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・ Rebecca (band)
・ Rebecca (disambiguation)
・ Rebecca (given name)
・ Rebecca (miniseries)
・ Rebecca (musical)
・ Rebecca (novel)
・ Rebecca (Tesla Boy song)
・ Rebecca A. Herb
・ Rebecca Abe
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・ Rebecca Agatha Armour
・ Rebecca Aguilar
・ Rebecca Akufo-Addo
Rebecca Alban Hoffberger
・ Rebecca Alexander
・ Rebecca Allen
・ Rebecca Allen (artist)
・ Rebecca Allen (basketball)
・ Rebecca Alleway
・ Rebecca Allison
・ Rebecca Alpert
・ Rebecca Amuge Otengo
・ Rebecca and Eliezer at the Well
・ Rebecca Anderson
・ Rebecca Angus
・ Rebecca Ann King
・ Rebecca Ann Quinn Dussault
・ Rebecca Aronson


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Rebecca Alban Hoffberger : ウィキペディア英語版
Rebecca Alban Hoffberger

Rebecca Alban Hoffberger (born September 25, 1952, Baltimore, Maryland) is the founder and director of the American Visionary Art Museum, America's official national museum for outsider art, located in Baltimore, Maryland. A colorful public figure, she has been called “the P. T. Barnum of the outsider art world“.〔Mansfield, Stephanie (2000), (“The New Populism: 'Rebecca's World' of Visionary Art and Big, Splashy Parties” ), ''The New York Times''; April 19 issue.〕
==Biography==
Rebecca Alban Hoffberger was born in a “leafy middle-class suburb” of Baltimore, Maryland to Allen, a mechanical engineer, and Peggy Alban, a homemaker.〔Huggins Amy (2006), (“Rebecca Alban Hoffberger” ), Maryland State Archives (Biographical Series # MSA SC 3520-14534).〕 As a child, she suffered a bout with rheumatic fever which left her with painful episodes in her legs and periodic paralysis. "During these periods of illness, Hoffberger found Robert Louis Stevenson’s ''A Child’s Garden of Verses'' particularly comforting and therapeutic. She also enjoyed more macabre literature, however, and was drawn to fellow-Baltimorean Edgar Allan Poe at an early age."〔 At age 16, she was accepted to college but turned down the offer to study with the celebrated French mime Marcel Marceau in Paris, becoming the first American ever to do so.〔 In a 2013 Baltimore Magazine article, Hoffberger said, “My parents wanted me to stay in Baltimore and learn to be a secretary or have a practical fallback, but they were very accepting.”〔Marion, Jane (2013), “Foraging in the Fridge,” Baltimore Magazine, June 2013 issue.〕 While living in Paris, she met and married a ballet dancer who would become her first husband, and after moving back to the United States, gave birth to a daughter, Belina. Hoffberger worked as a development consultant to both a literary society and a ballet company, as well as holding a position at the Boulder Free School in Colorado before eventually moving to Mexico with her daughter.〔 While in Mexico, she met and married her second husband, Andrija Puharich, a notable physician and parapsychologist who was studying traditional healing practices. (Puharich is perhaps best known for bringing Israeli psychic Uri Geller to the United States.) Hoffberger spent three years with Puharich helping to deliver babies in remote mountain areas in the state of Morelos, and although this marriage also ended, it produced Hoffberger’s second daughter, Athena.〔
After making her way back to Baltimore, Hoffberger began work as the Development Director for Sinai Hospital’s "People Encouraging People," a program which provided support to institutionalized psychiatric patients in facilitating their return to the community. She then married her third husband, LeRoy E. Hoffberger — a wealthy attorney and heir of a philanthropic Baltimore family that formerly owned a brewery and a stake in the Baltimore Orioles — who was 27 years her senior. Hoffberger spoke fondly of the psychiatric patients in a 1995 interview with ''American Style'', "I was so impressed with their imagination. I looked at their strengths, not their illness."〔(Bio: Rebecca Alban Hoffberger, Maryland Women's Hall of Fame. ) Maryland State Archives Website. Biography courtesy of the Maryland Commission for Women, 2006. © Copyright Maryland State Archives, 2006. Accessed July 2013.〕 It was while working with this program that Hoffberger began to develop the idea for a “visionary” museum, the idea which eventually blossomed into the American Visionary Art Museum, or “AVAM.”

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