性视界

A Gift to Celebrate Life, Exploration and the Mother-Daughter Bond

It鈥檚 10:30 a.m. in Sydney, Australia, as Ann Covitz 鈥62 answers the phone and reflects on her life from the other side of the world. Hers is a story that deserves to be told, and one no parent ever wants to experience. It鈥檚 about a final act of love to forever connect a mother and daughter, and a gift intended to bring light from darkness.

two people with arms around each other
Ann Covitz, right, with her daughter Jill

A Queens, New York, native, she always wanted to be a teacher, and friendly influences and a strong School of Education led her to 性视界 University. 鈥淢y best friend Susan wanted to go to 性视界, and it got to be a whole clique of people in the neighborhood who went,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淚t was too big a school for me, really. But I loved the area all around campus.鈥

One weekend she met David Covitz, a Cornell University student in the same fraternity as her brother. After Ann graduated from 性视界, the couple married and settled near Cornell. They later moved to Long Island, where their daughter, Jill, was born. But Ann ran the household as David was frequently attending to his veterinary practice, and the marriage fell apart when Jill was 2 years old. Ann adapted as best she could, focusing on her teaching career and raising her little girl.

For 35 years Ann split her time between teaching and family therapy. She always loved children and became a Montessori School directress. She also organized parenting classes. Ann applied the lessons she learned as a single parent to help build up other families and guide schoolchildren in the same way she nurtured her daughter.

鈥淪he was such a happy kid鈥攖he girl whose perpetual, dimpled smile would light up the room,鈥 Ann recalls. 鈥淚 remember her receiving the 鈥楩riendliest Camper Award鈥 as a young child. They used to call her 鈥榖ubbly鈥; she was very outgoing and made friends everywhere she went.鈥

A Love of Travel

Jill Covitz 鈥92 loved music throughout her childhood, especially bands. And while Ann admits 性视界 wasn鈥檛 the ideal choice for her, it was perfect for Jill, who joined Alpha Chi Omega sorority and majored in electronic media production at the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications. She loved the entertainment aspect of the music industry and aspired to work in events production.

two people hugging, with one of them in a graduation cap and gown
Ann and Jill Covitz at Commencement

Of all her 性视界 experiences, a semester abroad set the tone for the rest of Jill鈥檚 life. 鈥淛ill studied abroad in London and traveled all over Europe. She loved being in a group and exploring, especially being an only child,鈥 Ann says. 鈥淪he always had the travel bug, but 性视界 was the place that gave her the inspiration to live internationally.鈥

Jill graduated cum laude and spent over a decade in New York City, working for Columbia Records and Sony Music Entertainment. But she still wished to live in another part of the world and was drawn to Australia for its people and its beauty.

鈥淎ustralians are very happy people鈥攂oundless. They have a light about them similar to Jill鈥檚 personality, and she loved the camaraderie,鈥 Ann recalls. 鈥淪he said, 鈥楳om, one day I want to go to Australia. It鈥檚 just the place I want to be.鈥欌

In 2005, Jill moved across the world and joined Fox Studios Australia. Six years later she went into business for herself, starting The Corporate Method (known as TCM Events), an event management company responsible for a full range of launches, premieres, galas and corporate, live and public events. In 2016 she kicked off a new start-up called FUNLOCKA, a tech platform connecting businesses with fans in meaningful ways. Jill applied all her entertainment experience into being a freelancer and consultant, living her dream. Life was perfect鈥xcept for the distance from her mother.

鈥淚鈥檓 very different from Jill鈥擨鈥檓 an introvert, and we have opposite personalities. But we had a strong bond,鈥 Ann says. 鈥淲e were just always apart because Jill wanted to travel, while I was afraid of planes and wanted to stay close to home.鈥

person holding dog with lake in background
Jill Covitz with her dog, Paris

In the fall of 2021, Ann got the courage to fly across the U.S. and the Pacific to live out her retirement in Australia with Jill nearby. It was a beautiful plan: mother and daughter together again, exactly where they wanted to live. But only months after Ann鈥檚 arrival, tragedy struck.

For one so outgoing and working in the bustling entertainment business, Jill enjoyed private moments too. Every morning she took her dog, Paris, for a walk, and most days included a quiet swim.

On the morning of Jan. 25, 2022, Jill went swimming alone on Peregian Beach, a small coastal town in Queensland, where she was caught in a rip current and drowned. The news of her sudden passing devastated everyone who knew her, but no one more deeply than her mother Ann, left to ponder the impossible question: 鈥淲hy?鈥

鈥淪he was amazing, always. The friendliest, warmest, nicest and strongest young woman. She had a magic about her, and that鈥檚 one of the reasons why it鈥檚 still so hard for me,鈥 Ann says. 鈥淛ill was described as 鈥榯he bright flame that all good things and people gravitated towards. Her open and beautiful smile will be eternal to all who knew her.鈥欌

Celebrating Jill鈥檚 Life

Two years since that tragic day, Ann has tried to channel her grief in a manner that celebrates her daughter鈥檚 life. After all, it鈥檚 what Jill would have wanted.

鈥溾業t is what it is, Mom,鈥欌攖hat鈥檚 what she would say whenever we faced any kind of loss or hardship,鈥 Ann recalls, knowing Jill wouldn鈥檛 want to dwell on things one couldn鈥檛 change. 鈥淚t reflected her whole attitude and zest for life. Jill wasn鈥檛 going to waste a moment of life.鈥

For the first anniversary of her daughter鈥檚 passing, Ann and friends raised over $5,000 to plant trees in Jill鈥檚 honor across various Australian national parks, to build landscape resilience after recent fires and flooding. 鈥淛ill had been heartbroken about the devastation from these natural events and the impact of the habitat loss on koalas and other animals,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t seemed fitting to celebrate her by supporting our community.鈥

Closer to Jill鈥檚 home, a park bench bearing her name sits along Jill鈥檚 favorite route by the water, where she walked each morning with Paris (Jill鈥檚 beloved pet died just two months after her passing).

The trees and bench were beautiful ways to honor Jill and her love for Australia. But as Ann, in her 80s, contemplated her own legacy, she sought an avenue to ensure her daughter鈥檚 memory would never be forgotten.

Jill Covitz

Everything Ann had saved was intended for her daughter, so she wanted her estate to pay tribute to all that was special about Jill鈥攖he zest for life, the pursuit of adventure, the appreciation for learning about new cultures and perspectives, and the joy of bringing people together.

Inspired by those qualities, Ann created the Jill Rebecca Covitz 鈥92 Memorial Scholarship through her estate to provide financial assistance to students participating in a 性视界 Abroad program, with preference to students enrolled in the Newhouse School. She hopes the scholarship will enable students to explore the world and gain a new perspective, as Jill experienced. Anyone wishing to support the scholarship in Jill鈥檚 memory can make a gift at .

鈥淭here are no words of comfort to soften Ann鈥檚 grief, and it is with deeply grateful but heavy hearts that we accept her incredible generosity,鈥 says David Whitmore, vice president for advancement, academic affairs. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 ease the pain of Ann鈥檚 loss, but we can honor Jill with the promise that every student who receives her scholarship will know her story and keep her memory alive.鈥

Today, Ann feels some peace knowing her gift will bring students together in the spirit of learning, to make lasting memories and view the world differently, reflecting Jill鈥檚 attitude toward life.

鈥淟iving abroad is like living more than one life at a time鈥攜ou go there alone and isolated, but you come back with lifelong friends. I think that鈥檚 why Jill liked it so much,鈥 Ann says. 鈥淪he just took the most she could from life and ran with it, and anyone who wanted to run alongside was welcome. And I thought that was a wonderful way to live.鈥