Karen Pritzker

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Born1958 (age 6768)
OccupationsInvestor, philanthropist, film producer
Spouse
Michael Vlock
(died 2017)
Daniel Mark Schwartz (married abt 1985 - divorce)
Karen Pritzker
Born1958 (age 6768)
EducationNorthwestern University (BA)
OccupationsInvestor, philanthropist, film producer
Spouse
Michael Vlock
(died 2017)
Daniel Mark Schwartz (married abt 1985 - divorce)
Children4
ParentRobert Pritzker (father)
RelativesSee Pritzker family

Karen L. Pritzker (born 1958) is an American documentary film producer, investor, and philanthropist. She is a member of the Pritzker family, the granddaughter of A.N. Pritzker and daughter of Robert Pritzker.[1]

Pritzker was born in Oberlin, Ohio, the daughter of Audrey (née Gilbert) and Robert Pritzker.[2] She has two full siblings: Jennifer N. Pritzker (b. 1950),[3] a retired Lt Colonel in the Illinois State National Guard and founder of the Pritzker Military Library,[4] and Linda Pritzker (b. 1953), an American lama in the Tibetan Buddhist tradition.[5] Her parents divorced in 1979.[2]

Pritzker graduated with a B.A. from Northwestern University.[1]

Career

Pritzker worked as an editor at the magazine Working Mother before the family sold it in 1986[2] and has written for various publications including Success, Seventeen, Kirkus Reviews, and Newsday.[6] Pritzker operates a venture fund, LaunchCapital LLC[1][7] with a core focus in the technology, consumer and medical businesses.[8]

In 2012, Pritzker co-founded KPJR Films with James Redford.[9] She has since executive-produced three documentary film features: The Big Picture: Rethinking Dyslexia, Paper Tigers, and Resilience: The Biology of Stress and The Science of Hope.[10]

Pritzker, alongside her husband, Michael Vlock, and Elon Boms, founded LaunchCapital in 2008, a seed-stage investment firm.[11]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
2012 The Big Picture: Rethinking Dyslexia Executive Producer Sundance Film selection in 2012 and winner of a 2013 Parent’s Choice Award [12]
2015 Paper Tigers Executive Producer Seattle International Film Festival selection in 2015[13]
2016 Resilience Executive Producer Shown at the Sundance Film Festival in 2016[14]

Philanthropy

Karen Pritzker is president and director of The Seedlings Foundation. The Seedlings Foundation, founded in 2002, has awarded millions of dollars in grants, catalyzing advancements in medical research, social services, job retraining for adults, affordable housing, and online news sites dedicated to local, factual, ad-free reporting.[15] Pritzker and her husband donated $20 million to the Yale University School of Medicine.[1] (including $3 million to endow a professorship);[1][16] $5 million to Teach for America; $1.5 million to the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research, in honor of her father who had Parkinson's disease.[17][18] In 2007, Pritzker donated $1 million to build a new visitor center at the Treblinka concentration camp.[19] Pritzer funded a new website named Truth in Advertising (TinA), tina.org, that provides information about incidents of false advertising.[20] She is on the board of directors of Grameen America, a nonprofit that offers low-cost microloans to women below the poverty line, as well as Grameen PrimaCare, which provides affordable health care for immigrant women.[21]

The My Hero Project

Personal life

References

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