10/24/2025
One of my FAVORITE people!!
She made millions laugh on Saturday nights. Then she taught the world how to face death with courage. In 1975, a young woman from Detroit walked onto a New York soundstage for the very first episode of a late-night comedy show nobody was sure would succeed. Her name was Gilda Radner. The show was Saturday Night Live. And together, they would change television forever. Gilda wasn't supposed to be a star. She'd studied at the University of Michigan, honed her craft at Chicago's Second City, and worked her way through the comedy ranks when women were rarely given center stage. But the moment she appeared on SNL, something magical happened. Her characters—the hard-of-hearing Emily Litella with her delightful misunderstandings, the brash Roseanne Roseannadanna with her outrageous commentary—didn't just make people laugh. They became part of America's cultural vocabulary. "Never mind," Emily would say after correcting her latest confusion, and the whole country would smile. What made Gilda different wasn't just her talent. It was her fearlessness. She threw herself completely into every character, unafraid to look ridiculous, to be too much, to be vulnerable. In an era when comedy was dominated by men, she proved that women could be just as bold, just as hilarious, just as brilliant. She didn't ask for permission. She simply shined. Off stage, Gilda found love with actor Gene Wilder when they met filming Hanky Panky in 1982. They married in 1984, creating one of Hollywood's most genuinely touching partnerships—two creative souls who truly saw each other. Gene would later say that being with Gilda was like "lightning striking. "But in 1986, that lightning was threatened by shadows. Gilda began experiencing symptoms she couldn't ignore. For months, doctors misdiagnosed her. When they finally discovered the truth—ovarian cancer—it had already progressed significantly. What happened next revealed who Gilda truly was. Instead of retreating into private suffering, she chose to speak openly about her battle. She wrote about it. She talked about it. She turned her pain into purpose, determined that her experience might help others recognize symptoms earlier, advocate for themselves more strongly, and never face cancer alone. On May 20, 1989, Gilda Radner died in her sleep, with Gene holding her hand. She was just 42 years old. The world mourned a comedic genius. But Gilda's story didn't end with her death—it transformed. In 1995, Gene Wilder and Gilda's cancer psychotherapist opened the first Gilda's Club in New York City, a place where cancer patients and their families could find community, support, and—yes—laughter. Today, there are dozens of these centers across North America, serving hundreds of thousands of people. They're places where nobody fights alone, where shared stories become shared strength. Gilda's legacy isn't just in the comedy sketches that still make us laugh decades later, though those remain brilliant. It's not just in the doors she opened for countless women comedians who followed, though that impact is immeasurable. Her truest legacy lives in every person who walks into a Gilda's Club feeling scared and alone, and walks out knowing they're surrounded by understanding, hope, and community. She spent her life making people laugh. In death, she's given countless people a reason to keep fighting. Some performers leave behind memorable characters. Gilda Radner left behind a roadmap for turning personal tragedy into collective healing. She showed us that even in our darkest moments, we can choose to light the way for others. "I wanted a perfect ending," Gilda once wrote. "Now I've learned, the hard way, that some poems don't rhyme, and some stories don't have a clear beginning, middle, and end. Life is about not knowing, having to change, taking the moment and making the best of it, without knowing what's going to happen next. "She lived that truth. And in doing so, she gave us permission to be imperfect, to struggle, to laugh anyway, and to never, ever face hardship alone. That's not just comedy. That's courage.