I looked around for a good quality bio of Orbison, a man from Wink, West Texas, and this was about the best I could do. It's not particularly well written, but it has the basic chronology and facts.
I've always been a fan of the 1960s music of Mr. Orbison, who got his start with Sun Records in Memphis, playing rockabilly songs like "Down the Line," "Ooby Dooby" and "Rockhouse." Alas, he was not much of a success at Sun, competing for attention with Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash and other stalwarts. Roy's strength, of course, was his remarkable singing voice and his interpretation of near-operatic ballads about bad love and broken hearts. He was such a smash hit in England that on one tour, the Beatles - just getting recognized nationally - opened for him. (The promoter realized the audience felt differently and changed that around pretty quickly.)
Orbison dressed in black and wore dark glasses, initially because he thought he was unattractive and he was trying to hide as much of himself as he could. With big ears, glasses, and squinty eyes, he was not the best looking young man in West Texas.
Like Presley and Jerry Lew Lewis, Orbison was drawn to underage girls who looked grown up. He married Claudette when she was just 14. Let's remember, though, that it was not unusual for couples in the deep South to get married quite young. To be sure, Claudette's parents gave consent. Lewis, by the way, married his 13 year old cousin and didn't try to disguise the fact, which completely derailed his career. Worse, Lewis was already married when he purported to marry his cousin, committing bigamy in the process.
Once he got married, Roy stayed on tour, screwed around with groupies, and generally neglected his bride, who naturally got involved with someone else, leading to the Orbisons' divorce. However, the couple reconciled and remarried.
Everything about the rest of Roy's story changed my opinion of the man for the worse. In short order, Claudette was killed riding a motorcycle. Her three boys, Roy's sons, went to live with Claudette's parents. Alas, a house fire killed the two older boys, leaving only Wesley. Roy soon married a 17 year old woman from Germany named Barbara. Wes was not invited to live with them, even after Barbara had children. Roy was less than generous to his former in-laws, while Roy and Barbara and their own kids lived in luxury.
The deaths of Claudette and his two older boys are often cited as facts in Roy's "tragic" life. Unfortunate those things were, but Roy wasn't great to Claudette and treated his remaining son like shit. Yeah, his career revived in the end, but this was not, I'm sorry to say, a genuinely good man. Maybe a blind man? Deliberately blind? No better.
P.S. I don't want to obscure the fact that much of the music Orbison made is fantastic, particularly the recordings on Monument, his revival with The Traveling Wilburys (Roy was "Lefty Wilbury," reflecting Roy's admiration for country legend Lefty Frizzell), and his final album, "Mystery Girl." I defy anyone to listen to the song "You Got It" and not start singing along in your head.