Jenni Lilledahl was working for Second City comedy club in Chicago when she came across a most unfunny club connected with the legendary late comedian Gilda Radner.
Radner, aka "Roseanne Roseannadanna" on "Saturday Night Live," had become the inspiration for a clubhouse for cancer patients. Lilledahl was inspired, too, but it took 15 years to transplant the comedy/cancer club idea.
Now Gilda's Club has opened its signature red doors in the Twin Cities, one of only 20 in the nation to meet the group's exacting standards.
"I always knew it would eventually happen, but I didn't know how it would unfold," said Lilledahl, who chairs the board of directors.
As co-owner of the Brave New Workshop in Minneapolis, Lilledahl was also able to transplant the comedy/cancer club connection from Chicago.
"Gilda approached her cancer with a improvisational mind-set, which is making something wonderful out of what is in front of you," Lilledahl said. "That's what we do at Gilda's Club."
The club offers a menu of education, socializing and therapies for people living with cancer, as well as their families. There's even a break room appropriately called "It's Always Something," after one of Radner's lines.
The emotional and social support is critical, said Joanna Bull, who was Radner's psychotherapist as she coped with ovarian cancer in the 1980s. Bull came to the Twin Cities for the grand opening in April.