She was not on the list.
Longtime Chicago theater actress Molly Glynn died Saturday,
a day after she was hit by a falling tree while biking on a north suburban
forest preserve trail, officials and Glynn's husband said.
Glynn, who lived in Rogers Park, was pronounced dead at
12:45 p.m. at Evanston NorthShore Hospital, according to the Cook County
medical examiner's office. Also Saturday, Chicago actor Bernie Yvon was killed
when the vehicle he was in was struck by a semi-trailer in Munster.
Glynn, 46, was riding her bike about 3 p.m. Friday with her
husband, fellow theater actor Joe Foust, when the pair were caught in the
fast-moving afternoon storm, Foust said in a Facebook message today. Heavy
winds uprooted a tree onto the path where she was riding in Erickson Woods near
Northfield, authorities said.
Foust, 45, said he and Glynn would bike frequently together.
On Friday, they were riding on their favorite biking trail, the North Branch,
and were about 25 miles into the ride, heading south on the trail, when the
weather suddenly changed around 3 p.m. as they approached Willow Road.
"It was harsh and quick," said Foust, who has been
married to Glynn for about four years.
Glynn, who was riding behind Foust, yelled that the two
should take cover. A split second later, Foust said he heard a loud crack and
saw a tree fall down behind him in the rear-view mirror of his bicycle. One of
the branches hit Foust's back, but he said he is doing fine.
He said Glynn wore a helmet.
Foust said it took the forest preserve police about 20
minutes before they found them. He said he tried calling 911 several times
before he could get through, likely because of weather.
He said he believed a strong wind was responsible for
uprooting the tree that killed his wife.
Foust said Glynn leaves behind two teenage boys, Chance, 17,
and Declan, 13.
Foust, who first met Glynn at the Chicago Shakespeare
theater in 1990s, described her as funniest, greatest person he has ever met.
"We really loved working together," he said.
Glynn over the years has been a regular at some the city’s
most renowned theaters, including Steppenwolf, Writers, Next, Chicago
Shakespeare and Northlight, where she appeared in "Tom Jones" last
winter. Her TV credits include "Boss" on Starz and NBC's "Chicago Fire", in which she played
an emergency room doctor.
Northlight Theatre artistic director BJ Jones called Glynn
"a beautiful woman and one would think that she would only be a leading
lady, but the truth is she also had great skill and breadth and scope as an
actress," all but stealing the show as one of the Pigeon sisters in the
company's 2012 production of "The Odd Couple."
"In a cast, she was a strong, stabilizing
influence," he said. "A real pillar in the cast. And when she walked
on stage, you knew you were in good hands. You knew that you were seeing the
truest colors of the character and the play."
With her thick red hair, Glynn cut an elegant figure on
stage and had an affinity for inhabiting strong women with sharp edges to their
personality, memorably playing a wife grappling with her husband's extramarital
affair in a 2003 Steppenwolf Garage production of "Orange Flower
Water."
Area residents said the violent thunderstorm, which likely
uprooted the tree that ended Glynn’s life, came in rapidly but lasted for only
about an hour.
May her family take some comfort in the fact that by being
an organ donor, she has given life to others! They are to be commended that in
their time of sorrow, this decision was made. One organ donor can save up to 8
lives.
Morton Grove resident Jim Polizos was about to hop on his
bicycle around 3 p.m. on Friday to make his daily 10-mile commute from his job
in Wheeling to his home when he saw the darkness outside. Polizos, who said he
has driven through extreme conditions such as the polar vortex earlier this
year, said he decided to wait for about half an hour instead of weathering the
storm.
“It was really intense as far as the wind,” said Polizos,
28. “The rain was just whipping around.
It was almost whiteout conditions.”
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