calls, ‘light, bright and beautiful.’ Our team of ex-
perts set to work on the most challenging of Ugly
Ducklings ever.”
The next scene found her in Dr. Jamison’s office,
learning about the application of skin lightening
cream and donning her hat, scarf, and long gloves
for the first time. As she left the office, Dr. Jamison
spoke to the camera, explaining the risks associated
with high doses of hydroquinone and expressing
his concerns about the self-image of those seeking a
radical skin-color change.
“I think in Audra’s case, there’s been a lot of hurt
and trauma associated with her skin tone . . . and
I’m hoping she’ll address those internal concerns as
well as the external ones.”
“He never said that to me,” Audra muttered
no longer able to keep silent as the sweeping heat
of anger burned from her heart to her lips. “He
never said any of that shit to
me
! Every time I asked
for your input you just looked at me!” she told
the man.
Dr. Jamison was gone, his screen time finished.
Now, she was sitting with Dr. Goddard, being
lectured on the tensions between light- and dark-
skinned blacks in America. It was ludicrous, watch-
ing herself, a black woman, being told about
blackness by a white woman, and Audra leaned for-
ward, remembering the conversation clearly, re-
membering her response, which she’d launched
from her own private Africa, down deep inside.
None of it made it into the package. None of it. To
DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING
341
the world, she was just as passive, submissive and
agreeable as the “old Mammy” characters in the
movies she loved so much.
Another quick voice-over teased, “Audra gets
dropped a bombshell from home that rocks her mo-
tivation. Will she complete the Ugly Duckling pro-
gram or will she drop out?” Then the program
jumped to a commercial, leaving Audra’s angry re-
sponse to the doctor’s condescension on the cutting-
room floor.
The silence in the room was like a weight
around her neck, pulling her down into a darkness
worse than any feeling she could ever remember
having.
“They left out a lot of stuff,” Audra told her guests
in a soft voice. “There was all this stuff about keloid
scarring—about changing the tone of my skin to im-
prove the plastic surgery results . . .” she added
lamely.
Her explanations were met with a few mutter-
ings, but no one seemed to want to look at her. So
when the telephone rang, Audra yanked it up, any-
thing to escape from the awful pall that had been
cast over what was supposed to be a happy, celebra-
tory gathering.
“Hello?”
“Is this Audra Marks?” an unfamiliar female
voice asked.
“Yes?”
“The Audra Marks that went on the
Ugly Duckling
show?”
“Yes,” Audra said slowly. Shamiyah had told her
she might get calls from people who’d seen the show,
342
Karyn Langhorne
and had even suggested she make sure her number
was unlisted. But Audra had forgotten about that
warning until this very moment.
“I think you’re a pathetic excuse for a black woman,
you self-hating bitch.”
“Who is this?”
“A proud black woman who’s sick of people like
you
,” the woman hissed furiously. “The white man
said you were ugly, and you swallowed it whole,
didn’t you? I can’t believe you went on TV with this
trash. You want to be a white woman, be one. Black
folks don’t need you no how—”
“It wasn’t like that!” Audra told the woman, but
she hung up as soon as she’d said her piece. The
phone rang again, almost instantly.
“Audra Marks, you ought to be ashamed of your-
self, my sister,” an educated male voice lectured.
“And I feel sorry for you, a beautiful black sister,
for giving up your power for some light, bright
bullshit—”
And even as this stranger filled her ears with his
lesson, the call waiting was beeping through his
message, signaling another caller eager to drop
more curses on her.
Art wrestled the phone out of her hands. “We’ll
just turn it off,” he said, even as the line in Audra’s
bedroom jangled the steady jangle of another call.
“Go—”
But the show had returned and Audra stood still,
not wanting to watch and yet arrested by the un-
folding train wreck that was her appearance on
Ugly Duckling
.
“Troubles from home threaten Audra’s progress,”
DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING
343
the narrator was saying and Audra saw herself sit-
ting in the mirrorless apartment that had been her
home for months, the telephone pressed to her ear.
In white letters superimposed beneath her image
were the words, on the phone, audra’s mother,
edith.
And suddenly she knew exactly what she was go-
ing to hear and see.
“No . . .” she whispered as her heart stopped beat-
ing in her chest and the room became suddenly as
cold and dark as an arctic winter. “They wouldn’t
do that . . . She promised she wouldn’t . . .”
“Andrew Neill,” Edith’s voice said over the phone
with a loud beep replacing the syllable of the last
name. “He’s your father.”
“No she didn’t!” Edith exploded, jumping out of
her chair as ready to fight as any boxing champion
at the sound of the bell. “No she didn’t!”
But on the television, the conversation continued
as it had in reality: “If he’d lived, I would have left
James Marks—I would have left Petra’s father for
him and you would have known him, Audra. Then
maybe you’d be proud to look like him instead of
ashamed—”
“I’m gonna kill that little bitch Shamiyah,” Edith
hollered. “Somebody get my switchblade. I’m hop-
ping the next plane, train or automobile and”—she
looked wildly around the room as if pleading for
her guests’ understanding—“She
swore
on her life
they were gonna leave that out—”
“Undaunted by her mother’s entreaties, Audra re-
ports for surgery the next morning,” the relentless
narration continued, and the next images were of
344
Karyn Langhorne
the actual surgical process, sped up like a comedy
sketch, as three long, hard days of procedures were
compressed into less than thirty seconds.
Audra could hear the phone, still ringing in the
bedroom . . . and now the cell phone in her handbag
was jangling along with it, but she couldn’t make
her feet move to silence either one of them. She was
still staring at the TV in utter disbelief.
She’d just told the world she was illegitimate—
just outed her mother as an adultress—just opened
the Pandora’s box of family secrets and dumped
them out, soiled and foul, in front of everyone.
The cold room went hot, then cold, then hot
again, and she felt herself falling.
“Sit down,” Art murmured, but between her
mother vowing to cut Shamiyah from curls to calf,
the sound of several of their guests excusing them-
selves and the noise of the TV, she barely heard him,
barely felt the sofa beneath her legs.
It wasn’t over, the humiliation. Because there she
was, swaddled in bandages from forehead to neck,
talking to Dr. Goddard, denying her anger, denying
her hurt when it was so plain—so plain. The woman
she was looking at was the personification of anger,
the pure embodiment of hurt . . . and only she was
too blind to see it. But there wasn’t even a minute
of the subsequent breakdowns and breakthroughs—
nothing that might have redeemed her in the eyes of
the viewing public.
“God help me,” Audra muttered. “Please . . .”
But if the prayer were granted, His help appeared
in a form Audra could not recognize. The show
DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING
345
continued, marching through the healing process,
the gym workouts, the slow transformation of Au-
dra Marks, punctuated every so often by the narra-
tor’s comments, pointing out the obvious: Audra’s
skin seemed a little lighter, a little brighter, in every
scene . . . right down to the dramatic Reveal, where
Audra kicked and strutted and simpered and
pranced—and seemed just as self-centered and ob-
noxious as any pretty woman she’d ever disliked in
her fat, black and ugly days.
“For all Audra’s difficulties with relationships
with men in the past, it appears that there is some
possibility of a new romance on the horizon,”
Camilla Jejune narrated in a voice filled with high
drama, as Audra rushed into Art’s arms at the Re-
veal and some sappy music played. But at least in
that one brief scene, Audra seemed like a real hu-
man being, and not some kind of—of—
Character.
The realization hit her high and hard with its
truth . . . because for a good deal of the whole Ugly
Duckling experience—indeed, for a good deal of
her life—that’s exactly what she’d been doing. Play-
ing a character, a larger-than-life version of someone
she hardly knew—someone who didn’t really exist
at all.
“Wait a minute . . .” Audra stared at the screen, as
the thing that had been niggling in the back of her
mind for weeks took form and grew. “Wait a
minute!” she shouted over Edith’s continued curs-
ing. “That’s not right. That’s not how it happened.
The order is wrong.” She turned to her mother. “I’d
346
Karyn Langhorne
already had the surgery when you told me that. Re-
member?”
“Oh they just got us all messed up on here,”
Edith declared. “All messed up! They make it
sound like you set out to turn yourself into—into—
some kind of white girl! Somebody get me
my switchblade—”
On the screen in front of them, Camilla Jejune was
explaining the rules of the voting for Top Three.
“Give me the remote,” Audra demanded and once it
was in her hand, she stopped the video tape they’d
been recording and hit rewind.
There it was again, herself, talking to her mother,
being told about her paternity . . .
“Ma! Look!” she pointed at the screen. “There’s
no bandages!”
“No . . .” her mother said slowly.
“But you didn’t tell me until after the surgery.”
“Well, I tried to call,” Edith said angrily. “We al-
ready been through all that. Shamiyah said she
couldn’t reach you, and then you was too out of it to
take any phone calls. She didn’t call me and tell me
you were ready ’til damn near a week later—”
“When there were bandages all over my face and
body. They’ve done some major editing here,” Au-
dra announced, her own anger sharpening. “They’ve
switched it all around to suit the story they wanted
to tell—”
“I don’t understand,” Penny interjected.
“Audra’s saying Shamiyah didn’t want Ms. Edith
to talk to her before the surgery,” Art explained.
“You bet she didn’t.” Audra grabbed the phone,
dialing the numbers from memory. “Because she
DIARY OF AN UGLY DUCKLING
347
knew if I talked to Ma, I’d back out! She knew I’d
call the whole thing off and she wouldn’t have a
show—” She stopped short as the ringing sound
from the phone at her ear was replaced by a familiar
voice.
“Audra! Woman of the hour!” Shamiyah sounded
breathless and excited. “My phone has been ringing
off the hook. You saw the show, right? Didn’t you
just
love
it?”
“No, I didn’t love it, Shamiyah!” Audra snapped.
“It’s bad enough that you made me look like some
kind of self-hating color-struck
freak
.” Audra let her
voice rise with the word. “But—”
Edith snatched the phone out of her hand. “You
lying little
bitch!
I’m gonna cut you from your ears to
where the sun don’t shine—”
Audra grabbed the phone away from her mother.
“You asked me to talk about the man I thought
was my father, that he thought I was ugly . . . and I
did. But you promised not to go any deeper than
that. You promised not to tell the whole world about
my mother’s—”
“She consented to the release of the phone call,
Audra,” Shamiyah said as though that were the
only consideration. “I have the paperwork right
here.”
“But—”
“Look, Audra, it was an important part of your
story. We couldn’t leave it out. Not when it’s so com-
pelling and—” There was a break in the line as an-
other call rolled Audra’s line. “You should probably
get that. I told you earlier that we’ve been getting re-
quests from all kinds of media. All the morning
348
Karyn Langhorne
shows want to interview you and Dr. Goddard. To
talk more about color consciousness in the black
community and—”
“I’m not answering that damned phone,” Audra