She fought a good fight and inspired millions along the way.
At the start of her career, Jane Marczweski was just a college student — a girl with a dream of one day making it big — and boy, did she ever.
After a hard-fought battle, the 31-year-old Marczewski, who went by the stage name “Nightbirde,” passed away Sunday, according to several press reports. Her physical journey on this side of eternity may have come to a close, but there will be no final curtain call on the indelible mark she left on the lives of so many people around the globe.
Listen to the latest episode of the Faithwire podcast 👇
I was a college student at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Virginia, alongside Marczewski. Lynchburg is a small city and the “Liberty bubble,” as it’s known, is even smaller. So to us, she was just “Jane” — and everybody knew who Jane was: the “Liberty celebrity” — another phrase in the LU vernacular — whose music often filled university hallways and wafted through local, dimly lit coffee shops.
If Downtown Lynchburg had a playlist, she was the headliner. But it never got to her head: Jane — who was a Christian — was always kind, always eager to make new friends, and ever-willing to listen. These are just observations I made from a distance, as Jane and I weren’t really anything more than acquaintances. She was, though, an open book. Her kindness and care were obvious.
Not long after she left Liberty, Marczewski developed breast cancer — a grim diagnosis she was certain she’d beat. And she did. She even released a song about it in 2019, “Girl in a Bubble.”
Then the cancer roared back when she was 29 years old, this time taking up residence in her lungs, liver, lymph nodes, ribs, and spine. The prognosis wasn’t good. But she soldiered on, filling social media feeds and prayers with a simple anthem: #SeeJaneWin.
Just days after her diagnosis — and just weeks before the COVID-19 pandemic turned the world upside down — Marczewski’s life was pulled out from under her: The husband whom she described as her “one great love” walked out on their marriage.
That journey — one marked by deep darkness and despair — led, though, to a glimmer of hope: she made it big.
Her success was marked by its simplicity, a beautiful message that moved even Simon Cowell when Marczewski performed her song “It’s OK” during her audition for “America’s Got Talent.”
So moved by her performance, Cowell awarded the then-30-year-old singer his coveted “Golden Buzzer.”
The oft-harsh judge later described Marczewski’s song, a journal entry into the life she lived, as “mesmerizing.”
Virtually overnight, “It’s OK” rocketed to the top of the iTunes charts. Its message had made an impact not only from coast-to-coast in the U.S., but to listeners around the world who saw Marczewski’s song as an anthem: “If you’re lost, we’re all a little lost and it’s alright.”
Her powerful “AGT” audition has been viewed more than 39 million times.
“It’s a song I wrote for myself in the middle of the night when I needed those words so bad and it’s beautiful to see the world welcome that song into their own dark night and … I’m overwhelmed by it,” Marczewski said during a surprise appearance on “AGT” after she left the competition to focus on her health.
Cowell, then, told Jane the truth she needed to hear: “Even though you haven’t competed, you’ve already won.”
Truer words couldn’t be spoken.
Please keep Jane’s family and friends in your prayers as they grieve their loss and celebrate her life.
***As the number of voices facing big-tech censorship continues to grow, please sign up for Faithwire’s daily newsletter and download the CBN News app, developed by our parent company, to stay up-to-date with the latest news from a distinctly Christian perspective.***