Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Posted in scnow.com - Katie Melton meets Susan Boyle

Dreaming a dream to meet Susan Boyle

Florence woman admired “Britain’s Got Talent’ phenom from afar, then got to have tea and crumpets with her
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Posted: Wednesday, June 19, 2013 7:56 pm
FLORENCE, S.C. — Almost two years ago, Candy Melton had never heard of Susan Boyle, of “Britain’s Got Talent” fame. Yet just last month, she was sitting down to have tea and cookies with her at Boyle’s house in Blackburn, Scotland.
Boyle, a Scottish-born singer, leapt onto the world stage by captivating audiences with her performance on the talent show in 2009. Melton, 46, said she hadn’t really been a fan of the American version of the show but was taken aback when her 13-year-old daughter, Katie, showed her the video of Boyle on BGT.
“The first time I saw it I couldn’t believe it. I watched it over and over,” Melton said during an interview at her home in Florence. “No one makes Simon Cowell smile, but she made him smile right away.”
She said it was amazing how Boyle was met with criticism because of her looks and the funny way she talked but silenced all critics when she started to sing.
The more she found out about Boyle, the more her interest grew. Shortly after seeing the video, Melton joined a Susan Boyle Facebook fan group to meet other fans. Through the group, she met fellow fan 64 year-old Rita Degenova of Boston.
After about a month of talking on the Internet and by phone, Melton had an idea.
“I just asked Rita if she wanted to go meet Susan,” she said. “Right away, she said yes.”
Melton admits it was a little unusual never having met someone in person before planning a huge trip to Scotland. She hadn’t been away from her husband, Barry, in 27 years of marriage let alone out of the country. Melton said Barry eventually warmed up to the idea.
“I told her if we could save enough for it, she could go. She’s never really gone on a trip anywhere,” he said. “I could see it meant a lot to her, so we made it happen.”
It took her a year of planning and saving to pull it off. Melton admits there was an element of doubt in going with someone she had never met in person.
“You’re just not going to find people like that (Degenova) every day on the Internet,” she said. “We talked but there were things I didn’t say, not completely knowing her.”
Just in case, Melton decided to fly to Boston and stay with Degenova the night before leaving with her for Scotland. At that point, Melton said she was ready to abandon the trip if she and Degenova didn’t gel. They were to meet in the Boston airport for the first time, decked out in official Susan Boyle red scarves to recognize each other.
“We were the only ones crazy enough to walk around the airport with scarves on in the summer,” Melton said, laughing.
The two hit it off, flying out the next evening for a week without a guarantee they would even be able to see Boyle, let alone meet her. They arrived in Scotland on Mother’s Day. Before the trip, Melton met a friend of Boyle’s online who promised to try and set up a meeting, but there was no guarantee. At the time, Boyle was in the middle of recording her new CD and was involved in filming a movie. When she got to Edinburgh, the phone number for her contact wouldn’t work.
Instead of giving up, they decided to go to Boyle’s house anyway, “at least to say we did that,” Melton said. Upon returning to the hotel, 17 miles away, there was a message from her contact. When he went to go pick them up for dinner, he broke the news that they were actually going to meet with Boyle.
“Rita and I started pinching each other because we couldn’t believe we were going to meet her,” she said.
When they arrived at her house in Blackburn, the two were greeted with a big smile and Boyle welcoming them in, saying, “Come on in, I won’t bite cha,” in her thick Scottish dialect.
For more than an hour, Melton, Degenova and Boyle talked and had tea and cookies. In anticipation of the meeting, Melton bought a set of original 35 year-old Donnie and Marie Osmond dolls to give to Boyle because she knew Boyle had idolized Donnie since she was 13 years old. Last year, Boyle sung a duet with Donnie on the show “Dancing With the Stars,” then toured with the duo.
“She loved them,” Melton said.
The women also gave Boyle a locket with a picture of Boyle and her mother inside. Immediately, Boyle put the locket on her necklace with her mother’s wedding ring.
“Just the other day, I saw her wearing it on a video. I was shocked,” Melton said.
After exchanging pleasantries and getting some souvenirs of her own, including an autograph in Boyle’s biography “The Woman I Was Born to Be,” Melton and Degenova left feeling exuberant.
Melton said she’s never felt about anything or anyone the way she feels about Boyle. She feels like she can identify with her because Melton was bullied as a child, much like Boyle.
“Her story just clicked with me. She’s an inspiration and I feel like I can identify with her,” she said. “She hasn’t let fame and fortune change her.”
Melton said she and newfound best friend are trying to plan another trip next year

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