Kaye Lani Rae Rafko
Kaye Lani Rae Rafko Wilson (born August 26, 1963) is the winner of the 1988 Miss America Pageant. She is from Monroe, Michigan where a street is now named for her.
On September 19, 1987, Rafko was named as the Miss America 1988, after winning the Miss Michigan pageant of 1987. Rafko has participated in a number of fundraising activities and has been a vocal advocate for nursing and hospice programs. She has addressed medical professional organizations around the world on the topic of nursing, including groups in Malaysia, Paris, Rome, and Singapore.
Rafko is a Registered Nurse and is married to Charles (Chuck) Wilson, with whom she has three children. She is the president of Gabby’s Ladder, a bereavement program for children and their families, an organisation she founded after the death of her fourth child. Other family included a younger brother, Nick, who played football at the University of Wisconsin–Madison from 1989 to 1993, and who was killed in a car accident on June 26, 1994.
In the Miss America competition her platform included help for hospice services and her talent was a Tahitian dancing performance. She is also well known for her interview with the then-unknown Michael Moore in his documentary Roger & Me. The interview at a parade in Flint (prior to winning the Miss America pageant), Rafko gave superficial answers to Moore's questions on unemployment, stating on camera that she didn't want to say anything that would jeopardize her chances of winning the pageant.
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Famous quotes containing the words lani rae rafko, kaye lani rae, rae rafko, kaye lani, lani, rae and/or rafko:
“I kept in mind that the minute it got too rough, the minute the fourteen-hour days became too long, the minute people started to be naggy and frustrating, I knew that I could walk away and there were over seventy-nine thousand women who would trade shoes with me in a second.”
—Kaye Lani Rae Rafko (b. c. 1968)
“This program has helped me to keep physically healthy and to eat the right foods ... and thats really what the swimsuit competition is about.”
—Kaye Lani Rae Rafko (b. 1968)
“This program has helped me to keep physically healthy and to eat the right foods ... and thats really what the swimsuit competition is about.”
—Kaye Lani Rae Rafko (b. 1968)
“This program has helped me to keep physically healthy and to eat the right foods ... and thats really what the swimsuit competition is about.”
—Kaye Lani Rae Rafko (b. 1968)
“I kept in mind that the minute it got too rough, the minute the fourteen-hour days became too long, the minute people started to be naggy and frustrating, I knew that I could walk away and there were over seventy-nine thousand women who would trade shoes with me in a second.”
—Kaye Lani Rae Rafko (b. c. 1968)
“This program has helped me to keep physically healthy and to eat the right foods ... and thats really what the swimsuit competition is about.”
—Kaye Lani Rae Rafko (b. 1968)
“When youre crowned Miss America, they put you up on a pedestal. People really look up to you and they think youre perfect. They think that you have everything that youve ever wanted or dreamed about in life.”
—Kaye Lani Rae Rafko (b. c. 1968)