Background
Vonda Kay Van Dyke was born in Muskegon, Michigan. Her father, Doctor Bachelor of Arts Van Dyke, was an osteopath.
Vonda Kay Van Dyke was born in Muskegon, Michigan. Her father, Doctor Bachelor of Arts Van Dyke, was an osteopath.
The family moved to Phoenix, the seat of Maricopa County, Arizona, where Vonda attended the Phoenix Christian Junior/Senior High School.
Earlier in the year, she had taken a break as a 21-year-old junior at Arizona State University to become Mission Arizona. She is unique among pageant winners in that she was and still is the only Mission America who was also Mission Congeniality. In her senior year she entered a local America"s Junior Mission pageant, where she surprised the judges and her fellow competitors by performing ventriloquism as her talent, which she later honed at the Phoenix amusement park, Legend City.
She was named Arizona"s Junior Mission for 1961, and traveled with "Kurley-Q" to Mobile, Alabama, for the national finals, where she placed in the top ten.
Her next major pageant was the 1962 Mission Phoenix competition. Van Dyke continued in the spotlight for some years after having relinquished her crown.
Other sources dispute the number. Whatever the precise sales number may have been, the book was successful enough to merit a follow-up called Dear Vonda Kay, which came out in 1967, and consisted of letters to Van Dyke and her replies.
Van Dyke subsequently also recorded Here"s Vonda Kay and some other albums of inspirational songs.
Van Dyke currently lives in Laguna Beach, California. She is the widow of David Tyler Scoates (October 26, 1934–May 6, 2000), a minister formerly of Florida. She has one daughter from that marriage.
She did not win there, but remained persistent in her pursuit of a trip to Atlantic City, New Jersey, and her dedication bore fruit when she won the Mission Tempe crown in 1964, then Mission Maricopa County, then Mission Arizona, and finally Mission America, where she was the first contestant to use ventriloquism in the talent competition. In 1966 she wrote a Christian-themed teen advice book called That Girl in Your Mirror, in which she advised young women to become more beautiful by adopting "that inner sparkle that only Christ can give." Her official Mission America bio says that a million copies of the book were sold in hardcover.