From the Los Angeles Times, January 19, 2001:
Copyright (c) 2001 Los Angeles Times
Some lives just seem to fall together
Leo Vidal and Adele Tabet were born a week apart in 1913 and met 21 years
later when Vidal noticed the pretty young ticket seller in a New Mexico
movie theater. A quick flicker of interest flamed into passion and then a
marriage that stretched into seven decades, ending only with their deaths
this month, nine days apart, of cancer.
The timing of the deaths seemed fitting, friends and relatives said, as
though the Irvine couple's lives were synchronized from birth and forged by
love. She was born first and she died first, said the couple's daughter,
Francine Kenney, a special education aide in Huntington Beach.
"She hung in there because of Leo and he was holding in there because he
didn't want to leave Adele alone," added Maria de la Maza, a longtime friend
who met the Vidals through their church, St. Elizabeth Ann Seton in Irvine.
"When Francine told him that Mom was gone, it was interesting to see him. It
was like he made the decision: 'Now that Adele is gone, I don't need to be
around.' "
In many ways, the couple's life together was quintessentially Californian.
The couple came of age during the Depression, moved from Texas to Los
Angeles during the Dust Bowl years to find their future, played their roles
in World War II and raised three children: one son, one adopted daughter and
one foster son, a German war orphan whose parents were killed by the Nazis.
And they worked, he as a Southern Pacific and then Amtrak ticket agent, she
as a Spanish teacher and guidance counselor in a succession of Los Angeles
high schools and community colleges.
"They were the embodiment of the American dream," said their son Ralph, a
Santa Monica College physical education instructor and coach.
"They started out with nothing and, with a lot of hard work and laughter and
enjoyment, they made very comfortable lives for themselves and their
children and got involved with their church and their community. They didn't
do anything special."
Friends described the couple as opposites who meshed smoothly. He embraced
physical labor with a passion, at one point building by hand a retaining
wall at the couple's Lake Arrowhead cottage. She was more cerebral, an avid
reader and student of current events.
"Nobody stays married that long without really working at it," Ralph Vidal
said. "You have to give up some of who you are to make it go."
Leo Vidal was born on Christmas Eve in 1913 in San Antonio. His mother died
during his birth and his father left him to be raised by grandparents on a
farm, the couple's children said. He left school after the eighth grade to
work.
Adele Tabet was born in Punta de Agua, N.M., a small mountainside village
about 40 miles southeast of Albuquerque. Her parents were Lebanese
immigrants, part of an extended family that settled around Mountainair, a
slightly larger village down the mountain from Punta de Agua.
In a family memoir, Adele Vidal wrote that her family moved to Los Angeles
in 1931--the year she graduated as valedictorian of Mountainair High
School--because doctors recommended a warmer climate for her ailing mother.
She attended UCLA, graduating in 1936, two years after meeting her future
husband during a summer stay in Mountainair, where he was building roads in
the federal Civilian Conservation Corps program.
They married five weeks after she graduated with a bachelor's degree in
Spanish and, after a few months of living in San Antonio, set off for
California with $90 in savings.
Leo Vidal eventually went to work for the railroad, selling tickets at Union
Station and helping Hollywood stars negotiate both the trains and the
station before retiring in 1974, his daughter said.
He also served a brief stateside stint with the Navy during World War II,
volunteering after he was granted a deferment because he worked for the
railroad, which the government saw as a crucial part of the war effort.
"It was just eating him alive watching all these [soldiers] come back with
stumps for limbs," the couple's son said. "They assigned him to Point
Hueneme, dealing with trains. He was so [angry]."
Adele Vidal worked for a time in a defense plant during World War II, then
received an emergency credential to teach. In a career that covered 30
years, she taught Spanish at Los Angeles' Jefferson, Jordan and University
high schools, and at Southwest College and West Los Angeles Community
College, before retiring in 1974.
The couple sold their Baldwin Hills home and moved to Lake Arrowhead. A few
years later they moved to Orange County, eventually settling in Irvine's
Turtle Rock neighborhood. A lifetime of church involvement brought them to
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton parish, where they became active on social
committees and in weekly prayer groups.
Even as the couple's health failed, they continued attending 9 a.m. Mass on
Sundays, relying on fellow parishioners to help settle them in their spot in
a front pew.
"They were like two teenagers cooing in the front pew," said the Rev. Thomas
Pado, the church pastor.
De la Maza, a nurse who described the Vidals as her de facto parents, said
religious faith and love for each other were twin heartbeats for the couple.
"Both of them were very social and they enjoyed their friendships and
chatting with parishioners," said de la Maza. "I know I'm going to miss
them."
The couple are to be buried today at Holy Sepulcher Cemetery in Orange after
a joint 10 a.m. funeral at the church.