‘The coronavirus has been our friend’; Utah couple find love, marriage during COVID-19 courtship

Newlyweds Ann Marcusen Bell and Enoch Bell pose for a portrait on Monday, May 11, 2020, in Kaysville, Utah. | Photo by Ben Dorger/Standard-Examiner via Associated Press, St. George News

KAYSVILLE, Utah — With all the bad press COVID-19 has gotten, it only seems fair to point out when something good comes of the pandemic.

Newlyweds Ann Marcusen Bell and Enoch Bell pose for a portrait on Monday, May 11, 2020, in Kaysville, Utah. | Photo by Ben Dorger/Standard-Examiner via Associated Press, St. George News

Something like true love.

Our story begins near the eastern shore of the Great Salt Lake in Kaysville, Utah, back in early December when 76-year-old Enoch Bell called up 83-year-old Ann Marcusen to ask her out on a date. The two Kaysville residents had lost their spouses within the last few years – Enoch after a 50-year marriage, and Ann after nearly 60.

“It was a blind date,” Enoch said. “A mutual friend thought we should meet each other so she gave me Ann’s phone number and I called her up.”

Ann remembers well that initial conversation.

“He said, ‘Hello, this is Enoch Bell. Kenny Barnes said I should call you and that I might want to marry you,’” Ann recalls, adding dryly: “I told him we’d see how it goes.”

Holly Wright, one of Ann’s nine children, said the entire family had a good laugh about the way Enoch brought up marriage at that initial phone call.

“Enoch said, ‘You have to forgive me, I haven’t dated in about 50 years,’” said Wright, who now lives in unincorporated Weber County near South Ogden. “And my mom said, ‘I haven’t either. We’ll stumble through this together.’”

For her part, Cupid-wannabe and Kaysville resident Kenny Barnes swears it’s the first and only time she’s ever acted as a matchmaker – although she and her husband of 28 years had a similar introduction three decades ago.

Barnes and Ann work together on Thursdays in the Bountiful Temple for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. One day back in November, the two women were talking – it had been a few years since Ann’s husband had died – and Barnes asked Ann, “Have you ever thought you would want to date or get married again?”

Barnes says most people of a certain age would just say, “Are you kidding me?” But Ann got a little grin on her face and said, “Yeah, I think that would be fun.”

The following Sunday, Barnes was sitting in church behind Enoch when the inspiration hit her.

“I thought, ‘Oh my gosh, those two need to be together,’” Barnes said.

That next Thursday at the temple, she ran the idea past Ann, and Ann wrote down her phone number to pass along to Enoch.

Once the two started dating, Barnes says it was cute to see Ann’s excitement.

“She’d come to the temple and say to me, ‘Oh, I just really like him; I hope he likes me,’” Barnes said of her 83-year-old friend. “It was just like high school all over again.”

Love at first sight

File image | Photo by congerdesign from Pixabay, St. George News

The couple’s first date was Dec. 9, a Monday. Enoch took Ann to a Christmas party for singles who get together once a month.

So then, was it love at first sight for the two?

“For me, it was like at first sight — I wanted to go out with him again,” Ann said.

“I thought she was beautiful,” Enoch adds. “I was impressed.”

Date No. 2 came later that week, at the Tabernacle Choir Christmas Concert in Salt Lake City. After that, the cat was pretty much out of the bag.

“My neighbors were in the balcony at the concert, and were watching us,” Ann said. “So they told on me to the other neighbors.”

Ann calls Enoch even-tempered, not a showoff, a man of few words who isn’t impressed with himself, kind and gentle, and very respectful of people.

Enoch says Ann is intelligent, witty and smart. She knows French and English, and was an English teacher, so “she teaches me.”

Ann didn’t think she’d ever get married again. Enoch, on the other hand, says he was just following orders.

“My wife ordered me to get remarried,” he said. “And I always do what my wife — wives — say.”

Both say they like to think their deceased spouses had a hand in getting them together.

‘A funny thing happened’

File photo, St. George News

On Feb. 29 — Leap Day — Enoch popped the question.

“We were just sitting on the couch in her house, and it came to me that I needed to ask her to marry me,” he said. “We were just sitting here on the couch. It was nothing special.”

Ann begs to differ. She thought it was quite special. She’d worked in the temple that day, and remembers that filet mignon had been on the cafeteria menu. She bought two dinners to bring home that night.

“I had decided to say ‘yes’ about a month before that, if it ever happened,” she admits.

Wright says she got the news about her mother’s engagement via text message the next day.

“I got a text from my mom,” she remembers, “that said, ‘A funny thing happened last night. Enoch asked me to marry him. And I said yes.’”

The original date for the wedding was set for May 9 at Farmington Station. T

hen, the coronavirus came along, and little by little the wedding plans changed.

“First it was no groups over 100 people,” Wright said. “Then it was no groups over 20, and then 10. So the wedding kept getting smaller and smaller, and when my mom realized nobody could be there, she said, ‘Let’s get married April 24; it’ll be on Zoom.’”

The wedding

The ceremony was performed on the afternoon of April 24, by Ann’s former bishop and current LDS stake president, Jeff Taylor.

Taylor, who presides over the Kaysville South Stake, had known both Ann and Enoch before their spouses passed away. So when he got a text from Enoch asking if he’d perform the ceremony, he was pleasantly surprised.

Taylor admits that, as the wedding officiant, it was daunting to attempt to give the couple any sort of wisdom or advice.

“When Enoch asked for words of counsel, my comment was, ‘You two can give me more counsel than I can give you,’” Taylor said.

Photo illustration of using public meeting applications like Zoom. | Photo by Gabriel Benois/Unsplash, St. George News

Initially, it was just going to be Ann, Enoch and Taylor at the ceremony. But then, similar to the way in which the wedding got smaller and smaller, the wedding party suddenly began growing larger. At first, Ann wanted at least one daughter at the ceremony to take photographs. Then, she realized she needed another daughter there to be a witness. Eventually, Ann said she wanted all of her daughters there.

At first, these last-minute wedding guests were going to wear masks and just “peek through the window,” Wright said. But they couldn’t really hear, so they ended up standing at the back of the room, careful not to touch anything.

“And we gave a lot of air hugs,” Wright said.

Another 50 people — mostly relatives from across the country — participated virtually through a teleconference of the ceremony.

Neighbors had requested that, following the ceremony, the newlyweds walk around the block so they could all stand on their porches and wish them well. Thus, Ann and Enoch — trailed by their socially-distanced daughters walking behind and holding bells — strolled the neighborhood while folks waved and rang their own bells in a tribute to the new Mr. and Mrs. Bell.

Following their walkabout, Ann and Enoch stood on the sidewalk in front of their home while other community members had a sort of drive-by reception/parade.

The couple will live in Ann’s Kaysville home; she’ll go by the name Ann Marcusen Bell.

Good, happy news

Wright didn’t expect her mother’s wedding in the time of coronavirus to be such a beautiful event. But the way the two lovebirds pulled it off, it was a lot nicer than she had hoped.

Wright says it reminded her of the Whoville Whos from “How the Grinch Stole Christmas.”

“Although the Grinch tried to steal Christmas, the Whos still celebrated,” Wright said. “My mom and Enoch are like the Whos — they just enjoyed life to the fullest during that wedding celebration, in spite of the quarantine COVID thing going on.

“It was just some good, happy news in the middle of all this craziness.”

Newlyweds Ann Marcusen Bell and Enoch Bell pose for a portrait on Monday, May 11, 2020, in Kaysville, Utah. | Photo by Ben Dorger/Standard-Examiner via Associated Press, St. George News

Which brings us full circle to the silver lining in this COVID-19 madness. Ann believes that the pandemic actually helped the couple’s love blossom.

“The coronavirus has been our friend,” she insists. “It made it so we can spend more time together to get to know one another.”

Indeed, between their busy lives – family, church callings, temple work and other service – they wouldn’t have been able to see each other as much.

“I just don’t know if we could have gotten to know each other so well if not for coronavirus,” Ann concludes.

Written by MARK SAAL, Standard-Examiner via Associated Press.

Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Free News Delivery by Email

Would you like to have the day's news stories delivered right to your inbox every evening? Enter your email below to start!