Community Corner
Joan Rivers' Heart "as Big as Her Mouth Was Tart," Says AIDS Healthcare Foundation
Joan become an ardent supporter of AHF and an early advocate on AIDS issues at a time when few public figures were willing to speak out.

From the AIDS Healthcare Foundation:
AIDS Healthcare Foundation, the largest global organization, today mourned the death of entertainer and comedienne Joan Rivers.
“We are deeply saddened on the news of the passing of Joan Rivers,” said AHF President Michael Weinstein. “Her heart was as big as her mouth was tart.
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“When her hairdresser became ill with AIDS and spent his last days at AHF’s Chris Brownlie Hospice in Los Angeles in 1989, Joan become an ardent supporter of AHF and an early advocate on AIDS issues at a time when few public figures were willing to speak out. There was Elizabeth Taylor. There was Princess Diana. Madonna, who is still a strident voice on AIDS. And there was Joan Rivers.
“We extend our deepest sympathies and condolences to her daughter Melissa and her entire family during this difficult time.”
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From the earliest days of the AIDS epidemic, when the faces of AIDS were primarily gay men, Rivers’ special place in her heart for people with AIDS led her to host and participate in multiple benefits for AHF and other AIDS groups. AIDS Healthcare Foundation honored Rivers for her AIDS work at its AHF Academy Award Gala in 1992 at the Directors Guild.
PHOTO Joan Rivers Honored at one of AIDS Healthcare Foundation’s Academy Awards Gala in 1992. L-R: AIDS advocates including PAWS/LA co-founder Nadia Sutton, AIDS Healthcare Foundation President Michael Weinstein, Melissa Rivers and her mother, comedienneJoan Rivers, at an AHF Academy Award Gala benefiting AHF held at the Director’s Guild of America in Los Angeles in 1992. Rivers’ longtime hairdresser had been a patient at AHF’s Chris Brownlie AIDS Hospice in 1989, which led Rivers to become an ardent supporter of AHF and early advocate on AIDS issues.
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