowledging the impact and influence of social media to look a certain way, is to “always be original.”
She credits staying true to herself “with the attitude of glamour” as the way she won Mrs India Worldwide, keeping her Trini accent and dialect strong, and being authentic to herself. She also encourages young women to discover and focus on their strengths, as “once you’re doing what you’re good at, you will always enjoy it.”
After being involved in an accident where she was hit by a car, resulting in the disfiguration of her face and a broken clavicle, Joseph-Mouttet remembers having significant insecurities in secondary school.
During her teenage years, she focused on her academic work and delved into her studies as a comfort.
“Now look where I am; I am the winner of Mrs India Worldwide International Pageant. This proves that what I went through as a young girl moulded me into the woman I am today. I went through my teenage years thinking I was ugly, but I know I’m not ugly now. Wherever you are in the moment, see the silver lining and try to make the best out of it.”
Using her platform as an opportunity to contribute to others’ lives, she has found true happiness in being an example for young women that bravery and confidence can overcome even the most deep-seated insecurities.