June and Jennifer Gibbons

June and Jennifer Gibbons (born April 11, 1963) were twins born to a military family from Barbados, whose story is a curious case involving psychology and language.

Contents


Early Life

June and Jennifer Gibbons were the daughters of Aubrey Gibbons, a West Indian technician for the British Royal Air Force. Shortly after they were born, their family moved to Haverfordwest, Wales. The twin sisters were inseparable, and had speech impediments that made them difficult for people outside their immediate family to understand; they did not mix a great deal with other children. School was traumatic to them; they were the only children in their school of African ancestry, and eventually they were so tormented by their peers that the school administrators had to send them home early to give them a head start. Their language became even more idiosyncratic at this time, and became unintelligible to outsiders. They also developed a peculiar stiff way of moving and walking in absolute synchrony in public. They spoke to no one except each other and their little sister Rose, and became even more isolated. They would complete each other's sentences and often seemed to communicate with no more than a glance or a facial expression. In effect, they were elective mutes.

When they turned 14, after a succession of therapists had tried unsuccessfully to get them to communicate with others, they were sent to separate boarding schools in an attempt to break their isolation. This was a disaster: the pair became catatonic and entirely withdrawn when parted.

Creative Expression

When they were re-united, the two spent a couple of years engaged in elaborate play with dolls. They created many plays and stories in a sort of soap-opera style, reading some of them aloud on tape as gifts for their little sister. Inspired by a pair of gift diaries at Christmas 1979, they embarked upon a serious self-education and writing career. They sent away for a mailorder course in creative writing, and each wrote several novels. Set primarily in the United States and particularly in Malibu, California -- an excitingly exotic locale to romantic girls trapped in an ugly Welsh town -- the stories concerned young men and women who become involved in strange and often criminal behaviour.

In June's Pepsi-Cola Addict, the high-school hero is seduced by a teacher, then sent away to a reformatory where a homosexual guard makes a play for him. In Jennifer's The Pugilist, a physician is so eager to save his child's life that he kills the family dog to obtain its heart for a transplant. The dog's spirit lives on in the child and ultimately has its revenge against the father. Jennifer also wrote Discomania, the story of a young woman who discovers that the atmosphere of a local disco incites patrons to insane violence. They wrote in a unique personal style, often with unwittingly amusing word choices.

Crime and Hospitalization

Their novels were published by a vanity press called New Horizons, and they made many attempts to sell short stories to magazines, but were unsuccessful. A brief fling with some American boys, the sons of a U.S. Army serviceman, led nowhere. Desperate for recognition and fame (and perhaps publicity for their books), the girls committed a number of petty crimes including arson, which led to their being committed to Broadmoor Hospital, an institution for the criminally insane. There, they remained for 14 years.

Placed on high doses of neuroleptic medications, they found themselves unable to concentrate and Jennifer apparently developed tardive dyskinesia. Their medications were apparently adjusted sufficiently to allow them to continue the copious diaries they had begun in 1980, and they were able to join the hospital choir, but they lost most of their interest in creative writing.

The case achieved some notoriety among the morbidly curious and the human-interested due to newspaper coverage by author Marjorie Wallace. The girls finally became known in their beloved America, when they were introduced to the reading public via the Sun, a tabloid which gave a brief but accurate account of their story, headlined "Genius Twins Won't Speak" (an apparent reference to their having tested above average when being considered for Broadmoor).

Jennifer's Death

According to Wallace, the girls had long had an unspoken agreement that if one died, the other must begin to speak and live a normal life. During their stay in the hospital, they began to believe that it was necessary for one twin to die, and after much discussion, Jennifer agreed to be the sacrifice. (See the linked article below) Within hours after their release in 1993, Jennifer died of sudden viral myocarditis. There was no evidence of drugs or poison in her system. To this day, Jennifer's death remains a mystery.

After Jennifer's death, June gave two interviews with Harper's Bazaar and The Guardian. She became more communicative and was able to speak with other people. She lives at home with her family. She contemplates resuming her writing, although she describes her early books as "all over the place" and not very good. After Wallace's book appeared, Pepsi-Cola Addict became a valuable collector's item, and the novel has been reprinted several times.

Books

  • Marjorie Wallace - The Silent Twins (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0345348028/002-8792973-3882449) (1986)
  • Lucie Brock-Broido, "Elective Mutes". In A Hunger (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN%3D0394758528/002-8792973-3882449) (Knopf, 2005).

Films

  • Jon Amiel, The Silent Twins (1985) (IMDb (http://akas.imdb.com/title/tt0311808/))

Plays

  • Vanessa Walters, Double Take
  • Radiohole, None of It: More Or Less Hudson's Bay, Again

Music

External links

  • Marjorie Wallace, The tragedy of a double life (http://www.guardian.co.uk/iran/story/0,12858,997276,00.html), London: The Observer, July 13, 2003
  • Hilton Als, A life of my own (http://216.239.57.104/search?q=cache:yCRvcV8_V1sJ:futuristicaffinity.port5.com/thesilenttwins.html+%22A+life+of+my+own%22+Gibbons&hl=en), The New Yorker, 2000.
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