- Miss America 1937.
- Retired and living in Connecticut (2008)
- She has two children, Cheryl and Gregory, as well as four grandchildren, Adriane, Derek, Noelle, and Sarah.
- As of 2015, she is the earliest (September 11, 1937) and oldest Miss America awardee/title holder still living.
- She had entered the pageant as a lark, never expecting to win. Uninterested in a show business career, the 17-year old also didn't want to drop out of school to fulfill her Miss America duties. With the help of her parents she contacted the 21-year-old Lou Off, who had earlier been assigned by pageant officials to escort her around Atlantic City. He spirited her out of her hotel and secreted her on a boat anchored 200 yards off the Steel Pier. Rumors swirled that they had eloped, but no such thing happened, since he took her home to her parents the very next day. The pageant people decided that she could keep the title, and she dutifully attended parades and participated in radio broadcasts, but her main priority was to finish high school. As a result of her incident with the male chaperone, pageant officials ultimately decided contestants would henceforth be chaperoned by socially prominent Atlantic City women.
- As of 2017, she is the only Miss New Jersey to have won the Miss America contest. In 1984, the first-runner up Suzette Charles (also Miss New Jersey) was crowned Miss America, only after the original winner Vanessa Williams resigned 10 months after the contest.
- She later married a Wall Street executive and had two children.
- In 2000, "People" magazine contacted her at her Connecticut home to talk to her about her time as "Miss America", but the 80-year-old declined an interview and would say only, "There is no Miss America here.".
- Michael Callahan wrote a roman à clef on Cooper titled "The Night She Won Miss America", published in 2017.
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