Alana Beats Dad at Scrabble

If you’ve ever played “Heads up!” with Muffy, you know now competitive she can be. She was a fierce Scrabble player as well, and with her mastery of words she was a formidable opponent, but she never beat her dad, who, after all, is Bob Devich.

Then one day in the late 90’s, I think, the daughter surpassed the dad. Here are two, not just one, games where she beat me. On the left you see she beat me by over 100 points, with a stunning 76-point Scrabble. On the right she was more merciful, but still beat me by over 60 points.

Posted by Bob Devich

So Many Funny Things

Alana performed stand-up on the first ever show I saw at the Comedy Studio in Cambridge, Massachusetts. That showcase was called “Women of Color in Comedy,” and Alana shined bright. I wanted to pursue comedy, and I found Alana’s timing, material, sense of humor, and poise to be so inspiring that I tracked her down through her website and wrote her a fan letter.

Alana responded with warmth, encouragement, and an admirably down-to-Earth attitude for somebody who was, to me, such an obvious superstar. We became friends. This was THRILLING to me. Famous hilarious incredible Alana Devich was becoming my friend. I could hardly believe it.

Over the years we wound up performing on tons of comedy shows together, including a series called “Girls Gone Wild,” organized by our funny friend Kelly MacFarland. For one of those shows, Alana wrote some sketches based on Dirty Dancing, one of her favorite movies. We closed the show with a ridiculous dance re-enactment that Alana set up perfectly. At the climactic moment, Alana placed a stool in the middle of the stage, and another comic named Melissa rushed up toward the stage from the center of the audience. Yoga queen Alana did a perfect arms-out locust pose on the stool while Melissa grabbed Alana’s ribs from the audience, perfectly emulating the classic lift move from Dirty Dancing. And the audience. Went. Nuts. It was one of the most delightful, entertaining, magical, silly, fun, brilliant, hilarious moments I’ve ever seen at a comedy show.

Delightful. Entertaining. Magical. Silly. Fun. Brilliant. Hilarious. That’s Alana.

Posted by Erin Judge

The Beginning

I snapped this photo in the early morning of our friend Dan Perry’s 30th birthday weekend in Guerneville (2009). Alana and I’d only met a few months prior, this was our first overnighter. The photo demonstrates Alana’s pensive presence, she loved being around people. She didn’t often do a lot of talking in large groups but that brain of her’s was definitely at work. Thinking. Observing. So busy.

Posted by Penne Soltysik

A Wedding Toast

When Alana asked me to give a toast at her wedding, I spent a long time thinking about how best to celebrate her fabulousness and the fabulousness of her beloved. Here is what I said:

15 years ago, Alana Devich turned to me at the end of a yoga class in Cambridge, Massachusetts and said, “I’ve decided we should be friends. When are we going out to dinner?” A few dinners later plus a joint escape from what turned out to be not so much a yoga class but a strange cult, and the deal was sealed. The fact is, Alana Devich is made of awesome and I’m a very lucky person to have her in my life.

Let me tell you a little more about why. Soon after we’d become friends, I got sick with a chronic illness. Weeks stretched into months and months into years and pretty much all I could do was try my best to go to work and then come home and collapse. It was tough for a lot of people to understand, and I didn’t blame them—I hadn’t lived in Boston long, and it seemed like a lot to ask from new friends to stick by me when my social life consisted mostly of going to the doctor.

But not so with Ms. Alana Devich. She would pick up take out and come over and watch stupid tv with me. She didn’t care that my brain was a foggy mess that couldn’t put thoughts together. She still found a thousand ways to make me laugh. And that is one of the reasons I was able to make it through five long years of being sick.

And that is just one of the many times that Alana has been there for me when things have been hard, painful, falling apart.

When we each moved from Boston to opposite coasts, it was Alana who said, this is ridiculous. We need to make regular phone dates. Those phone dates have helped me through many years of changes, of sharing the good and the bad together, and doing our best to help each other make sense of it all.

Here are a few more things you should know about Alana, if you don’t already. She loves a dance-off. She is a comedic genius. She doesn’t suffer fools, but she will always find a way to make their foolishness hilarious. She is a healer who draws from the deepest well of compassionate power. She has the gift of being truly alive to the world around her, of finding delight even in the darkest times and, what’s more, she shares that gift with everyone around her. And when Alana sets her mind to something, that something will HAPPEN.

And so it was with the Alana Devich Dating Project. As a side note, I’d like to take credit for some crucial advice early on in the Dating Project about sexier bra options—feel free to thank me, Mac.

When Alana decided it was time to get some dating done, she got some dating done. But I could feel it in my bones from the first time she mentioned her upcoming date with Mac, something important was about to happen.

I have seen Alana give her heart before but I had not yet seen her meet her true match. Someone strong enough to be her strong-willed equal. And tender enough to make her know that she is always, at all times, loved. In Mac I see a poet-warrior who is both strong enough and tender enough. I see someone who has made it their mission to love Alana with great passion and inspiration. To make her laugh. To make her angry. To inspire her to be her greatest, most powerful self.

This is the kind of love I think about when I think about what Audre Lorde meant when she talked about the uses of the erotic, I think about your love, about the power of it, about the power of making a home for each other and a passion that fuels true transformation.

So raise your glasses with me and toast to the very special and rare loves that transform not only the lovers but declare inevitably that the world itself must transform in that loving image.

Posted by Karen Pittelman

The Cat Brooks Interview

This interview with Cat Brooks I had on my Soundcloud to do list long after it was shared on the Alana aka: Winner FB page. Today, I cherish it and have downloaded and backed it up just in case the interwebs blows up. It is one of my favorite things. The voice of my friend so close in my ear is comforting. And the story that is Mitts and Muffy is so unique, special. This interview illustrates their chemistry, their character, and respect for one another— in listening it is clear each can’t wait for the other to finish. They truly are proud of their connection.

Warming the ventricles of my heart aside, it taught me so much about esophageal cancer. About Alana’s prognosis. I hope the interview is shared so the whole world, through this love story, can learn, as well.

Posted by Penne Soltysik

We Owe This Man So Much

Dr Hervey-Jumper performed brain surgery on Alana in September, 2017 at UCSF hospital after she was transported by medevac from Maui to Honolulu to San Francisco. The prognosis by the doctor in Honolulu was grim. At a minimum, she would lose mobility on one side and possibly worse. Dr Hervey-Jumper gave us such confidence that he could remove the tumor with minimal side effects, and he delivered.

My only request of Dr Hervey-Jumper was “when you find Muffy in there, leave Muffy in there.”

She recovered rapidly and regained full mobility after a surprisingly brief rehab.

It is because of his successful surgery that we had another year + of Muffy.

We owe this man so much.

Posted by Bob Devich