Los Angeles Times

Joshua Allen Hoffs

January 2, 1933 August 4, 2024

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Josh Hoffs, M.D., 91, of Los Angeles, passed peacefully in his home on August 4.

Josh was born in New York City on January 2, 1933, to Saul and Dorothy Hoffs. He was raised with younger brother Malcolm in Brooklyn. He graduated from James Madison High School, where he was a classmate of Justice Ruth Bader Ginbsurg.

He received his bachelor’s degree from Harvard University in 1954. As a student at Harvard, he studied with Anna Freud, who at that time was a visiting professor and lecturer in psychoanal­ysis and child developmen­t. He remained in contact with her over the course of her lifetime through correspond­ence. Hoffs studied medicine at Yale University and the University of Chicago, and received his M.D. in 1957.

While at Yale, Josh met and fell in love with an accomplish­ed art student from Chicago named Tamar Simon. Josh and Tammy were married in Chicago on March 17, 1957, before heading West to California where they began their careers—Josh as a psychoanal­yst and Tammy as a writer, painter, and filmmaker—and started their family together. They would remain happily wed in Los Angeles for 67 years.

Josh did his internship at the VA Hospital of West Los Angeles and completed a residency in psychiatry at UCLA and psychoanal­ytic training at the Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanal­ysis, where he became a training and supervisin­g analyst in 1970. He worked as a psychoanal­yst and maintained a robust private practice in West LA for nearly 50 years. He was a training and supervisin­g analyst at the New Center for Psychoanal­ysis, an Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at UCLA and a Member of the Brain Research Institute.

He is remembered at these institutio­ns as a skillful profession­al, a kind and loyal colleague, and a patient and generous mentor. Clinically, he focused on the patient’s ego adaptation and self-esteem. He built longlastin­g relationsh­ips with his patients, who cherished his openness and insight. He was supportive, wise, and tolerant. In addition to his dedication to psychoanal­ysis, Josh was passionate about music and the arts and was an accomplish­ed and prolific painter, who evolved through phases inspired by the bright colors of brain scans, and the bold vertical color band divisions of Rothko.

Josh was loved by his family for his non-judgmental attitude, sentimenta­l streak, irreverent sense of humor, and his passion for deep and attentive one-on-one conversati­ons.

Josh is preceded in death by his parents and brother Mal. He is survived by his wife Tammy; children John, Susanna, and Jesse; six grandchild­ren; and two great-grandchild­ren.

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