Photos by Robin May
Susannah
Malbreaux
Susannah Malbreaux stands tall for good
reason. A former model, she honed her poise and elegance
in front of a camera lens. The 1972 Lafayette High
School grad and UL Lafayette student always intended to
own her own business, but she went through several
management careers before she opened Elite Model and
Photography agency in 2007. “I have the opportunity to
help young girls develop personally and professionally.
In the workshop I conduct, I include poise, posture,
etiquette, self-confidence building and self-esteem
building,” Malbreaux says. “I tell the young ladies,
whether they become professional models or not, this
training will help them in their professional life,
whatever they become.”
Her desire to nourish and polish young people
spills over to the community as a whole as well. She has
sought out leadership roles on community development
boards with the aim of “making Lafayette one of the best
places in the world to live.” Malbreaux is on the board
of commissioners for the Lafayette Economic Development
Authority, the vice-chair of the Democratic Lafayette
Parish Executive Committee (with an eye on the vacant
chairmanship spot) and a community organizer. “I like
helping people,” she says.
Malbreaux’s worked as a forum organizer for a
consortium of civic groups united as the State of
Greater Black Lafayette. A once and future member of the
Greater Lafayette Chamber of Commerce, she is currently
a member of the Black Chamber of Commerce. Both the
chamber and LEDA allow Malbreaux to work on economic
development, the key, she says, to building a strong
community. Her most recent action was organizing a trip
to the January inauguration of President Barack Obama.
She chartered a flight that carried 200 Lafayette
residents to Washington, D.C., to participate in the
historic inauguration of the country’s first
African-American president. “Now people want me to
arrange a trip to the White House,” she laughs.
Deidre
Toups
Think twice about 16 and pregnant. Deidre
Toups did. Now she’s president of an oil-service company
in an industry — perhaps more than any other — dominated
by men. Just over a year ago, Toups was promoted from
vice president to president of HB Rentals, which, as the
name implies, rents living quarters and other amenities
for both offshore and onshore drilling operations. The
company is a subsidiary of Superior Energy Services
based in Harvey (suburban New Orleans). Her promotion
was widely reported in the press, in part for the major
crack it made in a thick glass ceiling. “It was a little
intimidating, because it mostly is men in the industry,”
Toups admits, “but I guess I’m confident about my
education and my experience and I’m also willing to
admit what I don’t know, and that usually opens up a lot
of conversations for me.”
The teenage Toups, baby son in tow, moved to
Germany with her soldier husband. This is in the mid- to
late 1980s when Lafayette was still in the swoon of an
oil bust. Seeing bigger and better things for herself
and her child than being an Army wife and an Army brat,
she returned to Acadiana, earned a GED and enrolled in
then-USL in accounting. She got her degree in 3.5 years,
was the top graduate at the commencement ceremony, and
later earned the highest score in the state on the CPA
exam. “I was pretty driven,” she says. “I had a family
to raise — I was a single mom.” A single mom no more,
Toups has since remarried and has two daughters — ages
12 and 6 — who occupy most of her spare time; her son is
now in college. Toups went to work for Broussard,
Poché, Lewis & Breaux in Lafayette for four years
straight out of college. After getting her CPA license,
she landed at HB Rentals as chief financial officer. “I
was a little uncertain about getting into the oilfield
for my career path,” she says, “but it’s been a great
opportunity for me and it’s allowed me to move out of
accounting and into management... It’s a great company
to work for; a lot of great people. I think we have a
really good team of people who know the technical side
of our business, and with my finance background it just
seems to be a good combination.”
Toups acknowledges that she has run across some
old guard oil men suspicious of a woman in their midst,
but says her willingness to learn, to ask questions and
seek advice typically wins them over. Like many people
who achieve success in business, Toups credits hers in
part to the organization, and those surrounding her. “I
really stress the importance of the fact that it’s great
people that have helped to get where I am and supported
me. We’ve got a great team of people. I attribute most
of my success to them.”
Kit
Becnel
When the Ford Foundation visited Lafayette and
the LITE Center last October, it was blown away by a
presentation from a Carencro High faculty member so much
that it views Carencro High as a possible recipient for
funding based on the work of its computer and business
program.
That program is the Academy of Information
Technology, and that faculty member is Kit Becnel, its
director.
Becnel, a Destrehan High grad, moved to Lafayette
in 1973 to attend USL (now UL Lafayette) and never
really left. With a bachelor’s degree in business
education, a computer literacy certification, teaching
experience in the area and a lifetime of computer and
business experience, Becnel has spent most of her life
immersing herself in the framework and infrastructure of
the business world here in Lafayette. So it was no
surprise when then-Carencro High Principal Don Aguillard
and Assistant Principal Annette Samec asked Becnel to
become the director of the AOIT in November 2003.
She spent the rest of the ’03-’04 school year
planning the program, which included having AOIT join
the National Academy Foundation, which helps build
career academies in several fields that include finance,
engineering and hospitality/tourism; there are more than
550 such specialized academies nationwide. In its six
years of existence the local academy has garnered
numerous accolades. On top of winning the prestigious
Aldo Papone award for high school reform, one of six
given nationwide, and the ASPIRE Cohort award, one of 24
awarded nationwide, both in 2007, the AOIT under Becnel
has a perfect 100 percent placement rate in its
internship program. Now that’s unheard of.
The IT paid internships happen between the
students’ junior and senior year, when they work 180
hours at their designated business. Becnel, with the
help of her advisory board, parents and others, places
the interns herself, unlike other academies that have
agencies handling that task. When you can have up to 75
students to place, that can be massive undertaking.
In October, Becnel and the rest of the academy
will host the ASPIRE Design Showcase, where other
academies will come in to view and critique the work
they are doing, to help move the program forward. The
NAF thinks so highly of Becnel that its director
personally invited her to the Bay Area Video Coalition
in San Francisco in early March to attend a design
showcase in anticipation of her showcase.
“I really
think that by today’s standards, watching how I can help
mold and shape tomorrow’s workforce gives me great
pleasure,” Becnel says.
Judy
Briscoe
Compile a list of all the charitable
organizations Judy Briscoe has been a part of and you
quickly realize it may be easier to make a list of the
ones she has not worked with. Despite her successful
personal career that often means very long workweeks,
she devote countless hours to a diverse group of
non-profits and other community groups.
Her volunteer work started about 18 years ago,
when she took a job with BellSouth Mobility. “The
company played a major part in the community and
afforded employees many opportunities to volunteer,”
says Briscoe. “My job at BellSouth led me to take on a
board position with Louisiana Open that I continue to
serve to this day.”
The BellSouth job may have been the
stepping-stone into volunteering, but it was the
position with the Louisiana Open that teed off her
charitable endeavors. “My volunteer work with the
Louisiana Open for the past 16 years is what opened the
doors for me to be in contact with many non-profits in
our area,” she says. Since then she has been on the
board of directors for Acadiana Youth and worked with
Festival International, the Boys and Girls Clubs of
Acadiana, LEDA, Acadiana Outreach, and the Alzheimer’s
Association, just to name a few.
The apples aren’t falling far from the tree in
the Briscoe family. A single mom with three daughters,
Briscoe has had the pleasure of watching two of them
follow in her charitable footsteps. Leslie is the
development director for the American Cancer Society,
and often partners with her mother in other charitable
projects. Juliana just returned to Lafayette after
finishing an internship at the University of Houston,
and is now volunteering as well with several different
non-profit organizations in the area.
Briscoe also helps keep her work family in
charitable spirits. As assistant vice president of
public relations at Home Bank, her job entails lots of
communication within the community, which makes it
easier for her to help in getting others involved. “A
large part of my work here at Home Bank is to ensure
that our company is a huge supporter of community
efforts, the universities, and many other worthwhile
non-profit events,” says Briscoe. “This work
responsibility affords countless opportunities for me to
assist in planning and implementing charity events.”
Briscoe shows no signs of slowing her
increasingly manic schedule down anytime soon. “Besides
my full time job, my volunteer work has grown to be a
way of life for me, and I plan to continue that for as
long as I am able.”
Penny Angelle
Frederick
When you have lost hope, ensnared in the
endless automated phone operator loops of government
agencies, abandoned on the shores of unanswered
voicemail, don’t despair. There is a real live human
being who will come to your rescue. Her name is Penny
Angelle Frederick. Her phone number is 337-291-6400.
That’s all you need to know.
But there is a back story to this mystery woman who
has saved many from smashing their cell phones on the
pavement and hurling their laptops out bedroom windows.
Penny Frederick grew up in Henderson, graduating from
Cecilia High School in 1977. She was planning to go off
to college and become a lawyer. Instead she fell in
love, got her diploma from Spencer Business College and
went to work at Trappey’s. That lead to a job at
Petroleum Helicopters Inc. “But I was always fascinated
with government,” she says. Her move into the first
estate, more than 20 years ago, was a job as a
caseworker in the office of state Rep. Harry Lee Benoit.
“We’re like social workers, helping constituents,” she
says. Her first area of expertise was food stamps. She
also helped with social security issues, connecting with
Jan Becker, a caseworker in former Sen. John Breaux’
office. In 1988, Jimmy Hayes was elected to Congress,
and Frederick applied for the caseworker position in his
Lafayette office. “There were 19 other applicants,”
Frederick says. What gave her the edge? “I was fluent in
Cajun French.” Her boss on the ground in Acadiana was
current Lafayette Parish Clerk of Court Louis Perret.
Perret says Frederick is the quiet, unsung hero of
government service. “Many times, I have personally
witnessed Penny going beyond the call of duty when
someone needs help,” says Perret. “Like getting to work
extra early to assist people needing help that are in
another time zone. Or, patiently waiting for a
constituent to finish screaming at her for something the
federal government did to them. She does not take things
personally and is always willing to go the extra mile
for others.”
Hayes switched parties to Republican and ran for the
Senate; when Democrat Chris John won the District 7
seat, he asked Frederick to stay on. Four years later,
the same scenario took place: Charles Boustany, a
Republican, moved into the office. Frederick assumed she
would be out of a job. Boustany met with Frederick.
“What I do,” she told him, “is not about Ds and Rs. It’s
about the people. When they call we never ask if they
are Democrats or Republicans.” Boustany had the good
sense, according to Perret, to retain Frederick.
“We help people every day,” says Frederick. “It’s not
just about legislation. It’s about people trying to get
a passport. Veterans trying to fight for their benefits.
They fight a war and then come back and fight for their
benefits for the rest of their lives some times. I
fought the fight because I’ll never know what a day in
combat was, but you watch what it does to families and
it’s devastating. When you do one good thing, it gives
you the fuel to take a few more steps forward. That’s
why I’ve stayed here so long.”
Bonnie Robert
Will
For Bonnie Robert Will, climbing the ladder of
success meant climbing a utility pole — literally. Right
out of business college, the Northside High grad went to
work for South Central Bell. “Operator, may I help you
please?” The operator’s post was followed by a promotion
to typist, and roughly a year later, when the company
opened up its installation repair technician jobs to
women, Will was one of the first of two women in the
area to apply and get the job. It entailed climbing
utility poles and going into customers’ homes to install
telephones.
Will enjoyed the freedom of having her own
company truck and the physical activity — which she says
kept her in the best shape of her life — but the higher
pay was the big attraction. “I was really good at it,”
she says. “I liked drilling holes in people’s attics and
walls.”
Company officials saw other strengths in Will, a
knack for customer service and effective sales skills,
and soon hired her to train technicians to sell the
company’s products when they went into customers’ homes.
At age 28, when she returned to work after having her
first child, another promotion was waiting: manager of
two phone center stores in Lafayette. Within four years
she’d move up to zone manager for 17 stores in Louisiana
and Mississippi, and was then offered a post at the New
Jersey headquarters. The constant travel took a toll on
her, and Will decided to return to Lafayette after only
a year. Her first job back in Lafayette was with Service
Chevrolet in 1988, where she handled marketing, training
and PR. She left Service to run her family’s boat
business in Jennings, which was sold in 1993, rendering
her jobless. While at a UL football game she ran
into a couple of guys from KPEL, whom she had known from
her Service days, and was offered a job on the spot. She
later moved over to KLFY-TV10 and landed her first media
management job in 1997 back at KPEL/KTDY; in 2001 the
company moved her over to TV stations KADN/KLAF as
general sales manager. Within a couple of months, she
was general manager of the two stations — the first
female in Lafayette to serve in this capacity.
When she was let go from the locally owned TV
group in February 2005, which Will describes as
“devastating,” she turned to Nannette Frye,
then-president and general manager at KATC-TV3 (the
second female GM of a TV station in Lafayette), who was
more than happy to snag her, naming Will general sales
manager in March 2005.
It was a great career move for Will. KATC has
consistently gained ground in the Nielsen ratings, which
has helped her team chalk up record sales years. Despite
the slowdown in the economy, “We’ve made seven months of
budget, and we’re working on eight,” Will says. “I have
a really excellent, seasoned staff.” Though she is
remarried now, Will spent much of her career as a single
mom and still managed to build an impressive list of
local community involvement. Also, from 2002-2004 she
spent a week each spring in Mexico, helping to build two
cinder block homes with concrete floors for families
that had been living in shacks. “We would leave them
with a home,” she says. “It was remarkable.”
Though her telephone pole climbing days are long
behind her, Will says that job molded her professional
career. “It was difficult at times,” the 56-year-old
sales exec admits, “and installation repair technicians
don’t cry. It gave me a lot of self confidence.”
Johnnie
Marks
Johnnie Marks is what most people would have
called a career student — except that she’s the kind who
kept getting degrees and certifications, among which is
a master’s plus 30 in education and certification in
administration and supervision. She parlayed that
knowledge into a career in education that spanned more
than 23 years, retiring as principal of Paul Breaux
Middle School in 1998. Actual retirement, however, was
the last thing on her mind. “I retired to go into
business,” she says.
A decade later, Marks is the owner-operator of
four McDonald’s restaurants: two in Pineville, and one
each in Port Barre and Henderson. “We chose McDonald’s
because it’s such a great company. You never see a
McDonald’s close its stores,” she says. But deciding on
McDonald’s was merely a small, first step. “Just because
we chose McDonald’s,” Marks says, “did not mean they
would choose us.” Marks spent 18 months in the company’s
training programs and was later joined by her husband
when he retired from ExxonMobil (though she says he’d
been assisting her along the way).
McDonald’s has done an excellent job of
weathering the national downturn and is reinventing
itself in hopes of attracting non-traditional customers
to its economical menu. In the midst of the recession,
the company launched a line of premium coffees it calls
McCafé and rolled out the concept nationwide this spring
with one of its biggest marketing campaigns ever. “My
two Pineville stores started last summer. We were one of
the first to start, and it’s been great,” Marks says.
Each conversion to a McCafé store requires a $60,000 to
$100,000 investment on the part of the franchisee,
depending on the existing layout of the restaurant. The
lower price point for an iced mocha or latte, two of
Marks’ top sellers, is attractive to customers, and if
free Wi-Fi is made available, Marks thinks McDonald’s
will be in a position to dominate the coffee shop
market. “We keep asking McDonald’s to negotiate free
Wi-Fi,” she says. “We hope desperately that’s going to
happen.”
More recently the fast-food chain rolled out its
Angus third pounder, which also has been garnering rave
reviews. “It’s like what you will find at your casual
dining restaurant [except that] it’s $3.99,” Marks says.
The Angus burger has been in the pipeline for several
years, so it’s not a strategic move resulting from the
economic downturn. Still, it’s serving the purpose of
bringing a new wave of customers through the doors. And
like the café initiative, it just might keep them long
after the recession passes. “It came at a good time for
us,” Marks says.
Marks’ 27-year-old daughter, Crystal Vallo, is
herself in training to become an owner-operator. “That
was a decision we allowed her to make,” Marks says. If
she gets McDonald’s stamp of approval, her plans are to
either open her own stores or continue on with her
parents’ existing restaurants.
Marks says the transition from the classroom to
business wasn’t as difficult as she imagined. “I tell a
lot of my friends who are from the education community
that I am still doing so much teaching and coaching and
training. I am still teaching. I’m just not having to do
the lesson plans. [McDonald’s] does the lesson
plans.”
Dr. Ann
Laurent
As a high school student, Dr. Ann Laurent
often made extra money by babysitting for her neighbor
and family dentist Dr. Craig Strait. At the time,
Laurent knew that she wanted to do something in the
medical field, but she wasn’t certain what direction she
wanted to go in. After spending some time in the Strait
household, her future started to take shape. “Dr. Strait
seemed fulfilled, respected and able to balance work
with personal time,” Laurent says of her mentor. “I knew
above all else that the primary role I wanted in this
life was to be a mother, so I figured dentistry would
allow me to be more of a ‘master of my own domain,’
rather than answer to the demands of on-call hospital
duties [as] is required from physicians.”
She graduated from the LSU School of Dentistry in
New Orleans in 1983, but was unable to find an
associateship upon returning to Lafayette due to the
economic downturn that was beginning to take hold. After
a year of working in dental clinics in Lafayette and
Denham Springs, she was able to get one with Dr. Sam
Moss at an office he was renovating on South College
Road.
While trying to build a clientele with Moss,
Laurent still had to work long hours to make ends meet,
traveling to Denham Springs twice a week and often
working until 9 p.m. and on Saturdays due to the
practice’s working-class-friendly hours of operations.
Her hard work paid off. Moss helped her come into
her own and nurtured her talent while letting her go it
alone with her own place. “I moved from associate to
sole proprietor with my own practice, under his
leadership, sharing overhead costs. That relationship
lasted 14 years.” However, she eventually moved out, and
has been a solo practitioner for more than 11 years at
her office on West Martial Avenue. Laurent is
considered somewhat of a pioneer; when she graduated in
dentistry there were only a handful of women dentists in
her class. She was also one of the first female dentists
in this area, and is still one of only ones with a solo
practice.
Laurent loves to work, and it’s apparent that
dentistry is her passion. “I love what I do,” she says.
“There have been so many advances in techniques,
materials, and technology, that the array of services
and standard of care we can offer to patients is
exciting.” But it is the personal interaction that
fulfills her the most. “Unlike most surgical
professions, we are fortunate to establish long-term,
hopefully lifelong relationships with our patients. It’s
these relationships that make the profession the most
rewarding for me.” Laurent also finds time to devote
herself to missionary work between her practice and a
rich family life. “With two children still at home, my
time resources are somewhat limited, but I generally do
a yearly week-long outreach either in Mexico or Central
America with various faith-based organizations, as well
as some local work here at home.”
Lucy
Chenevert
After 25 years as a State Farm agent, Lucy
Chenevert stills enjoys her work as much as when she
first opened her doors.
A native of Lebeau, La., and a USL (now UL Lafayette)
graduate, Chenevert earned both her bachelor’s and
master’s degrees in education and taught at Truman,
Judice and Carencro elementary schools before deciding
to make a change. Even though she enjoyed teaching and
mentoring young people, Chenevert was ready for a new
vista, a new challenge: She wanted to take on the world
of business, despite that it was the mid-1980s and the
Lafayette economy was in the tank.
When State Farm announced plans to open a new
agency in Lafayette, Chenevert jumped at the
opportunity. Unbeknownst to her at the time, she would
become the first female African-American State Farm
agent in the area. In fact, when she landed the job,
there were only two other women in the area working as
State Farm agents.
“They didn’t look at me as a woman or a black
woman,” Chenevert recalls. “They looked at me as an
agent of a company.”
In those days, insurance was a male-dominated
field, and breaking that barrier was tough at times, but
Chenevert set out to build relationships with her
policy-holders, most of whom are still with her today.
“No one is going to come because you’re a new agent, but
because they need you,” Chenevert says. “You have to
prove yourself — that you’re gonna be there for the long
haul.”
“We’ve always had confidence we could get her on
the phone,” says Greg Davis, director of the Cajundome
who has been with Chenevert State Farm for about two
decades. “She is honest, she is hardworking and she runs
a good operation.”
Building the business was especially tough during
the early years because Lafayette’s economy was in
recession, Chenevert says, but she kept a close eye on
customer service (much like she is doing in today’s
challenging economic environment). There was little
money for advertising at the time, but after about three
years, the agency really began to take off, mainly
through referrals and word-of-mouth advertising.
Longtime customers like Davis attribute Chenevert’s
success to her trademark honesty and personal touch;
because of that, her agency is still flourishing. Lucy
Chenevert State Farm Insurance is indeed a family
affair, as Lucy’s husband, Lawrence, manages the 1401 W.
Pinhook Road office.
“First of all she has a lot of pride in her
community and serving her community,” says Annette
Hayes, an agency field executive for State Farm who has
worked with Chenevert for three years. Chenevert also
takes great pride in the fact that State Farm has always
maintained such a high level of respect in the insurance
business and she works every day to protect that
reputation. “She is very proud to serve State Farm,”
Hayes says.
Trailblazers
Elaine Mann Sue Fontenot (posthumously)
Dance
Moves
Elaine Mann knows the old adage “If you love
what you do you’ll never work a day in life” is true.
Matriarch of the successful Lafayette car dealership
family and long active in the Hub City’s civic life,
Mann founded the Elaine Mann School of Dance more than
40 years ago — one of the most successful
dance-instruction companies in Lafayette history — which
she sold in 2002. And she did it while raising four
children, founding a Mardi Gras krewe and being on the
boards of several charities. “It was great,” she says,
betraying no sense that being a female business owner in
the 1960s had any disadvantages. A dancer since
childhood, Mann had the good fortune of being offered
the opportunity to take over the business of her mentor
and dance teacher, Gertrude LeBlanc. But LeBlanc’s
studio was located near the Congress/University
intersection, and young families in Lafayette were
moving south. So Mann moved her new enterprise to
Johnston Street. “I had an option to buy in five years,”
she recalls of the original lease agreement for the
property. “Well, I bought it the next year.”
“She was a trailblazer back in the days when
women were not business owners,” says eldest son Ben
Mann. “She certainly brought dancing, and as a business
owner back in the ’60s, to the forefront.” Elaine
Mann began with $100 in seed money and hands-off advice
from her husband, Louis, who was on his way to a wildly
successful career as a car dealer. “He told me what to
do, but he wouldn’t do it for me,” she recalls. “Most of
the students that were with Mrs. LeBlanc came with me,
but like I said, the young families were [on the south
side], so that’s where my population of students began,”
Mann says. “And it was scary ... my note at the dance
studio was $128 dollars a month, and I thought if I
don’t get any students I won’t be able to pay that.” But
she managed just fine. By the late 1970s there were five
Elaine Mann School of Dance locations: the original in
Lafayette along with studios in Abbeville, Breaux
Bridge, Rayne and Youngsville. In each case, Mann used a
keen business sense to spot a demand and capitalize on
it. “As it happened I was very fortunate.”
In each expansion of her budding dance empire,
Mann made sure those running the studios were people she
liked and people she trusted, and she made sure they
were invested in the enterprise as well. “When you cut
somebody a little piece of the action, they’re going to
work,” she says. Mann deepened her connections in the
regional dance community with the co-founding of Dixie
Dance Masters, a three-state chapter of the prestigious
Dance Masters of America and was a delegate on the DMA
board as well. But she always made time for family. “I
was fortunate,” she recalls. “My hobby was wonderful. It
happened to make money, and it was a good
business.”
Good
Judgment
For so many people who knew her, or knew of
her, the first word that came to mind when longtime
Abbeville attorney and former 15th Judicial District
Judge Sue Fontenot died last July was “trailblazer.” At
the time, Lafayette Consolidated Government CAO Dee
Stanley, who was a reporter and anchor when Fontenot was
on the bench, called her a female trailblazer in both
politics and law in southwest Louisiana. “It was not
unusual for her to be in court at midnight,” he said,
“and if she was there, the lawyers had better be
ready.” That preparation and devotion to her
profession were also pointed out in a moving eulogy 3rd
Circuit Court of Appeal Judge Sylvia Cooks wrote about
her dear friend of 34 years. “If you knew Sue, you knew
when it came to the quality of her work she was a
perfectionist,” Cooks wrote, “‘never late,’ [Sue] would
say. She would start preparing months ahead of a
scheduled trial — eating, sleeping and breathing every
fact in the case until she was so prepared she was
masterful in her delivery before a jury ... of course
Sue was not easy on the lawyers who opposed her at times
— but at the end of the case most of them would get a
great big hug from a lady with an extraordinary gift to
make you her friend.”
Fontenot was just as tough when she was elected
to the bench; and while her style was at time
unorthodox, she always got her message across. Cooks
recalled the day when a young man walked into the
courtroom with a “‘bad diggity’ attitude with his poor
mama in tow.” He just thought he was in charge of the
show. “He soon found out the lady on the bench, in
addition to knowing how to use a gavel, sure knew how to
throw her shoes — the poor boy, after ducking two times,
finally understood the show was over,” Cooks wrote. “It
was time for him to learn a thing called ‘respect.’”
After the incident the young man turned his life around
and returned to let the judge know it — and to collect
on his hug. He also attended the funeral.
Fontenot was a fighter, having battled cancer
three times before her death at the age of 62. She made
headlines a year before she died when she fought off a
man who attacked her in her Mouton Cove home. Police
advised people to be on the lookout for someone with eye
injuries and bite marks.
For much of her adult life, Fontenot was active
in politics in areas not usually explored by women. She
was a state district judge from 1979 to 1987, ran
unsuccessfully against then-District Attorney Nathan
Stansbury in 1990 and was also unsuccessful against DA
Mike Harson in 1994. She also ran for the state Senate
in 1996. Despite those setbacks, she more than made her
mark, leaving all of us to wonder how different the
system might be today had Fontenot succeeded in those
endeavors.
Though she penned the eulogy, Cooks was too
overwhelmed by grief to deliver it, relinquishing the
honor to another of Fontenot’s close friends, Cameron
attorney Jennifer Jones. Ironically, it was Cooks who
delivered — in the same church, St. Mary Magdalen — the
eulogy Fontenot herself wrote but was unable to recite
only four years earlier for her brother James, a former
state senator.
Sue Fontenot had two children, Jean Paul
Perrodin, a Lafayette physical therapist, and Ahna
Segrera, who now lives in Tennessee.
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