Английская Википедия:Amir Fryszer Guttman
Шаблон:Expand Hebrew Шаблон:Infobox musical artist Amir Fryszer Guttman (Шаблон:Lang-he; April 25, 1976 – July 23, 2017) was an Israeli singer, musician, choreographer, actor, theater director and LGBT rights activist. He died after being swept away with his niece, whom he had held above water; his niece survived.[1]
Biography
Amir Fryszer Guttman was born as Amir Feiger in Kiryat Haim to a Romanian-born couple. He shortened his original family name to Fei when his parents divorced and added the surname of his maternal grandfather, Guttman, in honor of family members perished in the Holocaust. Fey Guttman began his career as a young journalist and model. After serving in the Israel Defense Forces, he joined the Eilat hotel's entertainment team. In 1996 he was selected by Hed Arzi Music to join a new boy band called "Hi-Five". Until it was dismantled in 2000, the band released three albums, all of which reached gold status, and an EP, and won the Festigal twice. He released two solo albums during his career: "Mantra" (2000), and "Honey In Beehives" (2007). He wrote and composed several songs for other artists, including Roni Dalumi, Tal Mosseri, Roni Duani, Eliana Tidhar and Tuval Shafir. He also worked as a choreographer and as a producer for Hamsa (musical group), David D'Or, Miri Mesika and as a director/assistant directors for plays such as the Israeli versions of High School Musical and The Jungle Book, amongst others, that featured many stars, including Tuvia Tzafir, Zachi Noy and many others.
Personal life
Amir Guttman was one of Israel's first celebrities to come out of the closet. He married his long-time partner, Yanai Fryszer on the 9 September 2009 and took on his name. Gila Almagor organized the ceremony. It was Israel's first high-profile gay wedding, and it made Guttman an icon of the struggle for gay civil rights. On 25 February 2013 the couple's child was born, with the help of a surrogate mother in India.
In April 2016 Amir was diagnosed with T Cell Lymphoma in Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center. (Ichilov hospital) After a series of lengthy chemotherapy treatments, they found out on July 22 that he was misdiagnosed. He actually suffered from Kikuchi disease. This is an inflammatory disease that is much less severe compared with T Cell Lymphoma, but the symptoms are similar. Following the misdiagnosis and the unnecessary chemotherapy sessions, Amir submitted damages claim against the Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center.
Amir declared the day he got the good news as his new birthday. He also returned to his activism: when the Israeli government announced that it would prioritize straight couples seeking to adopt children, Amir Guttman argued that the decision was an insult to couples like himself and his husband, who were parents of a young boy.[2]
Death
On July 22, 2017, Amir Guttman celebrated with his family and friends the first anniversary of being cancer-free. They traveled to an undeclared beach (A beach where there is no lifeguard) in Atlit. Amir went swimming with his niece and noticed the waves getting unusually strong. Both were pulled into the sea by turbulence. Amir held on to the child and kept her head above water, himself battered by the waves. When they were pulled out of the water a short while later, the niece was unharmed but Amir was not breathing. He was taken to Rambam hospital in Haifa as the medics tried to resuscitate him. He was unconscious and without pulse. The next day, the hospital's director emerged with the news that Amir Guttman had died.[3]
References
- Английская Википедия
- 1976 births
- 2017 deaths
- Israeli pop singers
- Israeli gay musicians
- Israeli LGBT singers
- Israeli people of Romanian-Jewish descent
- Musicians from Haifa
- Male actors from Haifa
- Gay singers
- Israeli LGBT rights activists
- 21st-century Israeli male singers
- Big Brother (franchise) contestants
- 20th-century Israeli LGBT people
- 21st-century Israeli LGBT people
- Jewish Israeli male actors
- Israeli gay actors
- Israeli male musical theatre actors
- Israeli male television actors
- Jewish singers
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