
Miss Huntington Beach queen's rose garden celebrates 60th anniversary
Nicole Allyson Vogt, the 2025 Miss Huntington Beach Queen, chose a 'Mellow Yellow' rose to be planted on Friday morning.
'As Miss Huntington Beach 2025, I've had the honor of representing a city full of vibrant spirit, continuous warmth and community pride,' said Vogt, a recent graduate of Cal State Long Beach, the 112th queen in Huntington Beach history. 'Through this journey, I've learned that kindness is not a gesture, it's a way of life, just has Huntington Beach loves to represent.'
Vogt said the yellow rose signified that spirit, as a symbol of joy, friendship and new beginnings.
'It embodies the kind of light I strive to bring into every space I enter,' she said, adding that her mother and grandmother taught her what it meant to shine for others.
The 60th anniversary Queen's Rose Garden ceremony was put on by the Sand Dollars of Huntington Beach. The nonprofit Sand Dollars and president Love Ghione organize the Miss Huntington Beach scholarship and pageant program each year; Vogt was crowed queen last October.
'Our mission here is to support young women in their quest to achieve their dreams,' Ghione said, giving a special shout out to Sand Dollars treasurer April Gentry and member Andrea Roberson for nursing the rose bushes back to health.
Marlena Guadarrama, the director of Miss Huntington Beach, introduced the queen and court to the audience. Vogt was joined at Friday's ceremony by her court princess, Huntington Beach High graduate Catherine Dosier, who sang the national anthem.
Dosier now attends UC Irvine.
Other former Miss Huntington Beach Queens at the event included Laura Sholar Roberts (1976), Elaine Bauer Keeley (1979), Stacey Jue (1995), Jena Jean Faris (2017) and Ruby Brown-Bilyeu (2024).
Each queen since 1963 has been honored by planting a rose bush in a public location, which became City Hall when the new building was constructed in the 1970s.
Mayor Pat Burns, City Council members Don Kennedy and Butch Twining and City Clerk Lisa Lane Barnes also attended.
'I love the tradition,' Burns said. 'Believe it or not, I'm kind of a goofy guy because I love roses. I used to grow them myself when I'd give them to my girlfriends and stuff when I was young. Now I've been married 37 years, so the roses don't come as often, but they still come.
'Now I know a source of them,' he added, as the audience laughed.
Former Mayor Lyn Semeta emceed the event, which was followed by a catered reception at City Hall.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
13 hours ago
- New York Post
Free Times Square concert to feature performances from 23 Broadway shows
Start spreading the news. A massive Times Square concert featuring performances from 23 Broadway shows is planned for next month in celebration of 400 years of Big Apple history, City Hall said Monday. The free spectacle, 'Founded By Broadway,' will be held in Duffy Square on West 46th and West 47th streets between Broadway and Seventh Avenue on Sept. 7 starting at 11 a.m., rain or shine. 4 A performance from the Broadway revival of 'Mamma Mia!' is slated to appear at the city's 'Founded By Broadway' free concert in Times Square next month. Andrew H. Walker/Shutterstock 4 The event will take place in Duffy Square on West 46th and West 47th streets between Broadway and Seventh Avenue on Sept. 7. Christopher Sadowski 'Broadway is synonymous with a visit to New York City, and what better way to celebrate 400 years than with a free, live concert in the center of it all, Times Square,' said Julie Coker, president and CEO of New York City Tourism + Conventions, in a statement. The show also serves as the marquee event of the Adams' administration's year-long 'Founded By NYC' celebration of the city's 400th birthday, which will offer free summer movies, 400 blocks of free Summer Streets events, the 47th annual Museum Mile Festival and more. 'The story of Broadway is the story of New York City, and with 'Founded By Broadway' and this Times Square concert for all to partake in for free, we will help tell both of these stories this September,' Mayor Eric Adams said in a statement. 'Thanks to 'Founded By NYC,' we're thrilled to be hosting events like this all year long as we commemorate more than four centuries of New York City history and show, once again, why we are 'the greatest city in the world,'' the mayor said. 4 Jeremy Jordan and Eva Noblezada appear for a curtain call at 'The Great Gatsby' on Broadway. Getty Images Performances from these shows are expected during the 'Founded by Broadway' event: Aladdin & Juliet The Book of Mormon Buena Vista Social Club Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club Chicago Death Becomes Her The Great Gatsby Harry Potter and the Cursed Child Hell's Kitchen Just in Time The Lion King Mamma Mia! Maybe Happy Ending MJ Moulin Rouge! The Musical Operation Mincemeat: A New Musical The Outsiders Punch SIX: The Musical Stranger Things: The First Shadow Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York) Wicked Some of the performances are subject to change closer to the final performance date, City Hall said. 4 'The Book of Mormon' performers are set to appear at next month's special event, fanfare will kick off NYC Broadway Week, when two-for-one deals will be offered for a variety of shows. The marquee event comes as New York City Tourism + Conventions projects a nearly 20% dip in foreign tourism this year because of economic fears and geopolitical tensions. 'There's only one Broadway, and there's only one New York City,' said Jason Laks, president of The Broadway League, while promoting 'Founded by Broadway.' 'The heart of Times Square is the perfect place to celebrate Broadway's legacy,' Laks said. 'As we mark 400 years of this extraordinary city, the 'Founded By Broadway' concert will bring together the energy, talent, and storytelling that define New York and inspire the world.'


Indianapolis Star
6 days ago
- Indianapolis Star
Fishers is building a pergola outside Fishers City Hall complex. Here's the cost to taxpayers
Fishers is looking for a little more elbow room around the art center and the Nickel Plate Amphitheater. The Board of Public Works approved the rental of a large, heated tent on the Nickel Plate Amphitheater lawn for a series of Christmas events in December and the construction of a long veranda on the outside of the Fisher City Hall and Art Center to accommodate visitors outdoors during its Aug. 12 meeting. The pergola on the south side of arts center will be 60 feet long and 30-feet wide with slats that open and shut. Smart Pergola, of Indianapolis, will build the covering for $297,193, paid for by city tax dollars. 'Originally, we had wanted a roll-up door but for whatever reason they couldn't do it,' Mayor Scott Fadness said at the meeting of the arts center construction plans. 'This creates kind of an outdoor amenity area. Summer camps, too, this would be a nice area for them to hang out in.' The City Hall with the attached art center and performance hall opened in June 2024. The center offers classes and showcases local artists' work. It is run by the Indy Art Center. On the lawn of the Nickel Plate Amphitheater behind City Hall and Art Center, Fishers will pay Blue Peak, of Michigan, $143,881 to put up a 116-by-82-foot tent that will stand for most of December. The tent will have seating for 432 guests and 54 round tables. It will be heated with 16 propane-powered space heaters and be connected by a tented tunnel to the art center. Fadness said the tent allows the city to host all its Christmas activities under one roof instead of scattered under several. Activities in the tent could include the sale of Christmas trinkets, arts and crafts or holiday-themed performances. It could also serve as a warming post for spectators at the Holiday tree lighting or Christmas lights show. 'One of the goals is to improve engagement during the winter months,' Fadness said. 'Instead of renting a bunch of tents we can rent one big tent for, say, Breakfast with the Grinch. This allows more flexibility. People really didn't like going outside between tents.'


Los Angeles Times
05-08-2025
- Los Angeles Times
Letters to the Editor: Neither wildfires nor ICE can take Los Angeles' joy for good
To the editor: I can only imagine the ongoing pain of those who lost a home in Los Angeles' fires or contact with a loved one to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids. As deputy managing editor Shelby Grad writes, there can be no escape from that grief ('The aftershocks of L.A.'s summer of ICE keep coming, even as some of us move on,' Aug. 2). But I want to share that a scenario of resilience, unity and, above all, pure, unbridled joy spread across the outdoor plaza at downtown L.A.'s Music Center on Aug. 1 for the organization's free disco night. As City Hall towered across the street and a sparkling mirror ball spun, a couple thousand of us — all ages, shapes, sizes and ethnicities — pumped and gyrated to '70s favorites including 'YMCA,' a song embraced by the LGTBQ+ community that President Trump so oddly seems to like, and Gloria Gaynor's victorious 'I Will Survive.' No one has been able to deport all the joy from our beloved city. No person or thing ever will. Zan Dubin, Santa Monica .. To the editor: It hasn't been an easy year for Los Angeles. Yet sitting at the Hollywood Bowl on Sunday, the temperature perfect, no biting insects to bother me, the Hollywood sign peeking through, surrounded by people of every race and walk of life gathered to watch a performance of a musical about the most radically loving figure, led by an otherworldly talented, multiracial, largely queer cast, reminded me why we so often say 'only in L.A.' and why my hometown is the greatest city on Earth ('Why 'Jesus Christ Superstar' at the Hollywood Bowl is 'the musical theater version of the Avengers,'' July 29). Alexis Rodriguez, North Hollywood