Tasha Guth with her parents Willa and Brad Guidi

“They wanted me to stop seeing Daddy...”

interview photo

Willa and Brad Guidi tell their daughter Tasha about meeting at college in 1970.

player-button

Recorded in Peoria, IL.

Tasha Guth with her parents Willa and Brad Guidi

Interview transcript

TG: How did you guys meet?

BG: We were introduced by a mutual friend, Jackie McClaine.

WG: She would say, ‘Oh, he’s just this really fine white boy I want you to meet.’ And I said, ‘Oh, please, Jackie, stop.’

BG: You know, when I went to Bradley, um, I knew two African Americans in my life, and that was Hank Aaron and Willie Mays. So it was different…

TG: When did you think it was time to tell your parents?

WG: Well, I had, my mom and I were very close, so I called her right away when I met him. But, I didn’t mention anything about race. I just said I had met somebody, so I just left it at that.

BG: As far as my family’s reaction, I guess probably, at the best it was considered a death in the family.

WG: They wanted me to stop seeing daddy, and, uh, I think at that point they had… had they disowned you?

BG: Pretty much…

WG: My mother’s reaction was like, ‘Well, do you think we’re excited about it?’ And then my dad was like, ‘Well, they’re gonna do what they’re gonna do, and I got to go to work.’

BG: The coolest people in our whole family were Nona and Aunt Zia, because they had experienced racial discrimination as Italians. And they could only live on the west end of town. To them it really wasn’t as big a deal, as it was to the next generation that was born in the United States and had grown up and, and not experienced that discrimination, that, that they had.

WG: Yeah.

BG: Mm-hm

WG: But I must say. once I became pregnant, Brad’s mom just stepped up to the plate. You were the first grandchild and once you were born, that’s when everything turned around.

BG: You know seeing a child, or seeing a grandchild, they see themselves. This is just not Willa and I having a relationship; they’re part of you. And you’re part of them. So now they understand that this is blood, you know, this is family.

  • More stories
  • Browse By Category

Podcast

The StoryCorps Podcast

This story is also featured in our free podcast. Subscribe now.

Related Stories