Glorya Kaufman

Glorya Kaufman is an American philanthropist.

Glorya Kaufman
Born
Glorya Pinkis

Detroit, Michigan
OccupationPhilanthropist
SpouseDonald Bruce Kaufman
ChildrenCurtis Kaufman
Gayl Kaufman
Laura Kaufman
Stacie Lyn Kaufman

Early life

Glorya (Pinkis) Kaufman was born to a Jewish family[1] in Detroit, Michigan during the Great Depression.[2] Her father worked as a production manager for Automotive News and her mother volunteered for Jewish charities. Her parents could not afford dancing lessons for her.

Philanthropy

Glorya Kaufman Hall at UCLA

In 1994, Kaufman made a donation for the construction of the 10,040-square-foot Donald Bruce Kaufman branch of the Los Angeles Public Library in Brentwood, Los Angeles.[2]

In 1999, Kaufman donated US$18 million to the University of California, Los Angeles, which named Glorya Kaufman Hall in her honor.[2] However, she admitted to being disappointed in the way UCLA handled her donation.[2]

In 2009, Kaufman donated US$20 million to the Los Angeles Music Center to establish the Glorya Kaufman Presents Dance series.[2] She has also donated millions to the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater and the Juilliard School in New York City.[2] In 2011, she donated several millions to the University of Southern California for the establishment of the Glorya Kaufman School of Dance, which enrolled its first cohort of BFA majors in 2015, and the construction of the Glorya Kaufman International Dance Center.[2] A year later, in 2012, she joined the board of trustees at USC.

Personal life

Kaufman is the widow of Donald Bruce Kaufman, who with Eli Broad co-founded Kaufman & Broad, now known as KB Home (NYSE: KBH), in 1957.[2] Broad's wife, Edythe Lawson, is Kaufman's first cousin.[3] They had four children, Curtis, Gayl, Laura and Stacie Lyn. Donald and his son-in-law, Eyal Horwitz, both died in a plane crash in 1983; afterward Glorya turned to charity work.[2] She raised her family in a sprawling Brentwood ranch house.

Kaufman currently resides in a US$18.2 million Italian-style villa in Beverly Hills, California with Erté tables and Louis Icart prints.[2]

References

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