She circulated an underground newspaper in junior high school that advocated greater individual freedoms for students. At Long Beach Polytechnic High, she designed her own curriculum and taught a study class on Shakespeare. Raised in the era of the Beatles and the Stones, Borgers became a jazz convert when she was a teen, listening to Ella Fitzgerald in a "meditation room" her parents built for her in the garage. "She was into Ella, and I "being more the angry young man, was into John Coltrane," said her brother Ken, a longtime Southern California broadcaster and a DJ at KSDS Jazz 88.3 in San Diego.
Borgers began doing volunteer work at K-Jazz, then known as KLON, while studying literature at Cal State Long Beach. Her brother, who was program director at the station, said he asked her one day to fill in for a DJ who was ill. The DJ never returned, and she never left. On air, Borgers, who had a booming voice and an easy laugh, explored both legends and up-and-coming jazz and blue artists. Outside the studio, Borgers poured her time and resources into the Long Beach Shakespeare Company, an ambitious if financially challenged outfit that performs out of a 37-seat theater. She fell for Shakespeare after seeing Franco Zeffirelli's "Romeo and Juliet" and memorized all of Shakespeare's sonnets and most of his plays by the time she was in high school, her brother said.
Over the decades, Borgers became a mainstay of the LA radio jazz scene, and the thought of her absence on the radio dial seemed improbable. But her voice vanished from the airwaves in June 2017, when she was laid off by K-Jazz after 38 years, ending a career that stretched from the days of vinyl and turntables to the more sterile environment of punching buttons on a console.
She died in Long Beach on Sunday, November 12, about two weeks after surgery and a two-month stay in the intensive care unit of Long Beach Memorial Hospital. She was 60 and survived by a sister, two brothers and her partner.
She circulated an underground newspaper in junior high school that advocated greater individual freedoms for students. At Long Beach Polytechnic High, she designed her own curriculum and taught a study class on Shakespeare. Raised in the era of the Beatles and the Stones, Borgers became a jazz convert when she was a teen, listening to Ella Fitzgerald in a "meditation room" her parents built for her in the garage. "She was into Ella, and I "being more the angry young man, was into John Coltrane," said her brother Ken, a longtime Southern California broadcaster and a DJ at KSDS Jazz 88.3 in San Diego.
Borgers began doing volunteer work at K-Jazz, then known as KLON, while studying literature at Cal State Long Beach. Her brother, who was program director at the station, said he asked her one day to fill in for a DJ who was ill. The DJ never returned, and she never left. On air, Borgers, who had a booming voice and an easy laugh, explored both legends and up-and-coming jazz and blue artists. Outside the studio, Borgers poured her time and resources into the Long Beach Shakespeare Company, an ambitious if financially challenged outfit that performs out of a 37-seat theater. She fell for Shakespeare after seeing Franco Zeffirelli's "Romeo and Juliet" and memorized all of Shakespeare's sonnets and most of his plays by the time she was in high school, her brother said.
Over the decades, Borgers became a mainstay of the LA radio jazz scene, and the thought of her absence on the radio dial seemed improbable. But her voice vanished from the airwaves in June 2017, when she was laid off by K-Jazz after 38 years, ending a career that stretched from the days of vinyl and turntables to the more sterile environment of punching buttons on a console.
She died in Long Beach on Sunday, November 12, about two weeks after surgery and a two-month stay in the intensive care unit of Long Beach Memorial Hospital. She was 60 and survived by a sister, two brothers and her partner.
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