Glorya Kaufman, the philanthropist who remodeled dance in Los Angeles via the institution of an eponymous dance faculty at USC in addition to a distinguished dance sequence on the Music Heart, amongst many different initiatives, has died. She was 95.
Kaufman’s dying was confirmed by a consultant for the Music Heart, which was the recipient in 2009 of a $20 million present from Kaufman that established Glorya Kaufman Presents Dance on the Music Heart. The cash, which represented the most important donation in L.A.’s dance historical past, went towards the continuing staging of appearances by a number of the world’s most well-known dancers, troupes and corporations, together with the Joffrey Ballet, American Ballet Theatre, the Royal Ballet, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater and Ballet Hispánico.
“Her gift to the Music Center has made it possible for us to bring the joy and beauty of dance into the hearts, minds and souls of countless Angelenos and visitors from around the world,” Music Heart President and Chief Government Rachel Moore mentioned in a press release. “As a result of Glorya’s significant visionary leadership and generosity, Glorya Kaufman Presents Dance at the Music Center today stands as a vital part of Los Angeles’ cultural fabric.”
Kaufman additionally donated an undisclosed sum to create and endow the USC Kaufman Faculty of Dance, and to construct its residence, the Glorya Kaufman Worldwide Dance Heart. When it launched in 2012, this system was the primary new faculty to be established on the college in 40 years. It opened in 2015 with 33 college students and has nurtured the skills of dancers who went on to work with internationally acknowledged corporations and artists together with Alonzo King LINES Ballet, Staatsballett Berlin and Ballet Jazz Montreal.
In a tribute printed by USC employees on the college’s web site, USC Interim President Beong-Soo Kim mentioned, “Glorya’s love for dance was contagious, and she spread that love by creating opportunities for people everywhere to experience the transformative impact and joy of the arts.”
“We have so much [dance] talent here in L.A.,” Kaufman advised The Occasions in 2012 when the present to USC was first introduced, “and there’s no place for them to go. We want to get the best students, the best teachers, and the kids, when they graduate, will be able to make a living right away.”
Later that 12 months, The Occasions described Kaufman’s significance to the dance world:
“The new biggest name in dance is Glorya Kaufman, who shook up the arts world last month when she gave the University of Southern California a gift that despite its undisclosed amount, has been called one of the largest donations in dance history.”
USC was not the primary L.A.-area establishment of upper studying to learn from Kaufman’s largess. In 1999 she gave $18 million to fund the restoration of the UCLA Girls’s Fitness center — now referred to as Glorya Kaufman Corridor. The Occasions wrote that her donation was, “the largest individual gift the university has received outside of the health sciences area, and the largest arts donation ever in the University of California system.”
Kaufman additionally gave cash to varsities in New York Metropolis, together with 4 lifetime endowments for undergraduates at Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. A 2,300-square-foot dance studio on the Juilliard Faculty, which she funded, can be named after her.
Though dance was her main focus, Kaufman’s affect was felt throughout L.A.’s cultural panorama. She was a founding member of the Los Angeles Museum of Up to date Artwork and in addition gave to the Los Angeles County Museum of Artwork. As well as, she was a founding trustee of the Geffen Playhouse and donated cash to construct an outside reception space on the theater.
Kaufman believed that dance must be skilled by as many individuals as doable and was dedicated to serving to much less advantaged college students achieve entry to packages of their communities. She created an endowment for a devoted dance trainer at Internal-Metropolis Arts in East L.A. and offered funds for greater than 17,000 youngsters to take free dance courses there every year.
The Glorya Kaufman Performing Arts Heart — a 299-seat, multi-use performing arts area, together with lecture rooms, rehearsal rooms and a theater — opened two years in the past at Vista Del Mar Baby and Household Companies, a nonprofit that gives psychological well being providers for neurodivergent kids and people experiencing behavioral issues. Kaufman’s present got here with the launch of three new community-focused packages: a USC Alumni Residency, an L.A. Unbiased Choreographer Residency and UniverSoul Hip Hop Outreach.
The Glorya Kaufman Performing Arts Heart at Vista Del Mar was based with the announcement of three new packages: a choreography residency, a USC alumni residency and a partnership with UniverSOUL Hip Hop.
(Nic Lehoux)
Kaufman was identified with strabismus as a toddler. The situation — which causes one eye to look in a special course than the opposite — and her early experiences attempting to appropriate the problem, alongside together with her struggles with poor imaginative and prescient, contributed to her curiosity in serving to these with disabilities.
In 1954 Kaufman married Donald Bruce Kaufman, a builder and entrepreneur who in 1957 partnered with businessman and distinguished philanthropist Eli Broad to co-found a homebuilding firm referred to as Kaufman & Broad (now KB House). In 1963 the Kaufman household moved to Huntington Harbour after the corporate expanded to California. Three years later, they once more moved to Beverly Hills. In 1969 the Kaufmans relocated to a 48-acre Brentwood ranch they referred to as Amber Hill.
In 1983, Donald died in a aircraft crash with the couple’s son-in-law, Eyal Horwitz, whereas piloting an experimental biplane. To take care of her loss, Glorya threw herself into philanthropy. She created the Glorya Kaufman Basis and devoted its first main mission — the ten,000-square-foot Donald Bruce Kaufman Brentwood Department Library — to her late husband, a prolific reader.
Kaufman is survived by her 4 kids, Curtis, Gayl, Laura and Stacie Lyn; 10 grandchildren; and 13 great-grandchildren.