Matilda Kerry Osazuwa is a former beauty queen MBGN – Most Beautiful Girl in Nigeria 2000 and a medical doctor at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH). A co-founder of George Kerry Foundation, she is an epitome of beauty and brain. She gives an insight on her job and life as a medical doctor.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s0R9yxY_KrQ
Senior Registrar at the Community Health Department, Lagos University Teaching Hospital, LUTH, and Founder, George Kerry Life Foundation, Dr. Matilda Kerry-Osazuwa, has admonished women in the country to take their health more seriously.
I have received a few honorary awards, one on the fight against cancer from Pink Pearl Foundation and the Youth Role Model award from African Youth Society. Those were achievements but the fulfilling part is when you impact someone positively; like diagnosing a patient in the pre-cancer stage, providing treatment and knowing you have helped with preventing one woman from coming down with cervical cancer, which is a debilitating and horrible disease – that is really fulfilling.
One of her children suffers from autism spectrum which made her write books for similarly afflicted families.
BIRTHDAYDecember 23, 1991: Indian model and beauty pageant contestant who rose to fame after being crowned 2015’s Femina Miss India Supranational. She is also recognized for having been a contestant on the second season of New Zealand’s Next Top Model.
BEFORE FAME
She graduated in medicine from the University of Otago in New Zealand.
TRIVIA
She appeared on the cover of the January 2017 issue of Grazia magazine.
FAMILY LIFE
She is originally from India. Married in 2022.
She played her first part in the movie: “We diddn´t kill Mia”
When being crowned at miss Supranational in 2015 in Poland she said she would create the NGO EDBF – Early Detection for Better Future and educate rural women of her country on the importance of health checkups and self examinations. By this life changing and life saving education may be spread.
Miss Jamaica World 2015 Sanneta Myrie is one of the first to wear locs as a contestant in the Miss World pageant. Myrie follows in the footsteps of Jamaican Zahra Redwood, who was the first to wear locs in the Miss Universe pageant in 2007, In addition to slaying pageants with her beautiful locs, Myrie is a medical doctor and volunteer counselor for the University of West Indies. Not only is she beautiful, but she’s clearly got the brains to match.
Myrie, who mentors teens in inner-city communities and runs an after-school programme took home the crown, in a hotly contested competition this evening at the Montego Bay Convention Centre in St James.
A crowd favourite, Myrie outpaced 19 other contestants to win the crown.
she is also dancer!
She competed in the Miss World competition in China in December. 2015 and got to the TOP 5.
Already during her medical studies Deborah Lambie worked as a model and trained to become a good speaker. Thus she won three elections as MISS, in 2015 she became Miss New Zealand.
Most remarcable her New Zealand HAKA during this competition!
Later she changed profession and became investment banker.
Lambie’s slightly more glamorous life had started in a dairy, when the owner of a modelling agency invited her to come to see her.
“I was in the last year of high school. I never thought that modelling would be something I would be able to do. I finally went along a few months later and the owner had completely forgotten me – but said she might be able to use me in a few things.”
Lambie began modelling in Dunedin fashion shows and things grew rapidly from there. “Beauty pageants were the obvious next step because they were not just about walking down a runway, but involved interviews and public speaking.
“In my first competition I was really nervous because I had done no public speaking, so I joined Toastmasters in Dunedin. Developing those skills has been hugely valuable. Public speaking is such an important life skill.
“If the only gain that I ever got out of beauty pageants had been joining Toastmasters it would have been worth it. The organisation helped me turn my weakness into a strength.”
In 2012 Lambie was second runner up for Miss Otago, which she won in 2015. “I had no expectations. If someone had told me I would win Miss New Zealand and go to Miss World I would not have believed them.”
Lambies most remaarcable HAKA!
Lambie had to juggle her extra-curricular activities with her studies. “I worked really hard and the University supported me doing these things. Whenever I went to them with a request, their attitude was ‘how can we make this work?’ which I really appreciated.”
Beauty contests have changed with the times, says Lambie, who is a strong supporter of rights and equality for women.
“My generation does not have the same negative associations with beauty contests that my parents’ and grandparents’ generations may have had.
Contestants are encouraged to do charity work and the Miss World competition has raised more than half a billion dollars for charity over the last 30 years, says Lambie.
She has not only worked with several existing charities, but has started one of her own.
After her Bachelor of Medical Sciences, with first class honours in bioethics, she completed a Master of Entrepreneurship. With fellow student and now fiancé Dave Cameron, she founded LearnCoach to provide free online tutorials for NCEA students.
“The master’s challenged my thinking in lots of ways. Now it’s awesome to be working with a team of people who believe in sharing the gift of education.
“Over the last three years we have delivered millions of tutorials to thousands of students.
“This year we plan to broaden the content on the website and make LearnCoach accessible to all young New Zealanders by incorporating New Zealand Sign Language and Te Reo Māori.”
Not everything went smoothly in Lambie’s expanding world. Although short-listed for a Rhodes Scholarship, she didn’t get it. “I was disappointed to miss out on what would have been a life-changing opportunity, but just making it to the final seven was amazing.”
Competition at Miss World was tough too.
“We were such a diverse group – doctors, lawyers, models, professional athletes, singers – the talent was incredible. It was a huge team effort to prepare for Miss World and so many people came forward to support me. On the final night I was delighted to come 15tth out of the 120 contestants.”
Lambie found herself rooming with another Otago student, law undergraduate Latafale Auva’a, who was representing Samoa. “She’s so talented, good at study, sport and music, but such a lovely, kind, down-to-earth person. I hope to stay in touch with her for a long time.”
Lambie caused a mini media storm when she performed a haka in the cultural section of the contest.
“I really didn’t see that coming. I worked for months with expert Kereama Te Ua, who lectures in Māori performing arts. I’d performed the haka at marae and had feedback from different people. I could not have made a more genuine effort to perform it in the correct way.
“Then there was a lot of negative comment saying I should not have done it at all – but on the flip side I received an equal number of lovely messages of support, which really meant a lot.”
Lambie also learned some New Zealand sign language for the talent section of the competiton.
“Learning that haka and some New Zealand sign language were my first real connections with people from those communities. They helped me understand things from a new perspective and could, quite possibly, change the direction of my career and what I end up doing.”
Now Lambie has hung up her tiara. “My run is over. I’ve loved the opportunities that pageants have brought, but now it’s time to concentrate on medicine and the future.”
It came out that she became an investment banker in Australia.
Strauss became engaged to D’Niel Strauss (no relation) in December 2014. They were later married on 6 February 2016, at the Laurent Wedding venue in Somerset West.[5][6] Their first child, a son, was born in January 2017.[7] In February 2020, she gave birth to her second son. Rolene Strauss is a devout Christian
Tatort Köln: Freddy Schenk (Dietmar Bär), Joseph Roth (Josef Bausch-Hölterhoff) und Max Ballauf (Klaus J. Behrendt, von links) sind ein eingespieltes Team. Foto:WDR
Joe Bausch (Hermann-Joseph Bernhard Anton Maria Bausch-Hölterhoff; * 19. April1953 in Ellar) is a German MD, author, actor and speaker of audio books.
Bausch-Hölterhoff was born in the Westerwald as son of a farmer, later studied theatre sciences, politicc, germanistics and law, in 1985 he got his medical degree.
During his studies he founded a theatre group “TPI – theatre pathologic institute” and wrote the librettos of Mister Buffo nach Dario Fo, Mein Traum …, Hotel der verlorenen Träume, Und sie legten den Blumen Handschellen an nach Fernando Arrabal.
He also acted in the Prinzregententheater Bochum.
Joes first appearance in the German criminal series “Tatort” in “Manila” underlined the problems of Philippinian children living in the streets. He and his colleagues founded the association “Tatort – Straßen der Welt” which is engaged for children´s rights world-wide.
Having worked in the jail hospital of Werl he wrote som books about his experiences (see gallery).