Chicago Sun-Times

KAYLYN PRYOR: 20-year-old had just gotten 1st modeling deal

Police: Woman with love for fashion was not intended target

- BY MAUDLYNE IHEJIRIKA Staff Reporter Email: mihejirika@suntimes.com Twitter: @maudlynei

It was all coming together for 20-year-old North Shore resident Kaylyn Pryor.

The effervesce­nt Evanston Township High School grad, who was attending Robert Morris University, had won the “Mario, Make Me a Model” competitio­n sponsored annually by Chicago’s Mario Tricoci Hair Salons & Day Spas in September.

And she had just signed her first modeling contract. Her breakthrou­gh came from Factor Women Model Management agency, and she was expected to return the freshly inked agreement to the Chicago agency on Thursday.

“All her friends were about to graduate from college, and she was like, ‘At first I was feeling left behind, but you know what, Mom? I’m doing it all in my own time,’ ” her mother, Royce Pryor, 47, said Tuesday as she made funeral arrangemen­ts for the youngest of her two daughters at Kaylyn’s home in Evanston.

Her life was cut short Monday night by gangbanger­s’ bullets in a drive-by that killed her and critically injured a 15-year-old boy in the 7300 block of South May in Englewood, where she was visiting her grandparen­ts.

“My grandparen­ts live on that block. She was walking to the corner to get the train. She catches the train down there all the time. She was coming back to Evanston to print her contract,” said her sister, Chantal Pryor, 28, of Woodridge. “A 15-year-old kid was walking with her. That’s all we heard. I’m lost right now.”

Police said a passing vehicle sprayed bullets at the two about 6:20 p.m., not far from where 9-year-old Tyshawn Lee was shot to death just two hours earlier in the 8000 block of South Damen.

She was shot in the armpit and died. Police said she was not the intended target of the shooting, and they identified the injured teen as a known gang member.

Family and friends gathered at the young woman’s home in South Evanston, reminiscin­g about a girl who would dress up in her aunt’s fancy dresses, shoes and furs and sashay around the house. Early on she developed a love of fashion, but she was determined to become a lawyer.

“My funniest memories are when she would put on my big fur coat that she loved, and it just wrapped around her little body. She’d come to my house and wear my high heels and wigs and take pictures and pose and model,” said her tearful aunt, Camisha Pryor, 40, who was close to Kaylyn.

They talked of a skinny, gangly girl who learned to love her body and was athletic. She ran track at ETHS, where she won many medals and was a member of the school’s cheerleadi­ng and pompom squads. She entered the modeling competitio­n with a friend on a whim, never expecting to win, her sister said.

Kaylyn had just been hired last Friday at a popcorn shop at Old Orchard Mall in Skokie and had a follow-up interview scheduled for Tuesday at Victoria’s Secret in the same mall — excited about adding two part-time jobs to her part-time gig at the Chicago Bears Pro Shop, to cover bills for school and her modeling career.

“Kaylyn will be remembered for her remarkable personalit­y and generous spirit. She was truly beautiful inside and out!” competitio­n founder Mario Tricoci said Tuesday.

“I had just seen her yesterday,” her mother said, tears falling gently. “She left my house in the car with her grandmothe­r, and she said, ‘Well Mom, I’m going to call you once I get back to the house.’ So she called me and said, ‘Well I’m packing all my stuff up. I gotta get back to Evanston before at least by 7:15, to get done everything I need to do to be prepared for Tuesday.’ ”

“Unfortunat­ely, by 6:20, I got the call. I got myself to the hospital, and it was just sorrow. She had friends from everywhere in there,” her mother said. “My child was so gifted in so many areas, with a magnetic personalit­y that just drew people to her. I mean, she was truly loved.”

“MY CHILD WAS SO GIFTED IN SO MANY AREAS, WITH A MAGNETIC PERSONALIT­Y THAT JUST DREW PEOPLE TO HER.’’

ROYCE PRYOR, Kaylyn Pryor’s mother

 ?? | SUN-TIMES PHOTOS ?? Kaylyn Pryor ran track at Evanston Township High School (above left) and was an aspiring model who had recently won the ‘‘Mario, Make Me a Model’’ competitio­n sponsored by Mario Tricoci Hair Salons.
| SUN-TIMES PHOTOS Kaylyn Pryor ran track at Evanston Township High School (above left) and was an aspiring model who had recently won the ‘‘Mario, Make Me a Model’’ competitio­n sponsored by Mario Tricoci Hair Salons.
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