My connection to my dear friend Genie was always both personal and musical. They are so intertwined that, just after Tom told me of her passing, church bells tolled in the small Mexican town where I happened to be. Okay, it was right on the hour… but still!!
Genie and I met in a high school chorus, and we became friends through the various theatrical experiences we shared during those years. Genie’s warmth, empathy, wit and insight enlivened and fortified me, forging a bond that lasted a lifetime.
The musical bond endured as well. Genie was more than a collaborative pianist. She transformed the experience of singing and playing together into something simply magical. We listened to each other intently. We played off each other musically as we would in a conversation, turning the notes on a page into intimate moments of clarity and care.
Growing up together was an endless series of such moments. I wish I could recall every second of the countless hours we spent together with dear friends in the living room of her lovely home. It seemed designed for cast parties and songs around the piano as much as for those long nights of earnest discussion, punctuated with wit so sharp that even Genie would admonish one of us with exaggerated horror, “I can’t believe you said that!” In a turbulent world of anti-war protests, civil rights struggles, and the challenging of so many cultural norms, this sturdy vessel of camaraderie carried us from adolescence to adulthood on waves of uproarious laughter, our sails filled with the constant winds of our union.
Genie and I lost touch for many years, but those winds prevailed. Thanks to our dear mutual friend, Steve Eiseman, Genie re-opened the door to friendship, which my husband Mitchell and I entered without a moment of hesitation. Visiting her and Tom for that first time in Ventura several years ago invoked all that was familiar, only now as fully formed adults. We still opined on political upheavals and shared the pivotal moments of our lives, but with perspectives informed by decades of experience. Once again, we listened intently and reveled in knowing each other at a depth that can only be obtained by having shared that original journey.
That memorable day, Genie and I reunited musically as well. She played and I sang for the first time in decades. It was as magical as ever. Afterwards, I recalled that, when we were young, my bond with Genie scared me at times, as did any strong bond of friendship. As a gay kid, I was chronically conflicted by both wanting such closeness and fearing that I would lose it were my friends to discover my secret. Of course, I’ve been essentially free of that fear for decades, but that day in Ventura repaired that experience with Genie, and it made me whole.
As you might expect, the pain of MS had made playing piano difficult for our dear friend, but with Mitchell, Tom and Steve as audience, I sang as she played without pain for two glorious hours. I kept offering to stop, but Genie insisted we do more. We were all moved, and I remain forever grateful for that time, as I am for this soulful friendship that lasted a lifetime.
I wrote to Genie before she passed, “I hold you in my heart where my sweetest and most precious memories of our friendship reside, and I carry you in my soul, where there has always been music.”
There is nothing more to say except to thank Tom for loving Genie so selflessly and for becoming our friend.
With love to all who mourn this loss --
Bruce Koff and Mitchell Channon