Community mourns healer
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Elia Powers
Dr. Peyman Tabrizi, a neurosurgeon at Western Medical Center in Santa
Ana, will always remember the man who helped usher him into his job.
Tabrizi first encountered Dr. John Charles Kennady, a future
mentor and operating room partner, during his interview for the
vacant position last summer.
“He made me feel very comfortable,” Tabrizi said Wednesday. “He
was always available to help me out. He was a very polite man and a
kindhearted individual. It’s a tragedy he had to leave us like this.”
Kennady, once a Newport Beach resident, died Dec. 29 in a car
crash at about 3 p.m. at the intersection of South Coast Drive and
Hyland Avenue in Costa Mesa. Kennady’s Porsche was broadsided by a
Dodge Durango SUV, police said. He was taken to Western Medical
Center, where he spent 32 years of his career and helped save
countless lives, many of whom were victims of major accidents. He was
78.
Nearly 500 people gathered Wednesday afternoon at South Coast
Repertory in Costa Mesa for his memorial service.
Speakers described Kennady as an even-keeled, gentle man with
varying interests.
“He liked the beauty of the ballet and the chaos of the operating
room,” said Mark Anderson, a friend and colleague.
Kennady collected art and was a major donor to venues such as
South Coast Repertory.
Friends said Kennady was a diligent student from a young age. Born
in Chicago, he received his bachelor’s and medical degrees from the
University of Iowa.
He was selected to study at the coveted Montreal Neurological
Institute at McGill University.
After graduation, he transferred his energy to teaching. He joined
the faculty of UCLA as a professor of neurological surgery and
nuclear medicine in 1959 and took a vested interest in trauma cases
and research.
In 1961, he left UCLA to establish the Department of Neurosurgery
at Harbor General Hospital. Eleven years later, he opened his first
private practice in Orange County.
Kennady served as the president of the Orange County Neurological
Society and worked alongside hundreds of physicians during his
tenure.
“He changed the course of medical history in Orange County,”
Anderson said. “He was the best of the best.”
Anderson said Kennady embraced the most difficult neurological
cases -- from tumors to aneurysms to major spinal cord damage.
In his final years, Kennady served mostly as a liaison to younger
neurosurgeons in Orange County. He continued his teaching in the
operating room, providing help at various area medical centers.
“He always told me, ‘I’m willing to do whatever it takes to get
enthusiastic, qualified people on board,’” said Shelle Bilhartz, vice
president of Western Medical Center.
Bilhartz said Kennady was always on call and happy to assist with
surgeries.
He is survived by his wife of 21 years, Teri, and by sisters June
and Bonnie.
* ELIA POWERS is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
He may be reached at (714) 966-4623 or by e-mail at
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