Tribute to Brianna
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Deepa Bharath
The black-and-white portrait that hung on the wall of Todd Olympius’
Eastside apartment was of a little girl in pigtails.
She was his little girl, Brianna, sitting on a bike with her eyes
closed as if she were ready to ride it into a magical world of fun
and adventure.
But 10-year-old Brianna didn’t get to live her life, dreams or
fantasies. The girl, diagnosed with a cancerous tumor in her brain
stem, died in September 2001. She lived nine months longer than
expected.
Olympius thanks his daughter’s doctors at Children’s Hospital of
Orange County for giving him and his family that extra precious time
with Brianna.
Three years after her death, the 42-year-old Costa Mesa resident,
who fabricates custom cars for a living, is organizing a car show,
Rev-N-Rock for CHOC, on Saturday to fund brain-tumor research through
CHOC’s Neuroscience Institute.
The fundraiser, where he expects to see more than 300 cars, is a
special tribute to Brianna and other children like her, Olympius
said.
“There is no better tribute to my daughter and the other little
faces in CHOC,” he said.
The event will commence at 10 a.m. in Central Park in Huntington
Beach. The cars, ranging from hot rods and classics to muscle cars
and custom vehicles, will be parked on the grass that Brianna loved
so much. Even her memorial service was held a park, Heller Park in
Costa Mesa, with friends and family dressed in “Brianna brights” --
bright-colored clothes like she always wore.
Olympius worked hard to bring the show to a local park, he said.
“I must have talked to 18 different city council members in
different cities to get approvals,” he said. “It didn’t work for some
of them.”
But the city of Huntington Beach, which works closely with CHOC on
many projects, agreed to host the event at Central Park, Olympius
said.
His daughter’s illness changed his attitude and perception of the
world, Olympius said.
“You see a lot of people in this area: they’re like ‘me, me, me,’”
he said. “I used to be one of those people. I was in my track in
life. And then I got pushed to the ground, sat up and said, ‘Wow.’”
He doesn’t even remember how many hours he spent at the hospital,
waiting, as Brianna underwent her treatment.
“You look at the children in that hospital -- many of them don’t
even know why they’re there,” he said.
Scenes at the hospital touched Brianna’s heart too, Olympius said.
“When she saw this article about her in the newspaper, she said,
‘Why me?’” he said. “She wanted to know why only she was written
about, when there were five floors of kids going through a lot of
suffering.”
Brianna’s older brother, Brandon, who will be a freshman at
Newport Harbor High School this fall, has been involved with his dad,
helping him with the fundraiser.
“I’m doing it both for my sister and the other kids who are in
need of help,” he said.
Before Brianna became sick, he didn’t know there was a hospital
for children, Brandon said.
“It’s an awesome place, and I’m glad to be giving back in some
way,” he said.
He hopes to not only help his dad with this one event, but he
hopes to participate in the year to come, Brandon said.
“I hope this is something we do for generations in our family,” he
said.
Olympius’ commitment to his project bears testimony to the effect
the hospital has had on him, said CHOC spokeswoman Susan Thomas.
“We usually get a lot of parents, especially the oncology parents,
because they spend a lot of time here,” she said. “It’s special
because they see firsthand what we need.”
Olympius has put this event together fueled by passion and
determination and with little to no funds, Thomas said.
“He lives paycheck to paycheck, still paying off Brianna’s medical
bills some three years after her death,” she said. “But his heart
still belongs to his little girl and to other children he met at
CHOC, who are fighting with as much vigor against cancer as Brianna
did.”
* DEEPA BHARATH is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at
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