I don’t know if people are
willing to admit it, but many of us, and I suspect especially those of us who
write books, have given some thought to what our legacy will be. I know I have.
Since I am childfree—a term I recently heard for the first time—I won’t be
leaving any progeny to carry on the family name. But I will be leaving my books
to inform future generations. Even if libraries purge their holdings to make
way for newer volumes, I’m thinking (hoping) that some of my writings will
survive on the dusty shelves, or at the very least, in Cyberspace. I know it
won’t really matter to me after I’m gone, but right now, I find the thought
comforting.
Perhaps that’s why I had
such a visceral reaction to the Gilda’s Club brouhaha that erupted last week.
For those who don’t know, Gilda’s Club is a community organization with more
than 20 affiliates that is dedicated to offering support to people who are
living with cancer, and their loved ones. It was founded in the 1990s in honor
of Gilda Radner, one of the original “Not Ready for Prime Time Players” on Saturday Night Live, who died of ovarian
cancer in 1989. During her illness, Gilda found encouragement and solace at a
California organization called the Wellness Community. Gilda’s Club was modeled
after that group. (The name refers to Gilda’s quote that “having cancer gave me
membership in an elite club I’d rather not belong to.”)
In 2009, Gilda’s Club
Worldwide merged with the Wellness Community to create the Cancer Support
Community. After the merger, the home office decreed that affiliates could
determine which of three names worked best for them: Gilda’s Club, the Wellness
Community, or the Cancer Support Community. A few weeks ago, the affiliate in
Madison, Wisconsin, held a ribbon-cutting ceremony to celebrate its new name,
the Cancer Support Community Southwest Wisconsin. The executive director,
Lannia Syren Stenz, told the Wisconsin
State Journal the name was being changed because the population they serve is getting younger. "One of the realizations we had this year is that our college students were born after Gilda Radner passed," she said. "We want to make sure that what we are is clear to them and that there’s not a
lot of confusion that would cause people not to come in our doors.”
Coverage of this event
jumped from the Wisconsin State Journal
to Gawker.com and pretty much all over the Internet, thanks to Twitter and
Facebook. Fans of Gilda, and common sense, pointed out that it would be more
meaningful to teach people who Gilda was than to obliterate her from the
organization that was founded in her name. Toward that end, actress Martha
Plimpton tweeted that she had ordered five copies of Gilda’s moving memoir, It’s Always Something, to be sent to the
Madison chapter. Others pointed out that few of us know who Mayo was, or Sloan
and Kettering, or Dana and Farber, but we still can find our way to their
hospitals when necessary. Among the hundreds of comments on the Madison
branch’s Facebook page (now taken down) was this one: "The
only educating you're doing is teaching kids that when they die from cancer,
their name will be erased from history in 20 years because the next generation
doesn't know who they are. Way to give them hope!"
While the Wisconsin
affiliate doesn’t seem to have been swayed by the petitions, tweets, and articles
blasting their decision, other branches were quick to reassure the public that
they had no intention of changing their name. “As
the flagship Clubhouse, we value our brand and our association with Gilda
Radner,” the New York club posted on their Facebook page. The Chicago branch tweeted,
“Gilda’s Club Chicago will remain Gilda’s Club Chicago in honor
of the courageous way Gilda, and all of our members, live with cancer.”
Just two months ago, I
blogged about the importance of naming buildings and public memorials after
women, so there’s no mystery about where I stand on this matter. I was also a
big fan of Gilda, who had the guts to bare her soul in the process of reaching
her audience. (Just watch this clip from her movie, Gilda Live, to see what I mean.) She did the same in her book, an admirable,
intimate account of her struggle with cancer which is back in print with a new
Resource Guide and a new chapter on Living with Cancer. And besides all that,
she was really funny. Just check out these clips of her characters Roseanne Roseannadanna and Emily Litella.
I joined the New York
chapter of Gilda’s Club when a close friend was dealing with cancer. The other
day, she reminded me that not too long ago, cancer was something you didn’t discuss.
Friends would shy away from you if they knew you were sick and you pretty much
suffered in silence. Thanks to Gilda and the movement she inspired, people with
cancer have a place to talk about what the “civilians” in their lives might not
want to hear, the gritty details of survival. Helping each other empowers them in their own fight. That's why if people don’t know who Gilda Radner was, they sure as
heck should find out.
2 comments:
What a wonderful post, Sue! I was moved to tears by the clip of Gilda. In moving on, we are at a loss if we throw all those babies out with the bathwater of the past.
Thank you for those wonderful memories of Gilda. We certainly need to remember her and treasure these memories of the past, not toss them aside for something more recent.
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