Hello, you are not signed on.
[ Blogs.starwars.com ]

Miss Padme's Naboo Love Nest
date posted: May 17, 2006 8:27 PM  |  updated: May 18, 2006 9:00 PM
Elegia
Yesterday I found out one of my first friends in SW fandom died more than a year ago from cancer.  Someone had tried to contact her and discovered her mail was bouncing.  So after a Google search, that person found her obituary http://www.nyjnews.com/obituary/obit.php3?id=1715652.

I was not shocked or surprised.  She was diagnosed with breast cancer in 1997 and the last time I heard from her, her cancer had not only come back, it had mestasticized, growing in her bones and causing her a great deal of pain.  The thing that is amazing is that she made it another two years.  But she always was a tenacious spirit.

The obituary from the newspaper was so blah.  It said practically nothing about her life or what kind of person she was.  So I'm going to tell you. I first heard from Amanda in 1993, responding like a lot of people did to a letter printed in Dark Horse's Classic Star Wars #8.  Back in those days, DH not only had lettercols, they also used to post your full address.  In the days before widespread internet use--much less e-mail, IMs, message boards, and blogs--that was the main way to meet other fans.  This began several years' worth of correspondence and a few phone calls.  Her letters were always long, filled with clippings and artwork, photos galore of her collection and her family, and the occasional small gift.  I've kept most if not all of her letters.

She had been in fandom since 1974, tagging along with her sister to the massive Star Trek cons they used to have in New York in the '70s.  She'd met every major cast member of the original series, by the way, and had a small Enterprise tattoo on her shoulder long before it became trendy to get them. But she was also a hardcore SW geek, partial to the Skywalker clan, especially Luke.  She was a collector; she'd tell me stories about competing with another area collector for store displays.  Her tactic was to bring fresh-baked cookies to the bookstore staff so that they'd call her when they were ready to take down the book dumps and displays.  Later when she had a job for a few years at the same store, her customers knew her as the Star Wars Lady, always eager to chat up the saga and wearing her X-Wing pendant.  She costumed, mostly in ROTJ Luke's Jedi robes, and she even got her two daughters in on the act with Jedi robes and lightsabers of their own.  She really had those kids trained.  They knew Bill Murray's Lounge Singer "Nothing But Star Wars" song.  They helped scout out toys and merchandise.  They helped set up displays at home.  Their mom even had a picture of Tales Of The Jedi heroine Nomi Sunrider up in their room to keep watch over them while they slept.  One time she sent me a tape of the girls "singing" the Imperial March.  Her older daughter started thinking the younger Obi-Wan was kind of cute after TPM came out. I told Amanda I thought young Obi-Wan was cute too and she told me (a long time Han drooler) that once you go Jedi, you don't go back.  Looking around at my collection of Anakin stuff and the hundreds of Hayden/Anakin photos on my harddrive, I suppose that's true. When the Special Editions came out, the local press did stories on her and her kids.  She got so many requests when TPM was released, she started turning them down. I think though one of the highlights of her fannish life was getting to meet Mark Hamill twice in 1996. She remembered him as warm, funny, and a total sweetheart.

She contributed stories, poems, filks, and artwork to a number of fanzines in the 1990s, including my zines Snowfire and Blue Harvest.  She ran her own Luke zine with her friend Kymm August, Echo Three.  Some of her filks were based on other songs (I still can't listen to U2's "Mysterious Ways" without thinking of her version, heh heh) but she occasionally wrote her own original songs.  She could sing and play piano and even taught it for a while.  We more or less liked the same type of music (she had fun stories about hanging around not only old school fannish types but punks as well) and I introduced her to a lot of cool stuff.

Whenever I kvetched about fandom, she'd tell me fandom is just a microcosm of society as a whole.  When I had a major setback once, she sent me these inspirational bookmarks.  When I sent her a graduation announcement, she used it and Dave Dorman's cover art from Dark Empire II #1 to make a card.  She knew I was a big Leia fan, so when she scored the book dump for the Courtship of Princess Leia, she sent it to me.  I still have it.  Once I mentioned there weren't any Leia t-shirts around (this was about 1995), she made one for me. 

She did not have an easy life.  The Trek scene was an escape from domestic dischord as a youngster and she suffered a lot of personal and financial problems over the years.  One Christmas, I sent some stuff for her girls and when she thanked me for the gifts, she told me if I hadn't sent them, her kids would have had nothing to open Christmas morning.  Her husband was less than understanding about her fannish activities.  I don't want to dish on too many details, but she had a very stressful home life and I can't help but think that had a negative effect on her health.

By about 2000, I was hearing from Amanda less and less.  Sometimes I'd get an e-mail out of nowhere or a Christmas card, but whenever I sent I response, I wouldn't hear anything back.  There were times I worried the cancer might have returned or that maybe her husband set down some sort of ultimatum.  In June 2003 I got a letter with the bad news that indeed she was very ill.  Before relapsing with cancer in 2002 (ironically, months after she passed the five-year "cured" mark), she was working multiple jobs to support her family which left her little time to pursue the things that brought her joy.  She said in her letter the chemo made her very weak and unable to tolerate anything with flashing lights or quick motion, so she couldn't watch any of the SW films anymore.  She could go online only when she felt up to it, which wasn't often.  The letter was almost a goodbye but not quite.  She was determined to live even with the odds stacked against her at that point.  I sent a letter back saying how much I'd valued her correspondence over the years and if there was anyone who could beat this awful disease, it was her.  She sent a couple of brief e-mails after that, but from 2004 on, nothing more.  I worried for a long time the worst might have happened, yet I couldn't bring myself to do a Google search for an obituary either.  Eventually, I figured there would be a way I'd find out when the time was right.

I'd only met Amanda in person once, in 1994 at a small media fandom con in New Jersey called Eclecticon (which she called "Eclecticsnooze").  She was every bit as funny and warm in person as she was in her letters and phone calls.  It's too bad we never got the opportunity to hang out again.  I wish she'd been able to come down to the Magic of Myth exhibit in Washington, D.C. when I was volunteering there or that we'd been able to meet up during my trips to NYC.  I wish she'd been able to attend a Celebration.  Once she told me that if you have the opportunity to do something, you should do it because you never know if you'll ever have that chance again.  I try to remember that.

I only hope that somehow she was able to experience the final chapter of the saga she loved so much in life since she passed away a month before ROTS opened.  I'd like to think she also learned the secrets of immortality from Qui-Gon.

Clear skies, my Master.

  Rive Caedo
Rive's Uncharted Settlements
date Posted: May 17, 2006 8:43 PM
Touching... Not much more to say than that. Thanks for sharing.

Interesting how such things can begin and end on the internet now.

Sounds like she lived a full life that she loved in her all too short time here.
I wouldn't look at it as her missing ROTS and the end of the second age of Star Wars... But as her surviving to see, in good health for the majority, the prime of it.
Darth Vader
Meditation Chamber
date Posted: May 17, 2006 9:01 PM
I never thought of what the best tribute to a persons life would be, much less to the life of a Star Wars fan. But this is it. You are right, that obituary does not make her any justice.

What you just wrote is indeed inspirational and very, very touching. Thanks to the new technologies, I have real friends. real as if I had met them in real life, I know them and they know me, we all share a common interest and were brought together by it, Star Wars. It's amazing the way we can find people that move us and complete us in this weird virtual world of fandom. Real people with real feelings that are so amazing.
hansgirl3
Invoking the Squee
date Posted: May 17, 2006 9:29 PM
I am so sorry you lost a friend, Miss Padme. Although, you didn't really "lose her", did you? You'll always have her memory and you've now memorialize those memories right here and shared them with us as well.

I'm so glad for you that you got to meet her at least once in person. That will make all the difference every time you ever think of her.

Take Care!
  WifeofVader
Tales from the Death Star
date Posted: May 17, 2006 9:33 PM
Wow... what a wonderful homage you have paid to you friend. May she rest in peace ... Thank you so much for sharing this.
  Aadi_Rila
Jedi Master to my God-child
date Posted: May 17, 2006 10:17 PM
Ditto on what everyone else has already said! Thanx for sharing this with us. I think I may just print this one out. This was very inspiring to read.
As far as her passing away before ROTS came out, I for one believe in an afterlife in which those who pass on are able to watch over us from wherever they are and I'm sure she was in a theatre somewhere watching the premier of Sith. Sounds like she was an awesome person, and though I never knew her, I wish her family the best! My prayers are with you MissPadme. MTFBWY:)
  solo smelly
date Posted: May 17, 2006 10:46 PM
She sounds wonderful and beautiful. A true star wars fan. Though i know she will be missed, she will always be remembered.

Thankyou for sharing MissPadme.

May the Force be with you!

amidalooine
The Emotional Galaxy
date Posted: May 17, 2006 10:55 PM
I'm crying my eyes out here, Miss Padme..for your friend...for my own stuff...but also because I am reminded, again, how beautifully and uniquely people touch our lives. Thank you so much for this entry, for the time it took to write it and the love it took to feel it.

I needed that.

To Qui-Gon's teachings!
The Stooge
Star Wars Joke-A-Day
date Posted: May 18, 2006 12:21 AM
Beautifully written piece. Thanks much -- she'd be honored.
Pris_H
date Posted: May 18, 2006 2:15 AM
I was very touched by this eulogy. Thanks for sharing this. She sounds like a wonderful person--warm and full of life. You were really fortunate to have known her. Maybe on some level, somewhere she was able to see ROTS.
anakinside1
Echoes from the Asteroid Field
date Posted: May 18, 2006 5:08 AM
What a beautiful piece to write for a friend. Thank you for sharing it with us.
  Jedi Arwen Skywalker
date Posted: May 18, 2006 6:57 AM
That was wonderful, and so sweet. Befitting for her, I'm sure. People like Amanda are the people that make the world wonderful. I'm glad you had such a good friend.
  Kenobi-fan
The Jundland Wastes Journal
date Posted: May 18, 2006 7:41 AM
I never thought of what the best tribute to a persons life would be, much less to the life of a Star Wars fan. But this is it.
Well said, DV...and what a heart-wrenching entry too.
ewanandhaydenfan5
I Have You Now!
date Posted: May 18, 2006 11:06 AM
What a beautiful tribute. Your friend must have had a great love of life that helped her stay positive throughout her troubles. Sounds like you both touched each other's lives in very positive ways.
MissPadme
Miss Padme's Naboo Love Nest
date Posted: May 18, 2006 9:00 PM
Thanks everyone for your comments.
  darthjack66
Jedi Temple Invader
date Posted: May 19, 2006 3:58 PM
Wonderful tribute. Thank you for posting on my three blogs.
Qui-Tom Servo loves Padme
You Must Unlearn What You Have Learned
date Posted: Jul 12, 2006 2:03 PM
As your friend was also a Star Trek fan, I think the words spoken at Spock's funeral in Wrath of Khan are appropriate here. "He's really not gone, just as long as we remember him."
MissPadme
Miss Padme's Naboo Love Nest
date Posted: Jul 12, 2006 6:28 PM
Great point, Qui-Tom. Thanks :).
  • Please log in to post comments