From UK Daily Mail
Oprah’s relationships with Stedman & Gayle have long been the subject of much puzzled speculation.
Barbara said; ‘He was
comfortable like an old shoe, to her. They stayed in the same room when
they were here but he didn’t live with her exactly. He travels so much;
he would fly here and there to her. He’s at her beck and call. I think
in the beginning it was different. Vernon told me how
one time he was driving and Oprah was taking Stedman to meet family in
Mississippi. He said she was running her hands through his hair the
whole trip, till he was so fed up he was ready to put her out of the
car.
‘She wanted to get married at first but he wasn’t so keen. Then she became this powerful person and things changed, the balance switched.’
Nowhere
could that be clearer than on the occasion when, according to Barbara,
Oprah ensured a book written by Stedman made it onto the bestseller
list.
She claimed that the star bought a warehouse and filled it with Stedman’s books.
‘It worked,’ she said, ‘His book was a
bestseller. Stedman
isn’t a good steward of money and that suits Oprah fine. He is
financially dependent on her. He knows her secrets and she knows his.
Why would they marry now? He’s there at her beck and call. He knows his
role in her life.’
And just as importantly he understands Gayle’s role in Oprah’s life. Barbara said.
‘Gayle is
very, very present. I don’t know any man I’ve ever dated who could
tolerate that, but Stedman knows Gayle’s going nowhere. They speak on
the phone three or four times a day. She believes Oprah and Gayle's
relationship is 'unhealthy'.
Frequently,
she said, Oprah’s communications to her or Vernon, now 81, were
delivered through Gayle. When notorious biographer Kitty Kelly was
working on a book about Oprah and interviewed her father in his barber’s
shop it was Gayle who called to berate first Barbara, then Vernon.
And
when Oprah spoke of herself as part of a couple, the ‘we’ in question
more often referred to her and Gayle, than her and Stedman.
Barbara
said: ‘The day I called to tell her that her father had been held up at
gunpoint in his barber’s shop her response was, “Well, I expect him to
be found dead in there one day.”
‘I
asked her why she would say something so cold, she said, “Coz it’s
true. Gayle and I have already discussed it and we’ve accepted that.”
‘That’s how it was with them.
‘Sometimes
I believe that Oprah is more dependent on Gayle than the other way
round. I don’t know what she would do without her friendship and if it’s
not more than friendship then they’re certainly giving every appearance
that it is.
‘But
don’t forget, Oprah has her brand to live up to and her father is a
very conservative, traditional man. He’s a deacon of his church. He
always thought she should get married.’
Oprah’s
highly public, lifelong struggle with her wildly fluctuating weight, is
linked to her effort to ‘be’ the brand according to Barbara.
She said, ‘She’s a stress eater. Food is her comfort. Potatoes are her downfall, potatoes, potato chips…any kind of potato.
‘But you rarely saw Oprah fix a plate of food and eat it at the table with everybody else.
‘If
she joined you she would pick at other people’s plates. If she saw
something she wanted she’d just take it straight off their plate and
wouldn’t even ask.’
The star would frequently instruct Stedman to make a doggy bag of food to take away rather than enjoy it in company.
She reflected, ‘Nobody can live up to being Oprah. She’s human like I’m human. She’s not perfect.’
Given
her unenviable position today it might seem surprising to hear Barbara
express sympathy for Oprah, yet she does, repeatedly.
‘She
tells the world what to do but she’s in inner turmoil. Everybody thinks
she has all the answers but she needs to sit down with Dr Phil.’
She
continued, ‘Vernon often told me that he thought if Oprah could change
the color of her skin she would - she’d make it lighter.’
Barbara
recalled an occasion on which she, Oprah and Stedman had been out
walking their dogs, Solomon, a brown cocker spaniel and Sophie, a black
dog of the same breed.
‘I
told her it suddenly struck me how she looked like Sophie and he looked
like Solomon – like owners come to resemble their dogs. Oprah said,
“No. I look more like Solomon. HE looks more like Sophie.” I hadn’t
meant it to be a slight about color but that’s how she took it.’
It’s
hard to believe Barbara made the remark in wide-eyed innocence,
oblivious to the fact that telling your stepdaughter she looks like a
dog might be taken as a slight.
Still,
she insisted, ‘Color was a real thing for her. It’s one of the things
she liked about Stedman. He has what we call ‘high yellow’ skin and soft
hair. He’s very pale complexioned and she liked that.’
The
cover of next month’s edition of her eponymous magazine, ‘O: The Oprah
Magazine’ shows the star, resplendent in Purple alongside the promise,
‘How to Love the Skin You’re In', but according to Barbara, that is
something Oprah herself has never quite managed to achieve.
That
unhappiness plays a part, she said, in the bitter denouement of her
divorce from Vernon. It explains, to some extent, Oprah’s need to insert
and assert herself in any of it.
She said, ‘She’s a billionaire three times over, doesn’t it seem so petty?
‘If
I could I’d like to tell her how sad it is she never took the time to
get to know me as a woman. I would still be married to Vernon I think,
if she had.
‘To me it’s just such a sad story at the end of the day.’
Culled from UK Daily Mail
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