Biography

Mary Fisher (activist)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mary Fisher
Born Lizabeth Davis Frehling
April 6, 1948 (age 63)
Louisville, Kentucky
Nationality American
Occupation Artist, author
Known for AIDS activist
Religion Judaism
Website
http://www.maryfisher.com/

Mary Fisher (born April 6, 1948) is an American political activist, artist and author. After contracting HIV from her second husband, she has become an outspoken advocate for AIDS prevention and education and for the compassionate treatment of people with HIV and AIDS. She is particularly noted for two speeches before the Republican Convention in Houston in 1992, and in San Diego in 1996.

She is founder of a non-profit organization to fund HIV/AIDS research and education, the Mary Fisher Clinical AIDS Research and Education (CARE) Fund. Since May 2006 she has been a global emissary for UNAIDS, the United Nations’ program to fight HIV/AIDS.
Contents

1 Early life
2 Activist
3 Artist
4 Author
5 References

Early life

Fisher was born Lizabeth Davis Frehling on April 6, 1948, in Louisville, Kentucky, the daughter of Marjorie Faith (née Switow) and George Allen Frehling. Her parents divorced when Fisher was four, and the following year her mother married multimillionaire Max Fisher, who adopted Fisher.

Raised in Michigan, Fisher attended Kingswood School (today's Cranbrook Kingswood School) in Bloomfield Hills and attended college at the University of Michigan for a year before taking a volunteer position at ABC Television in Detroit, which she left when afforded an opportunity to join the staff of Gerald R. Ford, then President of the United States, as the first female "advance man". In 1977, Fisher entered her first marriage, which soon dissolved. In 1984, she sought treatment at the Betty Ford Center for alcoholism; while there, she realized she was artistically inclined. After rehab, she resettled to New York City, and in 1987 she married fellow artist Brian Campbell. The couple relocated to Boca Raton and expanded their family. Fisher gave birth to son Max and after several miscarriages, adopted a second son, Zachary, with her husband. In 1990, Campbell requested a divorce and in 1991 informed Fisher that he was HIV positive. Fisher soon learned that she had contracted the disease from him, although their children tested negative.
Activist

Fisher decided to be open about her illness, and after Detroit Free Press published her story in February 1992, she was invited to speak at the 1992 Republican National Convention in Houston, Texas.(Clips and a transcript of her speech can be found at http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/maryfisher1992rnc.html) There, she urged the Republican Party to handle the AIDS crisis and the HIV positive with compassion. In 1995, New York Times credited Fisher — along with Elizabeth Glaser, who spoke on her experience with AIDS at the 1992 Democratic National Convention — with having "brought AIDS home to America." After that appearance, Fisher created a support group for families affected by AIDS and healthcare workers, the Family AIDS Network, and continued speaking as its representative, promoting education, prevention and acceptance of sufferers. Fisher spoke again at the 1996 Republican National Convention in San Diego, California. Fisher did not return for the 2000 Republican National Convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; she was replaced by a speaker who advocated abstinence only over safe sex education.

In 1999, Fisher made news when she, like some other HIV positive people, decided to stop taking anti-HIV medications which she felt were hurting her quality of life.

But she and her doctors continued to try new drug combinations and, by 2001, were able to suppress the virus without unmanageable side effects. Finding medications that could prolong healthy life marked a turning point, Fisher said in a 2007 MORE Magazine interview: “For years it was waiting to die, and then it was turning everything around and trying to figure out how to live.”

Fisher expanded her AIDS activism from public speaking into writing, art and international advocacy. She founded the non-profit Mary Fisher CARE Fund, based at the Center for AIDS Research at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, to support clinical AIDS research and promote public education about HIV/AIDS medicine and policy. She serves on the leadership council of the 'Global Coalition on Women and AIDS and with other HIV-positive women has toured the United States to raise awareness about the disease.

Fisher’s international work has focused on Africa and especially Zambia, where she has led fact-finding tours and has promoted income-generation projects to employ HIV-positive women. She has taught African women to create handmade jewelry which is then sold online and in U.S. galleries, with profits returned to the women artisans.
Artist

Fisher’s art has been exhibited in public and private collections around the world. Collectors include: President and Mrs. George H. W. Bush, President and Mrs. Gerald Ford, Mrs. Henry Ford II, President and Mrs. Mwanawasa of Zambia, and many others. Seven of her sculptures are displayed at the Geneva, Switzerland, headquarters of UNAIDS, as part of Art for AIDS, a collection created to recognize the role art has played in the response to AIDS. Fisher’s work also has been shown at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library and Museum.

Mary Fisher is successfully represented year round by Goldenstein Gallery Uptown Sedona, AZ. A special show featuring Mary's work is held annually in November. The show is titled: CHI: Art as a Healing Medium. The opening reception is held the first Friday in November. Mary speaks in the gallery at least once a year. Visit the gallery website for details.

She is currently active with the Sedona Visual Artists Coalition
Author

Fisher is the author of five books: An autobiography called My Name is Mary: A Memoir; Angels in Our Midst, a photographic tribute to AIDS caregivers; ABATAKA, a collection of her 'AIDS-themed and African-influenced arts works; and two books containing transcripts of speeches, Sleep With the Angels and I’ll Not Go Quietly.

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