Originally appeared on E! Online
When Mary Kay Letourneau died at the age of 58 following a private cancer battle, it was the end of a bizarre, scandalous era.
“We are deeply saddened to share the very difficult news that our beloved Mary passed away peacefully on July 6th 2020 after a six month battle since being diagnosed with stage IV, or metastatic, cancer. Mary fought tirelessly against this terrible disease,” her eldest son, Steven Letourneau Jr., shared in a statement. “It is in that spirit that we ask for privacy and respect for our desire to focus on the road ahead for all of us who make up Mary’s collective family.”
Her family included her three other children with first husband Steve Letourneau and her two daughters with Vili Fualaau, the estranged husband she had officially separated from in 2019 after several long months of are-they-or-aren’t-they-breaking-up limbo.
“I’m not surprised that they got married,” Letourneau’s lawyer and friend David Gehrke told People in 2017, when the duo first announced their split. “And I’m not surprised, in this day and age, that they are separating.”
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Theirs was a relationship that spanned decades and captured the attention of the world, its very existence dissected at water coolers across America and in more than a few made-for-TV movies.
Because their story started when Fualaau, now 41, was a child and Letourneau was his teacher. She gave birth to their first child together, Audrey Lokelani Fualaau, while she was on trial for child rape. Their second daughter Georgia Fualaau (now a mom herself) was born while Letourneau was in prison.
“I thought this could be trouble, because it’s not really a social norm,” Letourneau said in 2004, reflecting on her choices on CNN’s Larry King Live, “but I didn’t—I didn’t have an idea—I didn’t believe that it was a felony. It just…I knew it just didn’t…just wasn’t normal.”
In 1996, Letourneau was a well-liked, well-respected teacher at Shorewood Elementary School in Burien, Wash. Born Mary Kay Schmitz, she had been married to Steve Letourneau since 1985, the pair deciding to marry while students at Arizona State after she got pregnant. They had four children.
Letourneau’s father, John Schmitz, was a former Republican state senator and congressman representing Orange County—who, it was discovered in 1982, had extra-maritally fathered two children with a former student of his from when he taught at Santa Ana College. The known conservative embarked on the affair in 1973. Schmitz died in 2001, still married to Letourneau’s mother, Mary, after 47 years.
“John and Mary were just so ideologically strict, so repressive,” women’s rights advocate and attorney Gloria Allred, who knew the couple, told People in 1998. “I’m sure [Mary Kay] never felt comfortable talking to them about things she might have been feeling.”
Letourneau had known Fualaau since he was 8 years old and in her second-grade class. His parents were divorced and he lived with his mother, Soona. His dad, in prison at the time for armed robbery, had been married five times; Fualaau had 17 siblings. Letourneau knew his mom and other members of the family.
Fualaau was barely 13 and had just finished sixth grade, again having been in Letourneau’s class, when their sexual relationship began. They were both taking the same art class at a community college that summer and she encouraged his drawing and poetry writing.
Letourneau claimed that she was separated from her husband when the affair began, that she would still have had feelings but would have resisted acting on them if she knew it was a felony. She described the build-up to the affair as “a million moments that just kept building something very beautiful and scary at the same time.” In 1996, she had suffered a miscarriage and subsequently became depressed. She wasn’t looking to fall in love, she said.
She later told Larry King that she and Fualaau had a “really compatible sense of humor” and a similar “perspective on life.”
Fualaau had begun his adolescent advances after making a bet with his cousin that he could “get” her. “I remember I used to like plan the next day, like ‘What I was gonna do, what was I gonna say, what I was gonna, like, what surprise I was gonna leave on her desk,'” Fualaau later told Dateline. He objected to being called a victim.
On Australia’s Sunday Night in 2018, he recalled, “Mary and I became really close, and I kinda forgot about the bet.”
Police came across them sitting in Letourneau’s van one evening, parked near the marina, but a quick phone call to Fualaau’s mother confirmed that the child was with a trusted adult.
“He said there was nothing between them,” his mother later told the Seattle Times. “And I assumed I could trust her with my son.”
Her husband discovered the illicit relationship in February 1997 when he came across love letters his wife had stashed away. He didn’t know just yet that she was six months pregnant.
A relative of her husband reported her to the police, and Letourneau was arrested and charged with rape of a child. The argument that the tween pursued her and she didn’t know that what she was doing was a crime, and that they were so in love, roundly fell on deaf ears.
“There was a respect, an insight, a spirit, an understanding between us that grew over time,” Letourneau told the Seattle Times in 1997. “It was the kind of feeling you have with a brother or sister—a feeling that they’re part of your life forever.” But she “didn’t know what it meant.” And it certainly wasn’t sexual at first. “I felt that one day he might marry my daughter,” she added.
Apparently the affair wasn’t exactly a secret at the school, according to Gregg Olsen, author of If Loving You Is Wrong, a 1999 book about the case. “A janitor caught them in the stall, in a bathroom stall at one point. Other teachers saw them kiss,” he told CBS News. Fualaau said in a court deposition that they snuck up to have sex one night on the roof of Letourneau’s house.
She ended up pleading guilty to two counts of second-degree child rape, telling the judge, “Your honor, I did something that I had no right to do, morally or legally. It was wrong. And I am sorry. I give you my word that it will not happen again. Please, please help me. Help us, help us all.”
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She was given a suspended 89-month prison sentence and ordered to spend six months in jail, including credit for time served. She was released on Jan. 2, 1998, and as part of the terms of her release was ordered to get counseling and stay away from Fualaau, whose family was caring for Audrey.
Barely a month later, however, police spotted the 36-year-old woman and 14-year-old boy in a car parked in front of her house. According to police, the car was full of young men’s clothing, baby clothes, photographs, groceries, personal documents, a lock box with $6,200 in cash and, tucked near the gas pedal, Letourneau’s passport. She had purchased a pager for Fualaau to get in touch with her.
Child Protective Services were alerted by Fualaau’s therapist that they had resumed their sexual relationship.
Back in custody, Letourneau was put on suicide watch. Her attorney argued that she suffered from bipolar disorder and had stopped taking her medication after leaving jail, prompting her to take “really stupid risks.”
“Everyone said this was going to happen,” her attorney David Gehrke said on MSNBC at the time. “We were not surprised. Whether it’s true love, whether it’s sick love, whether it’s an obsession or whatever, you can’t start her in treatment one week and say, ‘You’re cured.'” Fualaau initiated the contact, he said.
Letourneau was sent to prison to serve out her original sentence. That March, it was revealed she was pregnant with her and Fualaau’s second child.
“She’s upset that this news came out so early in the pregnancy,” Gehrke told reporters at the time. “It seems like someone at the prison had access to her medical records and released the information prematurely without her permission.” He would not say who the father was, only that he knew about the pregnancy.
“She’s concerned about how this will lay on her future, her children, her image,” Gehrke added. “It’s another blow to everyone.”
Meanwhile, her husband divorced her and moved with their four kids to Alaska. “I’m kind of speechless,” he told People in March 1998, after Letourneau was locked up again. “It’s like taking a picture of our family from the wall and throwing it on the ground.” Their kids were “handling it pretty well,” he said, “considering their anger.”
Her and Fualaau’s daughter Georgia was born later that year at the Washington Corrections Center for Women in Gig Harbor, Wash., then eventually also went to live with her sisten in the custody of Fualaau’s mother.
Two cheesy TV movies were made about the Letourneau scandal in 2000, Fox’s Unauthorized: The Mary Kay Letourneau Story and USA’s Mary Kay Letourneau: All American Girl, starring Penelope Ann Miller as the teacher who unwittingly gained legions of schoolboy fans with her criminal behavior.
“It’s shock value. That’s what it was all about. Shock. I call it media carnage. Road kill. Blood,” Letourneau lamented the rabid coverage of her case years later on A&E’s Biography.
For the seven and a half years Letourneau was in prison, she was allowed no visits from or contact with Fualaau, though they managed to get messages to each other. One of the biggest blows was not being allowed to attend her father’s funeral in 2001.
Letourneau got out of prison in August 2004.
“She wants to be a mother, she wants to be a responsible member of society,” attorney and friend Anne Bremner told the AP at the time.
“I don’t know what my feelings are right now,” Fualaau told Seattle’s KING 5 News on the eve of her release, admitting he was “kind of nervous. But I know that I do love her.”
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During her time away, Fualaau had dropped out of high school, though in 2004 said he was working on his GED. “I tried to get my mind away from everything,” he told People. “I was partying, drinking too much. Too many hangovers.” His mother had unsuccessfully tried to sue the school district for negligence.
Two months after her release, Letourneau told King in her first interview since being back on the outside that she and Fualaau were engaged. (They had to petition a judge to dissolve a no-contact order first.)
Recalling the lead-up to the scandal being national news, Letourneau said that neither she nor Fualaau ever considered not having the baby when she got pregnant the first time. She encouraged him to stay in school and she planned to take maternity leave and pursue a new career.
Asked if the children, who she did get to see while she was locked up, knew anything about what was going on, she explained, ” I mean, the story is that their mother was away at prison. And now, finally, their mommy and daddy are back together. And that’s the story. And I’ve told my oldest one, at least, that, you know, mommy’s doing a time-out.”
Her four eldest children had visited from Alaska four times a year. Gehrke’s wife, Susan, would drive Audrey and Georgia to the prison twice a month to see her.
“I know that my children and I are going to work very closely through this, and use as many resources as we have to to make sure we grow through this in a healthy way,” Letourneau also said on Larry King Live. “I’m very sensitive to each of my older children’s developmental level and their understanding right now….I’m there for them right now. They’re in Alaska, but I stay very close in touch with them. And it’s not—it hasn’t been appropriate to talk with my 10 and 12-year-old right now. I’ll do that with their father, knowing, you know, that…of course, I’ll answer questions that they directly, and I have answered questions. “
Letourneau said that she didn’t consider her life to be “tumultuous,” a word King used. Rather, it was “blessed.”
“I’m healthy. My children are healthy. And I still have a mother. And I come from a very loving family. And I have Vili,” she said. At the time, she was not allowed to leave the state of Washington without permission. She could teach again, she said, just not in the public school system.
Letourneau, then 43, and Fualaau, 21, got married in May 2005 at a winery in Woodinville, Wash., in what could almost be mistaken for normal circumstances. They set up registries at Williams Sonoma, Macy’s and Tiffany. Their daughters were flower girls.
“They’ve got this nice little place on the beach and there’s always things to look at,” the lawyer said on MSNBC’s The Abrams Report. “We figure, the little girls are there and they can watch the ships go by, and there’s eagles that fly by.”
They remained in the Seattle area to raise their kids. When Fualaau had aspirations to work as a DJ, Letourneau hosted a “Hot for Teacher” night at a bar where he was deejaying in 2009.
It was déjà vu in 2014 when Letourneau was arrested again—this time for failing to show up at a hearing a year after being cited for driving with a suspended license—taken away due to unpaid tickets. She paid a fine after showing proof of her license renewal.
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In April of 2015, ahead of their 10th wedding anniversary, she and Fualaau sat down with Barbara Walters for ABC News.
“The incident was a late night, and it didn’t stop with a kiss,” Letourneau recalled about their first sexual encounter. “And I thought that it would, and it didn’t.”
Added Fualaau, “It was a huge change in my life, for sure. I don’t feel like I had the right support or the right help behind me. From my family, from anyone in general. I mean, my friends couldn’t help me because they had no idea what, what it was like to be a parent, I mean, because we were all 14, 15.”
Being barred from talking to Letourneau, the mother of his kids, was difficult: “I mean, if they gave me more options or choices to make instead of just saying, ‘Oh, you can’t talk to her anymore,’ and I was like, ‘I really do want to talk to her, though.'”
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The fractured fairy tale appeared to be coming to an end when Fualaau filed for a legal separation in May 2017.
However, he told Radar Online afterward, “It’s not necessarily what you think. Everything is fine between us…All the rumors that you hear between us. It’s fine.” Rather, he was trying to start a business, and he wanted to disentangle himself from a potentially messy background check.
“When you want to get licensed, they do background checks on both parties,” Fualaau explained. “If I decide to be a part of it I have to be licensed and I have to be vetted and so does a spouse. She has a past. She has a history.”
Sure enough, they were spotted together soon afterward. And on a 2018 episode of A&E’s Autobiography, they appeared together and Letourneau simply said they weren’t talking about it.
Asked on Australia’s Sunday Night in a special that aired in September 2018 if he had any advice for his younger self, Fualaau cracked, “Don’t do it!” He laughed and added, “I can’t regret my two daughters and the entire life that I’ve already lived.”
As for his daughters? “I think I understand about it, just like how it was surprising to people,” their daughter Audrey, now 25, said about her parents’ relationship. “It’s been feeling different because it’s not really been brought to our attention, just because we grew up with it, so we’re adapted to it.”
She and Georgia considered their mom to be on the strict side, Audrey revealing that mom once cut the padding out of one of her bras. Their dad “definitely feels like a young dad now that I’m at that adult age to where I can go to a bar,” she said. “He’s like a ‘friend dad.'”
And decades after the whole thing began, Letourneau hadn’t changed her story.
“I was pursued, and I didn’t think about it,” Letourneau also said on Sunday Night. “I did not think about it. Didn’t.”
Letourneau still felt that she was wrongfully imprisoned. “I did the best that I felt at the time with the decision that I made,” she said, “and I tried to take the guilty plea back when I realized I was tricked and coerced into it.”
The whole thing wasn’t her idea, she continued to insist.
“Who was the boss?” she turned and asked Fualaau. “Who was the boss?”
“I don’t know what to say,” he said quietly. “Who was the boss?” she asked, louder.
“It was me pursuing you,” he agreed. When she asked was the boss back then, he laughed and said, “This is ridiculous.” But she didn’t back down. “No, who was? Just say it,” Letourneau insisted. To which Fualaau said uncomfortably, “All I knew is what I knew back then.”
As she continued to press, he said, “This is getting weird.”
This cringey back-and-forth informed a scene in the 2023 film May December, starring Julianne Moore as a woman married to a younger man (Charles Melton) whom she spent time in prison for having a relationship with when he was a child and Natalie Portman as the actress who’s going to play her in a biopic.
While the movie isn’t about Letourneau and Fualaau, per se, everyone involved acknowledged the inspiration behind it.
“It wasn’t the same details—I certainly don’t want anyone to assume that we’re trying to say all these conversations happened behind closed doors, it’s not,” writer Samy Burch, who was nominated for a Best Original Screenplay Oscar, told The Hollywood Reporter in November 2023. “This was just a jumping-off point and a way that something like this made sense to me emotionally.”
Fualaau, meanwhile, slammed the project as a “rip-off” of his ongoing experience.
“I’m offended by the entire project,” he told THR, “and the lack of respect given to me—who lived through a real story and is still living it.”
(Originally published Nov. 24, 2018, at 3 a.m. PT)
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