Chicago Sun-Times

Second City, GayCo teacher, performer

- BY MAUREEN O’DONNELL Staff Reporter

Judy Fabjance spent 25 of her 41 years involved with Second City, where she was described as “easily the most- loved teacher” at its training center.

She worked and studied with future stars including Steve Carell, Stephen Colbert, Tina Fey, Amy Sedaris and Nia Vardalos. As an improv teacher and risk- taking performer, she influenced many fledgling students and actors who responded to her kindness with a trust that helped them bloom onstage.

At 16, she used to go to Second City Northwest, the troupe’s old location in Rolling Meadows. She was interviewi­ng Sedaris for her student paper at Prospect High School when the actor turned the tables on Ms. Fabjance.

“Amy asked her what she wanted to do, and she said, ‘ I want to do what you do,’ ” said Kelly Leonard, Second City’s executive vice president. Sedaris and producer Cheryl Sloane helped get her a job as a Second City host. A perk of employment was free improv classes.

“Stephen Colbert and Paul Dinello and I just adored her,” Sedaris said Tuesday. “She was just a bundle of energy, a real treasure to be around.”

“She was just this kid who was such a superfan,” said Andy Eninger, head of the writing program at Second City. “Everybody wanted to protect her and watch over her and adopted her.”

Her mentors supported her during an eight- year struggle with breast cancer, offering encouragin­g messages and help with fundraiser­s. Colbert donated a book for a silent auction and listed its value as “priceless,” colleagues said.

The Mount Prospect native died Aug. 21 at her home in Bolingbroo­k. “Man, she put up a fight,” Leonard said. “It got harder for her to actu- ally teach, but she’d come in and visit.”

She was a member of ComedySpor­tz and a cofounder of GayCo, a pioneer- ing, 20- year- old offshoot of Second City with an LGBTQ perspectiv­e, Leonard said.

“Judy was there at the birth of GayCo in 1996, and helped raise our group from a ragtag queer sketch troupe to a Chicago comedy powerhouse,” the ensemble said in a statement. “She was instrument­al in giving dozens of up- and- coming gay and lesbian comedians opportunit­ies, confidence and strength to speak their truths, on stage and off.”

GayCo called her “a comedian, a teacher, a trailblaze­r, a friend, a co- star, an actor, a teammate, a co- worker, a writer, a coach, a mentor, a brilliant wit, a tireless champion of others, a role model, a daughter, a sister, a loving wife ( to GayCo’s equally incredible Kelly Beeman) and, perhaps most inspiringl­y, an endlessly devoted mother to her amazing daughter Daphne.”

“She was my daughter, my best friend and my role model,” said her mother, Stephanie Fabjance. “If I could be as strong and brave as she is, I’ll get through all this.”

When she was born, Judy was a tiny “preemie,” her mother said. Doctors weren’t sure she’d survive. But an obstetrici­an who observed her in the nursery changed his mind. “She was screaming and kicking her arms and legs. She was trying to get both fists in her mouth,” Stephanie Fabjance said. “Only hours old, they could see she was a fighter.”

After her 2008 diagnosis, she wrote two cancerthem­ed shows: a solo perfor- mance titled “Are you There Judy? It’s Me, Cancer” and a satirical revue with her wife, “Tales of a Stage 4 Cancer.” They billed it as a riff on “everything from restrictiv­e diets to their sex life to the questionab­le motives of the Big Pink industry.”

She also appeared in a comedy sketch she wrote — featured on Second City’s website — about a man engaged in a single- minded pursuit of medical marijuana.

Ms. Fabjance taught at junior highs, after- school programs, high schools, day camps and corporate meetings, according to Second City. She studied at Columbia College, iO and the Annoyance Theater.

One of her students was Tim Baltz, who has appeared on Second City’s mainstage and TV’s “Veep” and “Drunk History.”

“She loved working with kids,” Leonard said. “But she worked with adults as well, and did teaching outside of Second City with specialnee­ds kids. That’s the kind of angel she was.”

Ms. Fabjance was able to get people to loosen up and be silly. “When Judy walked into a room she radiated empathy, and if you’re teaching improvisat­ion, there’s probably no better thing to radiate because it’s scary and it’s rife with failure,” Leonard said.

In addition to her wife, daughter and mother, she is survived by her father, John Fabjance; a sister, Cathi, and brothers Gary and Tom. A celebratio­n of her life is planned from 11 a. m. to 2 p. m. Wednesday on the mainstage of Second City, 1616 N. Wells. It will include clips of her comedy and music. Email: modonnell@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ suntimesob­its

 ?? | SUPPLIED PHOTO ?? Judy Fabjance ( from left) with daughter Daphne and wife Kelly Beeman.
| SUPPLIED PHOTO Judy Fabjance ( from left) with daughter Daphne and wife Kelly Beeman.
 ?? | FACEBOOK ?? Judy Fabjance, a teacher and performer with Second City, fought breast cancer for eight years.
| FACEBOOK Judy Fabjance, a teacher and performer with Second City, fought breast cancer for eight years.

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