Frances Lasker Brody
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May 27, 1916
Frances Lasker Brody | |
|---|---|
| Born | Frances Lasker May 27, 1916 Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
| Died | November 12, 2009 (aged 93)[1] Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
| Occupation(s) | Art collector, philanthropist |
| Spouse |
Sidney F. Brody
(m. 1942; died 1983) |
| Children | 2 |
| Parent(s) | Flora Warner Lasker Albert Lasker |
| Family | Mary Lasker (stepmother) Doris Kenyon (stepmother) Edward Lasker (brother) |
Frances Lasker Brody (1916–2009) was an American arts advocate, collector, and philanthropist who influenced the development of Los Angeles' cultural life as a founding benefactor of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) and later as a guiding patron of the Huntington Library, Art Collections and Gardens.[2]
Mrs. Brody, who died on November 12, 2009, at 93, was the wife of Sidney F. Brody, a real estate developer who died in 1983, and the stepdaughter of Mary Lasker, a philanthropist and champion of medical research who died in 1994. The Brodys lived in a modernist house in the Holmby Hills neighborhood of Los Angeles that was designed by the architect A. Quincy Jones and the decorator William Haines to show off the couple’s collection.[3]
Frances Lasker was born May 27, 1916, in Chicago to Flora Lasker (née Warner) and Albert Lasker, who built the advertising firm of Lord & Thomas. Albert Lasker was known in the advertising world for campaigns that popularized Kleenex tissues, Lucky Strike cigarettes and Sunkist orange juice. She studied political science, English and history at Vassar College, where she graduated in 1937.[2]
After college, she worked briefly as a model and saleswoman at a dress shop near Chicago. During World War II, while serving in a volunteer ambulance corps, she met Sidney Brody, a decorated Army lieutenant colonel who flew missions in Europe. They were married in 1942.[2]
After the war, the couple moved to Los Angeles, where he built a fortune as a developer of shopping centers. He died in 1983.[2]