Rebekka Lynn Armstrong 1967-2019 was an American HIV/AIDS activist and former model and bodybuilder. She was PlayboyPlaymate of the Month for September 1986. Eight years later, she was the first Playmate to publicly announce that she is HIV-positive.
Armstrong announced that she is HIV-positive in the September 1994 issue of The Advocate.[2] She said that she had known she was infected since 1989,[3] but spent two years after her diagnosis escaping into substance abuse. By the time of the publication of The Advocate article, she had come out as a lesbian and decided to educate others about HIV/AIDS, especially among lesbian and bisexual women. She said she was unsure of when she had contracted the virus, but might have as early as age 16.[4] By the time she was interviewed in 1999 for AIDS Project Los Angeles she identified as bisexual and said she had been infected at 16 "to the best of my knowledge."[5] A University of Toledo events notice in 2004 said that Playboy founder Hugh Hefner and the Playboy Foundation assisted Armstrong financially on her AIDS-awareness campaign, the College Campus Safer Sex education program.[6]
In a 2013 speech to community college students in Spokane, Washington, Armstrong shared details about the early days of her illness, the aggressive AZT treatment that she endured, the good and bad times of that five-year period, and about her suicide attempt followed by a coma and a lengthy hospital stay.[7]
In addition to her former career as a model and her current activism, Armstrong has also competed as a bodybuilder.[8]
^Kort, Michele (September 6, 1994). "Portrait of a Centerfold". The Advocate (663). Sam Watters: 41–48. Retrieved September 24, 2014.
^Forrest, Susan (November 1999). "A Bunny's Life". thebody.com. Remedy Health Media. Archived from the original on March 28, 2007. Retrieved August 2, 2005.
^Braun, Lori (November 18, 2010). "Rebekka Armstrong Gallery". femalemuscle.com. FemaleMuscle. Archived from the original on February 1, 2016. Retrieved September 24, 2014.