A fictionalized version of a wonderful true story.
Her twin sister Carla was her greatest fan. She was a sensitive, tenderhearted girl, but she had a broad,
plain face, and she lumbered around the schoolyard while Candi glided, apparently immersed in a world of her own. Carla had bought the April Violets as a gift for Candi. She herself smelled like bacon. I loved the smell of bacon before I "went vegan," but Carla got nicknamed "Porky" because of her unmistakable aroma. I was truly relieved when I was nicknamed "Saliva," which I hoped would make Carla feel better.
As is so often the case in the unfolding of lives, there would be
unexpected and startling reversals of fortune as the twins grew up.
Twins forever and always. |
The fact that they were regarded as twins made the contrast in their attractiveness and scholastic achievement all the more noticeable.
I can still smell it, 55 years later. |
Such an inspired combination. And color-coordinated too! |
Carla couldn't even seem to hold a pencil correctly with her small, blunt hands, much less perfect her penmanship (more crap) or sketch a tree. Darling Candi would often go over to her sister's desk and try to help her. Carla's humiliation seemed to dissolve under the affectionate gaze of her twin. When I tried to help her, she looked right through me, too proud or ashamed to accept my compassion. That would soon change, and she became a dear friend.
Candi's toothbrusing created a reverie of billowing mintiness. |
"Brutish Oaf" by OzPlasmic |
Something happened (in addition to the usual things): Carla, emboldened by her sister's encouragement, tried out for our junior high school's girls' softball team. She was killer good! She could slam it way into outfield, run like a wildebeest and slide onto the base with no regard for modesty or injury. She became a star athlete, and the boys found this to be surprisingly sexy. She also also inadvertently discovered that she could write fiction that delighted her classmates, despite the fact that she still couldn't grasp the pencil properly.
Then there was Candi. Suddenly (and quite bravely, given our Blonde and Blue-Eyed Aesthetic, and pervasive racism) she began confiding in people that she was "a Negro." She had been confused for years, she told Carla, by her feeling that she was not just a "browner shade of pale" than her adoptive parents.
As she became exposed to black people, who were -- every once in a while -- shown on TV, she felt a yearning, a beckoning, that these were "her people." Candi had been listening to black records for several years, and she told Carla, "that's my vibe!" It would be years before I ever heard of anyone using that word again. But Candi became obsessed with Mary Wells ("My Guy"), The Marvelettes ("Please, Mr. Postman"), The Emotions, Patty LaBelle and the Bluebells, Gladys Knight, and Aretha. The thing that clinched it was seeing The Supremes on "The Ed Sullivan Show."
She fell in love with Diana Ross. She was so in love that she was convinced they were related. She held a picture of Diana next to her face and looked in the mirror. They could have been sisters, she thought. They could even have been twins! But Carla would still be her twin, too, she hastily added.
"I look just like her," Candi said. |
It would be several years before Afros became cool, but in high school, Candi began wearing her hair "natural" -- wildly full and curly -- instead of using a brush and dryer to loosen it into soft waves.
Once Candi decided she had black ancestry, it wasn't hard to discern it in her appearance. This was a deep, serious thing for her -- not some passing fancy. For her to "come out" as "Negro" took as much guts at that time as coming out as gay. I had never seen one black person in Salt Lake City. But Candi persuaded a friend in the 10th grade, who had just gotten her driver's permit, to take her to the west side of town to find "her people."
The west side was a hotbed of bad boys..... |
My father was the same way. It was he, more than anyone, who had taught me to love black people. He had grown up in the 1920s South, and he had seen the hideous cruelty of racism. But when I pulled into the driveway one day in a black Volvo with a handsome young black man, he was furious. "There's nothing he can possibly see in you but sex," he said. I was shocked, although I would later learn that sex is a big part of prejudice. I told my Dad, "What you just said says more about you than it does about black men." It would be decades before he claimed to be comfortable with interracial dating, and a lot of people still aren't. White men are quite insecure as a group, it seems. They fear that "their women" are going to be swept away and "sullied" or "violated" by the animal passions of those in "out groups." Those "big black studs" threaten their manhood. A lot of "yellow peril" and anti-Semitic propaganda had this same theme, and even the early anti-Mormon tirades had a sexual focus.
The yellow peril: Lock up your women! |
Icky-fingered Jews are diabolically seductive! |
Mormons are a sex-obsessed cult. They're insatiable! |
This was the first rupture of any consequence that the Castillos and their beloved twins had ever experienced. Candi was heartbroken. She had actually expected her parents to be joyful that she had found her "real" identity and was proud of it.
Candi increasingly remained in her room, reading Ebony Magazine and listening to black music: Sam Cooke, The Drifters, Ray Charles, The Shirelles........she loved them all.
Carla didn't mind. "I think maybe she really is black," she said. "I'm starting to wonder what I really am. I always felt like I was Mexican, but I don't feel it anymore, and I don't look right. I look more Mayan than Mexican. Mayan or Mestizos."
As Candi emphasized her "blackness" -- by emphasizing her full lips, lying out in the sun to get darker skin, and wearing ethnic clothing -- she really was looking like a very beautiful young black woman. Pretty soon, she would turn 16, and she would drive to the west side whenever she wanted, and hang out with her "peeps."
With her babysitting money, she bought an old reel-to-reel recorder from a pawn shop and spent hours in her room taping herself singing Supremes' songs.
I was there one afternoon to work on a science project with Carla, and I heard her singing "Baby Love" and "Back in My Arms Again." I was stunned. She sounded good, and she sounded black, and she sounded beautiful. She sounded like Diana Ross! I burst into her room, where she was sitting on her bed holding a microphone, and embraced her.
I was there one afternoon to work on a science project with Carla, and I heard her singing "Baby Love" and "Back in My Arms Again." I was stunned. She sounded good, and she sounded black, and she sounded beautiful. She sounded like Diana Ross! I burst into her room, where she was sitting on her bed holding a microphone, and embraced her.
"You could make it big," I told her.
"I don't want to be a singer -- I just want to be Diana Ross as a person, Syl," she said. "She's my role model for how to look and how to be. A lady! And a black lady. I still want to go into obstetrics. When I sing 'Baby Love,' I really am thinking about how much I love babies."
The Castillo home was a changed place. The warmth and vitality were gone as this racial tension simmered. The yelling had stopped. Now, it seemed, resentment and hurt feelings dominated. As the weeks passed, though, I sensed a softening in the twins' parents. One day, Mr. Castillo asked Candi to sing for his friends, who were coming over to play some low-stakes poker in the basement.Candi was ecstatic at this breakthrough. This was acceptance. It was pride. She practiced for days. When the men took a "snack break," she went downstairs in her favorite dashiki and her jeans and earth shoes. She'd used a pick to fluff out her cute Afro, and she'd glossed up those yummy lips in a burnished coral color.
The men seemed amused but indulgent as she turned the record on low and waited for the music to begin. But when she sang along to "I Hear a Symphony" and "Nothing but Heartaches," their amusement quickly transitioned into surprise. Carla and I were hiding on the stairs, peeking down to see how she was received.
All of us were quite blown away by the quality and passion of Candi's singing. Tears streamed down Carla's cheeks as she whispered, "She is so cool. I am totally in love with my sister!"
Tears were streaming down her dad's cheeks, too. I was almost 16, and I had never seen a man cry before. It was possibly the greatest affirmation he could have given to his black daughter.
THE BIRTHDAY SUITE
A few days later, the Castillos announced that they were taking the twins to Las Vegas for their sixteenth birthday, which was on June 29, 1967. They would have dinner, see a show, and spend the night at the Flamingo Hotel.
So here was the big deal:
Carla was in on this "surprise treat," and had easily distracted Candi from the marquee when the family arrived by cab from the airport. Candi was under the impression that they would be going to a generic "Vegas show," with some comedy, acrobatics, magic, sexy girls, the usual.
So when the family settled into their front row banquette and ordered a bottle of wine, she was excited but not yet freaked out. She and Carla wore identical long taffeta sheath dresses, the kind The Supremes often wore. Candi's was rose and she wore matching lip gloss. Carla's was aqua, and she wore a tiny bit of matching eye shadow.
The Supremes at the Flamingo Hotel on June 29, 1967. |
Comedian London Lee performed his "poor little rich kid" routine, warming up the audience very well with his wry, New York attitude.
And then the curtain rose.
And there were The Supremes.
The Castillos and Carla watched Candi's face as shock and awe and overwhelming joy took it over. She gasped. She covered her face and kind-of sobbed, and then she stood up briefly to embrace her parents and Carla.
"Baby, baby: where did our love go?" The Supremes sang, gloriously vibrant in their sunflower yellow gowns. Candi mouthed the words to all of the songs: "You just Keep Me Hanging On," "Back in My Arms Again," "Stop! In the Name of Love," "Come See About Me," and "My World is Empty Without You."They got a standing ovation.
"And now we have a unique treat for you," Diana Ross proclaimed in her breathy voice. "A special girl is here tonight on her 16th birthday, and we'd like her to come up and sing the lead for our next song. Candi Castillo: this is your moment!"
Candi seemed elated, and then a moment of panic overtook her, but she quickly composed herself. After all, she'd been practicing for about four years. She knew ever lilt and vibrato, every sigh and harmonic interlude, of all the songs. She squeezed Carla's hand, and strode up to the stage.
She was ready. |
Love is here and
Oh, my darling, now you're gone
Love is here and
Oh, my darling, now, now you're gone
You persuaded me to love you
And I did
But instead of tenderness
I found heartache instead
Into your arms I fell
So unaware of the loneliness
That was waiting there
You close the door to your heart
And you turned the key
Locked your love away from me
Love is here and
Oh, my darling, now you're gone
You made me love you
And oh, my darling, now you're gone
You said loving you would make life beautiful
With each passing day
But as soon as love came into my heart
You turned and you walked, just walked away
You stripped me of my dreams
You gave me faith, then took my hope
Look at me now
Look at me
See what loving you has done to me
Look at my face
See how cryin' has left its trace
After you made me all your own
Then you left me all alone
You made your words sound so sweet
Knowing that your love I couldn't keep
My heart cries out for your touch
But you're not there
And the lonely cry fades in the air
Love is here and
Oh, my darling, now you're gone
Love is here and
Oh, my darling, now you're gone
You made me love you
Oh, my darling, now you're gone
You made me love you
Oh, my darling, now you're gone
Oh, my darling, now you're gone
Love is here and
Oh, my darling, now, now you're gone
You persuaded me to love you
And I did
But instead of tenderness
I found heartache instead
Into your arms I fell
So unaware of the loneliness
That was waiting there
You close the door to your heart
And you turned the key
Locked your love away from me
Love is here and
Oh, my darling, now you're gone
You made me love you
And oh, my darling, now you're gone
You said loving you would make life beautiful
With each passing day
But as soon as love came into my heart
You turned and you walked, just walked away
You stripped me of my dreams
You gave me faith, then took my hope
Look at me now
Look at me
See what loving you has done to me
Look at my face
See how cryin' has left its trace
After you made me all your own
Then you left me all alone
You made your words sound so sweet
Knowing that your love I couldn't keep
My heart cries out for your touch
But you're not there
And the lonely cry fades in the air
Love is here and
Oh, my darling, now you're gone
Love is here and
Oh, my darling, now you're gone
You made me love you
Oh, my darling, now you're gone
You made me love you
Oh, my darling, now you're gone
The Supremes had gotten a standing ovation, but Candi got a "standier" ovation. She had tears on her cheeks, and so did a lot of other people, including Diana Ross.
Candi did go on to become an obstetrician. She married a tall, handsome young black man of Caribbean descent who taught African Studies at the University. She delivered hundreds of babies, and gave birth to two of her own.
Carla got the blessing of her parents to find her real racial identity, and learned that she was Native American. Her father had been Navajo, her mother Ute. She became a successful short-story writer and had a long, rewarding career at a small liberal arts college, heading up its creative writing program.
Carla and Candi are both grandmothers now. Their lives have been supreme indeed.
NOTE TO CANDI: Guess what -- I copied you without meaning to, when I moved to New York. Instead of your April Violets/grape gum "trademark aroma," I found myself using pink baby lotion and chewing Double Bubble gum. I was yummy! Not as delicious as you, but it did the job. Now I use lemon extract and pure peppermint oil.