The race for Newport Beach City Council: Steve Bromberg
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH--Twice in his life, District 5 council candidate Steve
Bromberg has encountered situations he said were simply “meant to be.”
The first came in 1978, when he and his wife, Ronnie, saw a house
going up on Little Balboa Island. The couple, both Los Angeles natives,
had been vacationing on the island for almost a decade and fell in love
with the geometrically shaped cottage.
They held out another seven years until one day when Ronnie came back
from the market to their vacation rental.
“The house is for sale,” Bromberg remembers her saying. That’s all the
couple needed to know.
After a stretched out sale--the house fell in and out of escrow three
times before the couple finally called it their own--and a fair amount of
remodeling, the Brombergs have lived there ever since.
“The house is half the size of what we lived in in L.A.,” Bromberg
said, sitting on a sofa in his living room. “But the only regret is that
we didn’t do it 20 years earlier.”
One thing Bromberg has had to give up is his passion for
black-and-white photography. There wasn’t enough space for a darkroom in
the new home.
“If I can’t do it right, I’m not going to do it,” he said. A wall now
covered with some of his work reminds him of his hobby.
All of the pictures contain people because “it adds warmth and
meaning,” Bromberg said. “It makes that image interesting.”
A portrait of a homeless woman and her four-legged companion that
Bromberg encountered on a San Francisco street corner remains his
favorite shot.
“The dog was giving me a defiant look [like] ‘What are you doing?’ ”
he said. “But the woman smiled. This is her home. Her life is this corner
and her dog.”
Living on the island, where life moves along at a mellow pace and
there is less of a need to “sweat the small stuff,” also prepared
Bromberg for his life’s second decisive moment. In 1995, he was diagnosed
with bladder cancer.
The cancer was “quite invasive,” Bromberg said. “But I just knew that
I was going to recover. I wasn’t worried about it. I just knew that I was
going to recover.”
Bromberg did, and recent checkups have shown that he also overcame a
second, smaller bout of cancer last year.
“To a lot of people, there’s nothing more devastating than when you
have cancer,” he said, adding that he now helps other victims of the
disease to overcome their fears. “But it doesn’t have to be as
devastating as it sounds. I probably have more energy than I’ve ever
had.”
Sitting across from her husband, Ronnie agrees that his candidacy for
City Council has not caused any problems.
“We’re a team,” she said. “I’m not worried at all.”
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