
LALATE is convinced the Spelling Mansion is the cause of Tori and Candy Spelling’s inability to communicate with each other. Tori Spelling told press earlier this week that mom Candy hasn’t contacted her to talk. Now Candy Spelling is using her website to send a message online to Tori to read.
Yes, this is what happens when the nearest bedroom in a mansion is 20 acres away.
Spelling Mansion Pictures
Spelling Mansion Photo 1
Spelling Mansion Photo 2
Spelling Mansion Photo 3
Candy’s latest response is she’s using the phone, emails and texts to reach Tori. Hey Candy – ever thought of actually using your feet and going over there? And Tori, you too. Tori had said:
“She knows how to reach me, she knows where we live.”
How about you use your feet too Tori, and walk over there and the ring the doorbell. On her website CandySpelling.com, Candy set a message to Tori in the latest round of Spellings who can’t communicate:
Says Candy:
“You haven’t responded to my emails, phone calls and text messages. You say you look at my website, so I’m trying to reach you that way. I want to see you and your family – in private, like the ‘normal family’ you say always wanted.”
“With your book coming out [Tuesday], the war of words will escalate. That’s not what I want. I want us to be a family. Well, I’m stepping up. Call me, write me, text me.”
“I’m a mother who, like every mother, wants communication and a great relationship with you, my daughter, and your family,” writes Candy. “I’d love to work it out the way all families try to resolve issues. In private. But, as I wrote in my book, I was a celebrity by marriage” – her husband is the late TV producer Aaron Spelling – “then a celebrity by motherhood. That means that my life is public. I’m used to it. It comes with the territory.
“What makes it so difficult is to hear you say things like: I’d like to call my mother, or I love my mother but don’t speak to her, or I think she has my nanny’s phone number. I don’t want a reunion via talk show or to speak through the press. I want a relationship with you and my grandchildren.”
“I am hopeful. Love, Mom.”