Chapter One
PROLOGUE
When you're a kid, you don't worry what anyone thinks. You go around
saying whatever pops into your head or picking your teeth, and it never
occurs to you that someone might think you're gross, awkward, or
ridiculous. That was me -- picking my nose, snorting when I laughed,
wearing white after Labor Day -- I just was who I was. That all changed
one day at the tender age of twelve when I was getting ready for a
family photo. We were having a formal family portrait taken with our
dogs (doesn't everyone do that?), and I was getting frustrated with my
bangs. I couldn't get them to do whatever a twelve-year-old in 1985
wanted bangs to do. So I went into my parents' bathroom, all dressed up,
with my hair done as best I could manage, and asked my mother, "Am I
pretty?"
She looked at me and said, "You will be when we get your nose done."
I was stunned. My nose, as noses tend to be, was right in the middle of
my face, and I had just been told that it was ugly. So long, innocence.
To be fair, let the record show that my mother has absolutely no
recollection of making this comment. I know this because in high school
I took a class called Human Development, taught by Mrs. Wildflower. In
it we had to keep a journal (her name was Mrs. Wildflower -- what did
you expect?), and when Mrs. Wildflower read my story about the nose
incident, she called my parents. That afternoon I came home to find my
mother crying. She said, "I never said that. I'd never say something
like that." I'm sure she was telling the truth as she remembered it.
Nonetheless, I had my nose done the minute I turned sixteen. Or didn't
you hear? But what I realized as a twelve-year-old was bigger than that
I was destined for the plastic surgeon's chair. I realized that how
other people saw me wasn't necessarily how I saw myself. Feeling pretty
or smart or happy wasn't all there was to it. What I hadn't considered
before was how I was perceived. And it wasn't the last criticism I'd
hear about my nose.
Little did I know then how huge a role public perception would play in
my life. My nose, and pretty much every other "prominent" body part and
feature, would be prey to gossip and tabloids in just a few years. But
the unwanted attention wasn't limited to my body. According to the
press, I was the rich, spoiled daughter of TV producer Aaron Spelling.
They claimed I grew up in California's largest single-family residence.
They said that my father had fake snow made on his Beverly Hills lawn
for Christmas. They said I was the ultimate example of nepotism, a lousy
actor who nonetheless scored a lead role in her father's hit TV show.
They pigeonholed me as my character on
Beverly Hills, 90210:
Donna Martin, the ditzy blonde virgin. They later talked about my
wedding, my divorce, and my second wedding. They reported that I'd been
disinherited and was feuding with my mother. They told about the birth
of my son. What I learned from my ugly nose was true times a million:
The details of my life were and would always be considered public
property.
Some of what you may have read about me is accurate (my father did hire
a snow machine for Christmas), some false (I didn't live in that
enormous house until I was seventeen), and some exaggerated (I wasn't
"disinherited"). But all the while the life I was living was much more
than that. I lived in fear of my own doll collection. I let a bad
boyfriend spend my 90210 salary. I planned a fairy-tale wedding to the
wrong man. I begged casting directors to forget that Donna Martin ever
existed. I was working hard and shopping like crazy. I was falling in
love and getting hurt. My life has been funnier and sadder and richer
and poorer than any of the magazines know.
Public opinion dies hard. To this day I still look in the mirror and
hate my nose. Still, everyone else has been telling stories about me for
decades now. It's about time I told a few of my own.
Copyright © 2008 by Tori Spelling
Chapter One
X Marks the Spot
Here's the part of my book where I'm supposed to say, Sure, my family
had lots of money, but I had a normal childhood just like everyone else.
Yeah, I could say that, but I'd be lying. My childhood was really weird.
Not better or worse than anyone else's childhood, but definitely
different.
Part of it was the whole holiday thing. My parents liked to make a
spectacle, and the press ate it up. Like I said, it's true that my
father got snow for our backyard one Christmas. But that's only half the
story, if anyone's counting -- he actually did it twice. The first time
was when I was five. My father told our family friend Aunt Kay that he
wanted me to have a white Christmas. She did some research, made a few
calls, and at six a.m. on Christmas Day a truck from Barrington Ice in
Brentwood pulled up to our house. My dad, Aunt Kay, and a security guard
dragged garbage bags holding eight tons of ice into the back where there
was plastic covering a fifteen-foot-square patch of the yard. They
spread the snow out over the plastic, Dad with a pipe hanging from his
mouth. To complete the illusion, they added a Styrofoam snowman that my
father had ordered up from the props department at his studio. It was
eighty degrees out, but they dressed me up in a ski jacket and hat and
brought me out into the yard, exclaiming, "Oh, look, it snowed! In all
of Los Angeles it snowed right here in your backyard! Aren't you a lucky
girl?"
I'm sure that little white patch was as amazing to a five-year-old as
seeing a sandbox for the first time, but my parents didn't stop there.
Five years later they were thinking bigger, and technology was too. This
time, again with Aunt Kay's guidance, my dad hired a snow machine to
blow out so much powder that it not only filled the tennis court, it
created a sledding hill at one end of the court. I was ten and my
brother, Randy, was five. They dressed us in full-on snowsuits (the
outfits were for the photos, of course -- it was a typical eighty-five
degrees out). According to Aunt Kay, the sledding hill lasted three days
and everyone came to see the snow in Beverly Hills: Robert Wagner, Mel
Brooks...not that I noticed or cared. Randy and I spent Christmas
running up the hill and zooming down in red plastic saucer sleds. Even
our dogs got to slide down the hill. It was a pretty spectacular day for
an L.A. girl.
My parents didn't get the concept of having me grow up like other kids.
When I was about eight, my class took a field trip to my dad's studio.
It was a fun day -- my father showed us around and had some surprises
planned, such as a stuntman breaking "glass" over some kid's head. But
then, at the end of the day, the whole class stood for a photo. My
father and I were in the back row. Just before the shutter clicked, he
picked me up and held me high above the class. My face in the photo says
it all. I was beyond embarrassed that my father was lifting me up like
that. I just wanted to fit in. When I complained to him, he said, "But
you couldn't be seen." He just didn't get it.
And then there were the birthday parties. The setting was always the
backyard of our house on the corner of Mapleton and Sunset Boulevard in
Holmby Hills, a fancy area on the west side of Los Angeles. It was a
very large house -- though not the gigantic manor where everyone thinks
I grew up -- maybe 10,000 square feet. It was designed by the noted L.A.
architect Paul Williams, whose many public buildings include the famous
Beverly Hills Hotel. A house he designed in Bel-Air was used for
exterior scenes of the Colby mansion on my dad's television series The
Colbys. Our house's back lawn was probably an acre surrounded by
landscaping with a pool and tennis court, the regular features of houses
in that neighborhood.
As I remember it, the theme for my birthdays was always Raggedy Ann, and
there would be a doll centerpiece and rented tables and chairs with
matching tablecloths, napkins, and cups. But every party had some new
thrill. There were carnival moon bounces, which weren't common then as
they are today, and fair booths lined up on both sides of the lawn
offering games of ringtoss, balloon darts, duck floats, Whac-A-Mole, and
the like. One birthday had a dancing -poodle show conducted by a man in
a circus ringleader's outfit. Another included a puppet show with
life-size puppets. And one year we had a surprise visit from Smidget,
who at the time was the smallest living horse. My godfather, Dean
Martin, whom I called Uncle Bean, always brought me a money tree -- a
little tree with rolled up twenty-dollar bills instead of leaves. Just
what a girl like me needed.
When my sixth-grade class graduated, we had a party at my house for
which my father hired the USC marching band. Apparently, my dad first
approached UCLA, but they said no. According to Aunt Kay, who organized
a lot of these parties for my parents, my father told her, "Money is no
object." Well, it must have been an object to the USC marching band
because all one hundred plus members showed up to play "Pomp and
Circumstance" and whatever else marching bands come up with to play at
sixth-grade graduations. I have to admit I didn't even remember the
marching band's presence until Aunt Kay told me about it. What I
remember are the things a twelve-year-old remembers: the rented dance
floor and the DJ and hoping that the boy I liked would ask me to slow
dance to "Crazy for You" by Madonna. I remember swimming in the pool. I
remember feeling sad that we were all moving on to different schools. I
remember being only mildly embarrassed that my mother was hula hooping
on the dance floor, but I'm sure I was truly embarrassed by the marching
band.
My parents were endlessly generous, and those parties were
spectacular...on paper. The reality was a little more complicated. For
every birthday and Christmas my big present was always a Madame
Alexander doll. Madame Alexander dolls are classic, collectible dolls.
Sort of like a rich man's Barbie, but -- at least in my house -- they
were meant for display, not play. My mother loved the best of the best,
for herself and for me. She was known for her Dynasty-style jewelry --
quarter-size emeralds dangling off nickel-size diamonds. Most
attention-grabbing was the forty-four-carat diamond ring she always
wore. That's right -- no typo. Forty-four carats. Walking around with
that thing must have been as good as weight lifting. I always begged her
not to wear the ring to school functions. But that was her everyday
style -- put together in blouses with Chanel belts, slim jeans, Chanel
flats, perfectly manicured red nails, and a heavy load of jewelry worth
millions of dollars.
As for the Madame Alexander dolls, every birthday, as soon as I
unwrapped them, they were whisked away, tags still attached, to a
special display case in my room that had a spotlight for each doll. No
way in hell was I allowed to dress and undress them or (God forbid!) cut
their hair. Every time I unwrapped a present, my heart sank a little bit
when I saw that same powder blue box. I knew that all I had was a new,
untouchable doll to add to my expensive collection. But my mother would
be smiling with pleasure. She loved the dolls, had always coveted them
as a girl, and wanted me to have something special. I didn't want to
hurt her feelings, so I always thanked her and acted excited -- she had
no idea that all I wanted (at some point) was a Barbie Dream House.
So now imagine another birthday party. I was four or five. The great
lawn was festooned with balloons and streamers. Colorful booths lined
the perimeter of its downward slope. And in the center of it all was a
mysterious white sheet with a big red X painted across it.
In the middle of the festivities a plane flew overhead. I was just
starting to read, but our family friend Aunt Kay had spent all morning
teaching me how to read Happy Birthday, Tori. Not coincidentally, the
plane was pulling a banner saying just that. I read it and was thrilled
and proud, jumping up and down and clapping my hands in excitement. Aunt
Kay waved to the pilot, and he dropped a little parachute with a mystery
gift attached to its strings. So dramatic! It was supposed to hit the X
on the sheet, but instead, it landed in a tree. One of the carnival
workers had to climb the tree to get it down. I later found out that
Aunt Kay had to get special permits for the plane to fly that low over
the house.
As soon as my present was liberated, I ran to the box and pulled away
the padding until I got to the present. I tore open the wrapping paper,
and there it was. The powder blue box. Another Madame Alexander doll.
This one was a surprise, along with the plane, from Aunt Kay. (Some of
my most valuable dolls were gifts from her collection.) My friends oohed
and aahed, and I fake-squealed with joy. Then I handed the doll over to
my mother so her dress wouldn't get dirty.
At some point I wondered if all these spectacular events were actually
being done for me. Really, how many sixth-grade girls' biggest fantasy
is for a college marching band to play at their graduation? Take
Halloween. When I was five or six, my mother decided I would go as a
bride. No polyester drugstore costume for me, no sir. Halloween found me
wearing a custom bridal gown made by the noted fashion designer Nolan
Miller, with padded boobs and false eyelashes. And, like many
Halloweens, I wore high heels. It wasn't easy to find heels for a young
child, so my mother went through the Yellow Pages until she found a
"little person" store that sold grown-up shoes in my size.
Then there was the Marie Antoinette costume my mother had Nolan Miller
make for me when I was nine or ten. My five-year-old brother, Randy, was
Louis XVI (a costume that actually suited him -- even at that young age,
he was already showing a taste for the finer things. We'd go to a
restaurant and he'd tell the waiter, "For my appetizer I'll have the
escargot.") My Marie Antoinette costume had golden brocade, a boned
bodice, and gigantic hip bustles. It was topped off with an enormous
powdered wig of ringlets so heavy that I got my first headache. I looked
like one of those Madame -Alexander dolls of which my mother was so
fond. Meanwhile, Randy got off easy in a ruffled red coat and a
comparatively lightweight wig.
My parents drove their young royals to the flats of Beverly Hills,
L.A.'s prime trick-or-treating turf. The houses were closer together
than those in our neighborhood but still inhabited by rich people who
didn't think twice about giving out full-size candy bars. Not that we
got to keep any of the candy we collected anyway. My mother was paranoid
about hidden razor blades and poisoned chocolate, so she always
confiscated our booty and replaced it with bags she'd painstakingly
assembled herself.
As I wobbled my way down the street trying to adjust to my new center of
gravity, some kids threw raw eggs at me. I barely felt the first couple
-- they must have hit my bustle. But then, as if in slow motion, I saw
two eggs coming toward us, one at me, one at my brother. Randy darted
out of the line of fire, but I couldn't escape because of my enormous
petticoats. An egg hit me in the ear. I wish I could at least claim it
was some French immigrants avenging their eighteenth-century proletariat
ancestors, but I think I was just caught in run-of-the-mill vampire/Jedi
knight cross fire.
After the Marie Antoinette debacle, I'd had it. When Halloween rolled
around again, I begged to be anything other than a historical figure. I
wanted to be a plain old bunny. You know, the classic Halloween costume:
plastic mask, grocery bag for candy, jacket hiding the one-piece paper
outfit. My mother agreed to the bunny concept. But instead of drawn-on
whiskers and bunny ears on a headband, I had a hand-sewn bunny costume,
which had me in (fake) fur from head to toe with just my face showing.
Who was I to complain? It was the best bunny costume a girl could ever
want. Unfortunately, after four houses I had an allergy attack and had
to go home.
For all the effort and fanfare my parents put into my childhood, I'm
most sentimental about some of the lower-key indulgences, the ones that
had nothing to do with how I was dressed or what kind of party our
family could throw. We have a beach house in Malibu, and whenever we
went there, my mother and I would walk out to the end of our beach to
pick shells. (This is the same beach house where Dean Martin, my Uncle
Bean, came to stay for a summer during his divorce. He was a huge golfer
and traveled with a stockpile of golf balls that had his autograph
printed on them. Every morning he'd set up a driving range on the
private beach in front of our house and shoot golf balls into the ocean.
People from all sides of the beach would be diving into the water to
collect those golf balls as souvenirs, but Uncle Bean would just keep
hitting the balls, completely oblivious.) Anyway, whenever my mother and
I went shelling, she always brought her purse, which wasn't suspicious
since she smoked at the time. I'd hunt for shells and she'd urge me on,
pointing me to spots I'd missed. It never took me long to find a few
big, beautiful, polished seashells. I was always telling my friends that
Malibu had the most amazing seashells.
My Malibu illusions were shattered when I was twelve. We took a family
trip to Europe, but because my father refused to fly, we took the scenic
route. It started with a three-day train trip to New York in a private
train car attached to the back of a regular Amtrak train. We brought two
nannies, my mother's assistant, and two security guards. From New York
we took the Queen Elizabeth II to Europe. I loved the boat -- it had a
shopping mall, restaurants, and a movie theater -- but what excited me
most was that they had little arts-and-crafts activities scheduled for
the kids. It was the closest to summer camp I ever got. (It was also the
farthest from home I ever got. Every other family vacation was spent in
Vegas, mostly because you could get there by car.) In England we made
the tourist rounds: Trafalgar Square, Madame Tussaud's, and so on. Of
course, when my mother saw the Crown Jewels at the Tower of London she
commented, "I have a necklace bigger than that." It was true. She did.
But I was talking about the breaking of the Malibu seashell mythology.
In England I was reading
OK! or
Hello!a?? -- one of those
gossip magazines that were more respectable back in the eighties -- and
I came across an interview with my parents. In it my mother talks about
how she used to buy exotic seashells and hide them for me on the beach
in Malibu. Total shock to me. So much for the beautiful seashells of
Malibu. You know your family doesn't exactly communicate well when you
find out things like this in weekly magazines.
Part of why I was upset about the seashells (beyond normal
almost-teenage angst) was that it had only been the year before that I
realized there was no Santa Claus or Easter Bunny. All I knew was that
every year on the night before Easter, the Easter Bunny would call me on
the phone and tell me to be a good girl. And every Christmas Eve the
phone would ring and Santa's workers would inform my father that Santa
had landed and he was approaching our house. A few moments later there'd
be a knock at the door and...there was Santa. My brother and I would
rush to greet him in our coordinated Christmas outfits. I'd be wearing a
red overalls dress with a white shirt and red kneesocks, and Randy would
be wearing red overalls shorts with a white shirt and red kneesocks.
We'd sit on Santa's lap, one on each knee, and tell him what we wanted
for Christmas. Then he'd tell us to get to bed early, that tomorrow was
a big day, and he'd ho-ho-ho out the door. It didn't always go so
smoothly -- like the time that Randy peed on Santa's knee -- but for the
most part that was what had gone on for years, and I saw no reason to
believe the kids at school when they said Santa was bunk. I saw him with
my own eyes.
I probably would have kept believing if my cousin Meredith hadn't come
over for a sleepover when I was eleven. She was a year older than I was,
and that fact alone made her cool. I was really psyched that she was
spending the night. It was Easter, and I must have said something about
the Easter Bunny's imminent arrival because she was like, "You're
kidding that you think there's an Easter Bunny." I said, "Yes, there
is." Then she said, "Don't tell me you believe in Santa, too!" The kids
at school were eleven like I was -- what did they know? Why should I
believe them? But -Meredith was twelve. She knew stuff. I had to
concede. If it hadn't been for her, who knows how long the charade might
have gone on. Oh, and after that I never saw Meredith again. I think her
disclosures convinced my parents that she was a bad influence.
As a kid I felt deceived to discover my parents had been lying, but now
I realize it was pretty lovely. My mother loved decorating for and with
us -- coloring Easter eggs, carving jack-o'-lanterns, setting up moving
Santa scenes at Christmastime. The seashells, the holiday characters,
the decorations, these were pure, sweet moments that weren't about
putting on a show, they were about making us happy. These were the
heartfelt private gifts from my parents for which I never knew to thank
them.
Looking back, what I remember with the most affection is being four
years old and having a dad who would sit in the Jacuzzi with me and make
up stories. My father was a slight man with slouchy shoulders that made
him appear even smaller. For all his power in Hollywood, most of the
time he'd appear in a jogging suit with a pipe. He spoke in a soft voice
with a hint of Texas twang and would come right up to you to shake your
hand or give you a hug even if he didn't know you well. The overall
effect was very
Wizard of Oz man-behind-the curtain -- this
unimposing, gentle guy is the famous Aaron Spelling? People always felt
comfortable with him right away.
He and I would sit in the hot tub, and he'd be Hansel and I'd be Gretel
and my mom (upstairs with a migraine) would be the witch. (Yes, I now
think this is weird, if not psychologically damaging, that my father let
me cast my unwitting mother as the villain. At least I can say that on
the day I have in mind I kept looking up at the window of my mother's
bedroom, hoping to see the shade go up, which meant the witch felt
better and might join us at the pool.) Or we'd play Chasen's.
Chasen's restaurant, which is now closed, was a legendary celebrity
hangout on Beverly Boulevard in Beverly Hills. Frank Sinatra, Alfred
Hitchcock, Marilyn Monroe, Jimmy Stewart, and most of the Hollywood
elite were regulars in their day. When I was a kid, the family would go
to Chasen's on Mother's Day or Father's Day for a fancy celebration. So
my dad and I would recline in the Jacuzzi and say, "We've just arrived
at Chasen's. What should we order?"
A few years later I asked my parents for an allowance because the other
kids at school had allowances. My father wanted to give me five dollars,
but I wanted only twenty-five cents because that's what the other kids
got. Dad told me that in order to earn my allowance, I'd have to help
out around the house, so he gave me a job and said he'd do it with me.
Every weekend we'd go out into the yard to scoop up dog poo and rake
leaves.
That's right, every weekend TV mogul Aaron Spelling, net worth
equivalent to some small island nation, went out and scooped poo with
his daughter. We hadn't yet moved to the Manor -- that enormous house
that the press can't get over -- but we still had a large yard and four
dogs. And of course we had gardeners who were supposed to be taking care
of all that. But there was always plenty for us to pick up, and I
suspect he told the gardeners to leave it be. Sort of like the
seashells, I guess -- but a lot grosser. No matter, I loved it. I
remember spending a lot of time out on that lawn, hanging out with my
dad, playing softball, or working in the vegetable garden with him and
my mother. One year we grew a zucchini that was as big as a baby. There
are photos of me cradling it. My father was very proud -- no matter what
it was, our family liked the biggest and the best.
For the most part my father thought that money was the way to show love.
Where do you think all those lavish jewels my mother wore came from?
Every holiday he bought her a bigger and brighter bauble as if to prove
his love. When I asked Aunt Kay to help me remember some of the
extravagances, she said, "Money was no object. That's how much he loved
you. There was no limit to what he would do for you." When my mom and I
were planning my wedding, my father said almost the same thing: "She
loves you so much. Do you know how much she's paying for this wedding?
That's how much she loves you." When it comes down to it, luxury wasn't
the substance of my childhood. Love was, simply, the time my parents
gave me. What I wish my father had understood before he died is that of
all those large-scale memories he and my mother spent so much money and
energy creating, picking up poo is what has stayed with me my whole
life.
Copyright © 2008 by Tori Spelling
(Continues...)
Excerpted from "sTORI Telling"
by Tori Spelling.
Copyright (C) by Tori Spelling.
Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.