GLSEN (Posts tagged HIV/AIDS)

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18 LGBT Allies Who Advocated for HIV/AIDS Awareness

A big part in the early fight against AIDS was eliminating the stigma associated with it. The people in the best positions to do so were often celebrities who were allies to the LGBT community. They used their fame to bring attention to the epidemic and used their resources to raise money for research and to provide care for those in need. Thankfully this is an aspect of fame that knows no age or generation, as AIDS continues to be a harsh reality today. Here are 18 celebrity allies who have advocated for HIV/AIDS awareness over the past 30 years.

H/T: Out

Out Magazine allies HIV/AIDS health advocacy

When the lights came back on after GLSEN’s screening of How to Survive a Plague last month, everyone in the room knew they’d seen a special film.

We weren’t the only ones impressed, apparently, as the movie received an Oscar nomination today for Best Documentary. How to Survive a Plague is one of the best documentaries I’ve ever seen, and I couldn’t be more excited to see it receive national recognition.

The film follows two coalitions, ACT UP and TAG (Treatment Action Group), through the HIV/AIDS crisis during the late ’80s and early ’90s. The groups used political activism and civil disobedience to help shift AIDS from a near-certain death sentence to a manageable, but still serious, disease.

Eliza Byard, our executive director, noted the connection between the atmosphere of the era and the birth of GLSEN:

“My mother attended a founding meeting for GLSEN’s New York City chapter at the time,” she said, “walking through one of the very ACT UP meetings depicted in the film to a boiler room off the back where Kevin Jennings was greeting volunteers.”

How to Survive a Plague will compete with 5 Broken CamerasThe GatekeepersThe Invisible War, and Searching for Sugar Man for the award.

If you’re interested in other documentaries about the HIV/AIDS crisis, check out We Were Here, which focuses on San Francisco, and  30 Years From Here, which reflects on three decades of HIV/AIDS in the US.

Congratulations again to the director/producer David France and everyone else connected with the film!

Matt McGibney
Communications Assistant 
Source: blog.glsen.org
How to Survive A Plague LGBT lesbian gay bisexual transgender ACT UP TAG HIV/AIDS