Julia Reed | 05/11/2009 9:30 am
What Elizabeth Edwards's Hairstylist Knows About John

On Friday morning I spoke to a class of graduating seniors at the all-girls Academy of the Sacred Heart in New Orleans, and I was surprised to find that one the first things they asked me was a variation on wOw’s Question of the Day. I had visited the school two years earlier, just after I’d interviewed Elizabeth Edwards for Vogue, and they wanted to know what I thought about what is going on with her now. They may be only 17, but they got right to the point: “Why in the world is she staying with her husband?” Clearly, they were mystified – and not just a little grossed out.
Theirs is a normal reaction. Last spring, when it was revealed that Eliot Spitzer, the then-governor of New York, was also Client No. 9, I ran into a woman I know at the grocery store, a woman who is several years older than I am and extremely active in the church to which we both belong. The topic of the moment was if and when Spitzer would tender his resignation. “If he were my husband, that’s not something he’d have to worry about,” she told me. “Because if he were my husband he’d be dead – I would have shot him by now.”
Silda Spitzer did not shoot her disgraced husband, just as Joan Kennedy and Hillary Clinton and Wendy Vitter and a host of other women did not shoot theirs. Not only is Eliot Spitzer still alive, Silda is still with him more than a year later, just as Lee Hart is still with Gary (they recently celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary).
I can’t explain any of these women’s actions any more than I could answer the girls’ – or wOw’s – question about Elizabeth Edwards. But I did manage a few things. First, I told the girls, as you get older, you learn never to presume that you know what goes on between any two people in a relationship, Second, the one person I would never presume to tell anything at all to, period, is Edwards, a woman whom I respect and admire and like enormously. She has been through hell, after all. Her teenage son was killed in a freak car accident. She gave birth to another daughter and a son when she was 48 and 50 years old. The first time she found out she had cancer was just after the 2004 Democratic Convention that nominated her husband for vice president; she learned that it had returned – and that it was incurable – while he was in the midst of his second campaign for the presidency. Now the whole world knows that during that same campaign he had an affair (and very likely fathered a child) with his “videographer,” Rielle Hunter, a woman who served as the model for the crazy, druggy character in Jay McInerney’s Story of My Life, as well as an even crazier, druggier character in both American Psycho
and Glamorama
by McInerney’s friend Bret Ellis. Further, her husband had given Edwards the story piecemeal, so that she would stick with him on the trail
Now she’s written a memoir, Resilience, in which she addresses the infidelity, and talked to Oprah. Meanwhile, the whole family grimly hunkers down together in the “dream house” that was built between campaigns (and illnesses) just outside of Chapel Hill, NC – the one with the big open kitchen and enormous beamed family room, the one with the barn she turned into a regulation basketball court for her self-indulgent husband. I cannot begin to imagine how it must feel to be inside that house – or her head.
























86 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
Why are we so curious to find out what goes on behind someone else’s door.? Why must we know the reasons why someone stays in a marriage?
After all does it affect our home? Our bank account? our health?
Will our observations change them and should they listen to us and do what we think is the answer?
Hell, no. As much as I liked the article I do think that we are trying to pry way to0 much. Let them solve this the way they feel is right for them, we do not have a clue.
That’s the whole point: FEW OF US ARE CURIOUS AT ALL. I’m pretty sure I speak for most of us in that we’re aggravated that Elizabeth Edwards is making a stupendous book tour over the next few weeks and that we’re having this stuff shoved down our throats.
Hey, WOW, if you’re at a loss for topics, I’d be glad to give you a list.
I think it is because we are so fearful of it happening to us. We wonder how to prevent it & wonder what we would do in the same situation. We are also learning lessons about what others do.
Although, that being said, I have learned through the years that what I think I would do & what I actually do when faced with a situation squarely in reality can be quite different.
"One of the most telling details to surface during the tawdry Hunter saga is that Edwards felt that it was somehow mitigating to note that his wife had been in remission when he began his affair."
Dahling, this was one of the creepiest statements to emit from that politician with the expensive/bad haircut, in this Mommy’s opinion. Allow me to translate… "She didn’t have cancer (yet), so it wasn’t like it was a BIG betrayal, you guys."
Mommy shudders.