Janice Haynes died on June 3 at her home in West Tisbury. She was 58.

Janice was born on Feb 1, 1966, at the Martha’s Vineyard Hospital. In choosing that date, she interrupted her mother’s birthday and spent the next 58 years likewise drawing plenty of attention just by entering a room.

Janice grew up in West Tisbury, across from her grandmother’s ice cream stand (now State Road Restaurant) and near an illicit entrance to Seven Gates, where she loved to trespass. Her appetite for life was enormous. In high school she discovered make-up and flirtation, much to the delight of the Menemsha Coast Guard.

Janice attended the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan, where she studied illustration. Withdrawing before graduation, she had a brief starter marriage in her 20s, which took her to suburban Long Island. This was her sole experiment in leading a conventional life and thus was doomed to failure.

Returning to West Tisbury, Janice lived with her close friend, Beckie Scotten. They held weekly potlucks, often with music, and sometimes with a bonfire.

“You know the party’s a good one when Janice starts taking off her clothes,” Beckie reminisced.

Jeremiah Brown, a Vineyard Gardens landscaper, was a regular at Biga Bakery where Janice worked. After harboring a crush on her for months, he asked Beckie what Janic’es favorite flowers were.

“Daffodils!” Beckie said. “And lilacs!”

Janice said she fell in love with Jeremiah on a wintry visit to the arboretum, when he could identify every bush, shrub and tree by a twig.

Janice was ecstatic when her sunflower-themed design was chosen for the 2006 Fair poster. Throughout her life, she vacillated between professional artistic pursuits. For years, she sold her painted works at the artisan’s festival. But she always kept a day job: office manager at Vineyard Gardens, baker at Humphrey’s and Back Alley’s, etc.

In 2016 she was hired as the hall manager for the Agricultural Fair. This tickled her; as a child, she’d wanted to grow up to be one of the Fair Ladies.

At the time of her death, she worked as “Administrative Assistant To Pretty Much Everyone” (her words) at the West Tisbury town hall. If you don’t know her by name or voice, she was the one with the turquoise blue, and teal green, and sometimes purple, hair.

In 2019, Janice was diagnosed with colon cancer. A bad reaction to a com

monly prescribed blood thinner led to her being medivacked to Boston and put into a medically-induced coma. On awakening, her first words were: “Well, that sucked.”

This was as close to self-pity as she got. A dyed-in-the-wool rural Yankee, she found the hardest part of cancer was accepting that she needed help from other people, in excess of her own usefulness to them.

She was in treatment throughout Covid lockdown, and her energy often dipped to the level of ordinary mortals. But in July 2021, bald as a cue ball and swathed in bright blue, she artfully navigated Covid restrictions and flew to Ireland for four days to visit a friend. Despite flight complications on both ends of her journey, they saw more of Ireland in those four days than most people do in a month.

Janice was absolutely unselfconscious and her underlying state of mind was boisterous delight. Even when discussing things that made her unhappy, she did it with such vim that she seemed almost to take pleasure in her displeasure.

She wore her heart on her sleeve and trusted the world to accept her. A childhood friend recalled, “I was in awe that she dared to be herself before I even knew I could do that.”

Janice is survived by her husband, Jeremiah Brown, parents Bill and Betty Haynes, mother-in-law Lynne Irons, brother Bruce Haynes, stepsons Michael and Chris, grandkids Zappa and Athena, daughter-in-law Ellie, sisters-in-law Jennifer and Naomi, brother-in-law Reuben, nephew Nathaniel and nieces Jessica, Lily, Hannah and Violet as well as lifelong friends and neighbors around the Island, and especially in West Tisbury.

A celebration of life pot luck will be held July 6 at 5 p.m at the Agricultural Hall in West Tisbury. Wearing bright colors is encouraged.