The Normal Heart

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The study guide provides context and background about Larry Kramer's play The Normal Heart and the early AIDS epidemic.

The Normal Heart is a play by Larry Kramer about the early outbreak of AIDS in New York City and the efforts of gay activists to raise awareness and push the medical establishment for action.

The study guide mentions organizations like Gay Men's Health Crisis (GMHC), AmFar, The Names Project/AIDS Quilt, CDC, and NIH that were involved in responding to the AIDS crisis.

by Larry Kramer

directed by Nick Bowling

STUDY GUIDE
Prepared by
Maren Robinson, Dramaturg

This Study Guide for The Normal Heart was prepared by Maren Robinson with content
by Maren Robinson, Lara Goetsch, PJ Powers and the AIDS Foundation of Chicago
for TimeLine Theatre, its patrons and educational outreach.
Please request permission to use these materials for any subsequent production.

TimeLine Theatre 2013

STUDY GUIDE
Table of Contents
The Playwright: Larry Kramer .......................................................................... 3
The Play: The Normal Heart .............................................................................. 4
The Interview: David Cromer and Nick Bowling .............................................. 5
The People ......................................................................................................... 18
The Context ....................................................................................................... 22
The Disease: HIV vs. AIDS ............................................................................... 23
The Continued Fight Against HIV/AIDS.......................................................... 24
United States AIDS Statistics by Year ............................................................ 26
Glossary of AIDS Terminology ......................................................................... 27
The Organizations.............................................................................................. 32
Timeline: The Early Years of the AIDS Epidemic ........................................... 35
The Poem ........................................................................................................... 41
Discussion Questions ........................................................................................ 42
Resources ........................................................................................................... 42
References and Documentaries ........................................................................ 43

Download a PDF of the entire


Study Guide at TimeLines website:
http://www.timelinetheatre.com/normal_heart/
TimeLine_NormalHeart_StudyGuide.pdf

The Playwright: Larry Kramer


Larry Kramer was born June 25, 1935. He is an author,
playwright and AIDS activist. He was an unwanted
second child of Jewish parents, an attorney and a social
worker. He and his elder brother Arthur both spoke with
distaste of their parents. Kramer has written that he was
instilled with the necessity to achieve.1
In 1953, as a lonely Yale undergraduate and believing he
was the only gay on campus, Kramer attempted to overdose on aspirin. After
his stomach was pumped, he told his brother Arthur he was gay and Arthur
took him to a psychiatrist to cure him, according to the prevailing
psychiatric theory of the day. He claims his relationship with his brother was
one of the most important relationships in his life. For a time, they had lunch
every week or at least weekly calls, but they fell out several times over Larry
Kramers homosexuality and political activity. He had a relationship with a
Yale professor. He graduated from Yale in 1957 with a degree in English. He
then did a stint in the army.
Kramer found work in the film industry, working his way up and becoming a
producer. He received an Academy Award nomination for his screenplay of
Women in Love. His 1978 novel, Faggots, created a stir in the gay community
for its frank treatment of the gay sex and drug culture on Fire Island and for
the satiric critique that promiscuity made it difficult for gay men to find love.
Many in the gay community criticized the novel and Kramer, but the book
has never been out of print.
While he had not been very politically active, the sudden illness and deaths of
his friends motivated Kramer to call a meeting in his New York apartment.
The group would become Gay Mens Health Crisis. Kramers role was often
that of public speaker and gadfly, a role that rubbed many in GMHC and the
gay community the wrong way. Kramer later quit GMHC in a rage when he
was denied access by the board to a meeting with Mayor Ed Koch because
they were afraid of what he might do or say in the meeting. He tried several
times to rejoin the organization but failed. He wrote The Normal Heart about
both the deaths of friends and a lover and his founding of and ultimate
separation from GMHC. He later founded ACT UP, an AIDS organization
focused on political action, protests, and lobbying, primarily for access to new
AIDS drugs.2 Kramer has often suffered periods of what he calls burn out.
Kramer found out he was HIV positive in 1987. On July 24, 2013, Larry
Kramer married architect David Webster, his partner since 1995, from his
hospital bed.3
1

Kramer, Larry. Reports From the Holocaust, St. Martin Press, New York, NY, 1994, (224).
http://www.parade.com/56371/dotsonrader/thenormalheartplaywrightlarrykrameridontknowwhygaypeopleare
hatedbutweare/
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/aids/interviews/kramer.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/25/nyregion/25kramer.html?pagewanted=all
3http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/25/larrykramerismarriedinhospitalceremony/?_r=0
2

In Faggots, I set out to try to understand one main issue:


Why did I see so little love between two homosexual men?
Love was what I wanted and want, and what most of the
friends I have say they want too. Whatever reasons I came
up with in my novel, they, and it, seem to have touched a
most responsive chord in the gay community.
Larry Kramer in The New York Native, Issue 27, December
21, 1981 January 3, 1982.4

The Play: The Normal Heart


I tried to make Ned Weeks as obnoxious as I could. He
isnt my idea of a hero. He fucks up totally. He yells at his
dying lover and screams and rants and raves at and
against everyone and everything else and gets tossed out
of the organization on his ass. I was trying, somehow
again, to atone for my own behavior. I tried to make Bruce
Niles, the Paul Popham character, the sympathetic leader
he in fact was. I hoped Paul would come and see the play,
which he would not do, and be honored.
Larry Kramer reflecting on The Normal Heart in Reports
from The Holocaust, 19945
Many other theaters had turned down The Normal Heart
first, including American Playhouse and PBS.
The Normal Heart was first produced off Broadway at
The Public Theatre in 1985 by Joseph Papp, directed by
Michael Lindsey Hock. It was a hit, running for almost a
year. It first starred Brad Davis, then Joel Grey. In Los
Angeles it starred Richard Dreyfuss and at the Royal
Court in London, Martin Sheen, transferring to the West
End with Tom Hulce. Four members of the original cast
died of AIDS.
It had productions at major regional theaters. By 1995, there had been more
than 600 productions of The Normal Heart. Kramer was surprised at the
positive press and found that the negative press came from a few gay critics
who accused him of writing a self-serving revenge play.

4
5

Kramer,Larry.ReportsFromtheHolocaust,St.MartinPress,NewYork,NY,1994,(16).
Kramer,Larry.ReportsFromtheHolocaust,St.MartinPress,NewYork,NY,1994,(93).

After the main productions, I found it increasingly


difficult to sit through the play any more. It contains too
many unhappy memories. (It also contains too much
clumsy writing.) I wrote it to make people cry: AIDS is the
saddest thing Ill ever have to know. I also wrote it to be a
love story, in honor of a man I loved who died. I wanted
people to see on stage two men who loved each other. I
wanted people to see them kiss. I wanted people to see that
gay men in love and gay men suffering and gay men dying
are just like everyone else.
Larry Kramer reflecting on The Normal Heart in Reports
from The Holocaust6
Barbara Streisand optioned the movie rights to The Normal Heart in which
she would play Dr. Emma Brookner, but delays and legal battles meant a
film was never produced. Kramer said, It came to nothing but $20,000 in
legal fees for me.
The HBO screen adaptation of The Normal Heart recently filmed in New
York and boasts an all-star cast, including Mark Ruffalo, Julia Roberts, Matt
Bomer, and Jim Parsons.7

The Interview: David Cromer and Nick Bowling


Artistic Director PJ Powers (PJP): Here I am sitting with Nick Bowling,
TimeLines Associate Artistic Director and the director of our production of The
Normal Heart, as well as actor David Cromer, who is playing Ned Weeks in
The Normal Heart. Thanks guys for joining me. I know you have to dash off to
rehearsal soon, so lets just jump in. Do you remember how you first met?
David Cromer (DC): No.
Nick Bowling (NB): I do. We first met on And Neither Have I Wings to Fly.
DC: Yes, yes.
NB: I worked as your casting director on that.
PJP: And when was that?
DC: 2000.
NB: Right, 2000. And we had a great time in that audition room.
Kramer,Larry.ReportsFromtheHolocaust,St.MartinPress,NewYork,NY,1994,(93).
LarryKramerflyerfromtherevivalofTheNormalHeart
Kramer,Larry.ReportsFromtheHolocaust,St.MartinPress,NewYork,NY,1994,(74,9194).
http://www.nytimes.com/1995/01/12/garden/athomewithlarrykramerwhenaroaringlionlearnsto
purr.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm
http://www.parade.com/56371/dotsonrader/thenormalheartplaywrightlarrykrameridontknowwhygaypeopleare
hatedbutweare/
6
7

DC: It was a great cast.


NB: It was a great cast, and then it was a really lovely production that you
directed.
PJP: So you worked with him as casting director. Wow, and now 13 years
later here we are. So David do you remember what your first experience with
The Normal Heart was?
DC: I saw the Next Theatre production when it had moved from the theatre
in Evanston to the Ivanhoe.
PJP: Now the Binnys wine super store just down the block from TimeLine.
DC: It was relatively soon after the New York production, and its one of the
few occasions I legitimately without any doubt leapt to my feet at the end of
it. Just the raw power of it was really shattering. And so, that was my first
time.
PJP: Nick, was your first experience when we read it as a company about
three years ago?
NB: Yes, and then first time seeing it was this Broadway revival that
happened two years ago. I definitely knew of the play but I dont think Id
ever read it before and I was taken by that production in New York. I was
mostly taken by the contextualization of the play from todays perspective,
and in particular the idea of looking back at AIDS from the perspective that
we have today. That AIDS had such an impact on the gay community, in of
course terrible awful ways, but also the positive impact it had on bringing a
community together and giving a community a point. And also realizing how
strong Larry Kramer was, what an important voice he was in helping us
shape that focus toward advancement as a community.
PJP: For both of you in revisiting this play, seeing it in New York and rereading it and so on, did you go into those experiences thinking Oh, I wonder
if this thing is dated?
DC: I dont think I did. Im never a big fan of the word dated. I get weird
about it because its not dated to the people who are going through it. What
were watching is those people not have any idea whats going on. Its an
entire city in an emergency and people dont behave well in an emergency.
NB: Thats true.
DC: There are like five lines in the play that are This is nothing good can
be said for anybody involved.
What was striking to me was I had forgotten how little we knew. Id forgotten
what it was like to have no information and how terrifying that is and how in
an emergency when something has happened, when an accident has
6

happened its just chaos afterwards. And watching people live through that is
really immediate to me.
PJP: Nick, what was it that made you think Oh, this is a TimeLine show?
You are more responsible than anyone for what TimeLines mission is, since
you proposed it in 1997. So what made you think, This is something we have
to do here?
NB: Its ultimately about how people deal with a plaguean awful thing
thats happening to a group of people. And this notion of a plague hits gay
people in the 1980s with AIDS, but theres no saying when that will happen
to us again. Which is a terrifying thing to say, of course.
Im struck by this macro idea of how people deal with a plague, but then on a
more micro level Im interested in how this community, how this gay
community that Im a part of, how we dealt with each other and how we dealt
with this kind of perfect storm. Wed just been liberated in many wayswere
beginning to be liberatedin the post-Stonewall era of gay liberation and gay
sexual liberation. And then we were thrown back into fear and in some ways
back into the closet.
How did that shape us as a community? In particular Im interested in how it
shapes where we are today with finding a point in the gay community again.
Something different than sex and looks and money and these surface
priorities that easily can take over our community in particular. I think the
focus right now for our community is gay marriage and thats why I think
many people have connected this play to gay marriage, and some of the
themes of this play to the fight over gay marriage.
So thats a great reason why it needs to be seen today. You end up seeing this
group of people fight their way through something awful. I guess the idea is
that that can happen it can be done and it may have to happen again
someday.
DC: Theres a great Vonnegut quote, saying make terrible things happen to
your characters no matter how sweet and good-natured they are, that way you
can see what they are made of, or something like that. With these characters,
this emergency took place so you could find out what these people are made of.
We are seeing how people function in an emergency with their demons, their
own internal demons, and then the demons in their own community.
NB: Thats right.
DC: I was just thinking when you were talking about something I hadnt
quite connected to, which is that the big conflicts in the play are not with
forces outside the gay community. Hiram and Ben are a little bit, but
ultimately the big monolithic conflicts of the play are within this group of
guys who presumably three weeks before the play started were all on Fire
Island together, you know?
7

PJP: Have there been interesting generational clash discussions in the


rehearsal room? Because there are some members of this cast who werent
alive when this play is set.
DC: They probably know way more than I do now. Heres what I notice: This
is a big history thing, which is when I was younger I thought if something
took place in the 1940s or something, that everyone behaved one way. You
know what I mean?
PJP: Yeah.
DC: Theres a very simple solution to things, and life just isnt like that. So
there were plenty of people who were out, there were plenty of people who
were happy, there were plenty of people who were public, there were plenty of
people who were safe from persecution even. We were talking about that in
the beginning in rehearsal, about how we have our own sections of the city,
we have our own island! (Laughs)
NB: There was one great example that happened in rehearsal one day. Alex
Weisman, whos in his 20s, said something to the effect of Well, why
wouldnt he? Wed been talking about who would you take to the hospital
with you if you were going to get a test for this new unknown disease. And he
made the point that you would send out an all points bulletinand of course
today that would be done on Facebookand youd say, Ive got to go to the
hospital, whod like to come? So any random person might end up coming
with you, a third-level friend might come with you. But actually when you
think about that period, you have to actually call people
DC: They have to be home.
NB: Yeah thats right, they would have to be home. And youd make a very
specific choice. Youd call your first-tier friends first and then youd move
down the list I guess. That sounds like a technical perspective but it gave us
some insight into how much has changed. Telephones would have changed
much about how the gay community responded to this plague, and think
about how Facebook would have changed that. It would have changed it
immensely, I think.
DC: One the things which is all-powerful in the play is The New York Times,
and it simply isnt anymore.
NB: These guys are getting out information on hand-written pamphlets, on
hand-typed and crossed-out, photo-copied pamphlets that theyre sticking
around the city.
PJP: And Larry Kramer is still doing that. He was on the sidewalk two years
ago after the Broadway show still shoving flyers in peoples faces.
DC: Yeah, old school.
8

PJ: Lets change gears a little bit. I want to talk about how we all came to be
here working on this production together.
Nick, ever since we started talking about this play at TimeLine three years
ago youve been dying to direct it. Then about a year ago, sitting here in this
very room, in my office, I said to you one of the hardest things Ive ever said
to you: Hey, since youre already planning to do the musical Juno this
season, what if we give The Normal Heart to David Cromer? What if we
asked David to direct this?
NB: Womp, womp.
(Laughter)
NB: This comes after me also talking for many years about trying to find a
way to get Cromer here to direct a play.
PJP: Exactly. Its true.
NB: Weve both been fans for a long time and trying to find the right time
and the right project and feeling like we could pull you back here for
something.
PJP: So, for anyone reading this, Nicks entire body deflated and he said,
Youre right, that is soul-crushing, but its a brilliant idea and lets see if we
can make it happen.
DC: So we took a brilliant idea and we changed it into a terrible idea!
(Laughter)
PJP: Talk us through what happened next. You reached out to David
NB: I called Cromer
DC: It was an email, wasnt it?
NB: Oh yeah, it mightve started with an email. Thats right, and then you
sent me an email back and said
DC: I dont know.
PJP: I remember you were in town doing Sweet Bird of Youth at the time. It was
in the middle of your tech when Im sure you had nothing else on your mind.
DC: Im still in tech for Sweet Bird of Youth.
PJP: (Laughs)
NB: What was exciting is that from the get-go you were very interested in the
project. And at some point you said something to the effect of how much you
had really thought for a long time about playing Ned. And how interested you
were in that role.
9

DC: Yeah, yeah.


NB: What was funny about it was that we hadnt even begun thinking about
our Ned, even though that should be priority number two, or maybe even
number one. So when you said that it was like, oh wow, thats amazing, that
would be kind of the perfect answer for us, because I cant think of a better
Ned than you in town. Thats really true.
DC: I dont remember ever really entertaining the idea of directing it. I think
right away this feels disingenuous now but its not I thinkI just assumed
that you would be directing it.
NB: Well, thats nice. (Laughs)
DC: And it turned out to be the case. I just assumed.
PJP: So a day or two after I had this soul-crushing talk with Nick, he comes
back in and says, OK, David doesnt want to direct it, hes dying to play Ned
Weeks. And we both said Oh yeah, that would be good, too! So off we went.
Once you guys started talking about the play, before saying Lets do this,
you wanted to see if you had similar feelings about the play. Do you
remember what some of those first things were where it was clear were
trying to tell the same story, were on the same page?
NB: Its funny because I think both of us have a sense about each other from
the people that weve mutually worked with, and from that experience where
we worked together many years ago, that we would find a good way to work
together. I think that was most important to us and I just believed that
would somehow work out.
You had a different experience with that New York production than I did,
there were some differences, but I think from the beginning we both knew
that hes passionate about this character and hes passionate about this
story. In fact, I dont know that you and I are always in exactly the same line
but I think thats been helpful to us so far.
DC: Yeah. I feel very incredibly well taken care of. And people say, Hows it
going? and I say, I agree with everything hes saying so hes brilliant. You
know what I mean?
(Laughter)
DC: That all sounds right to me. You know?
NB: Thats great.
DC: You know what I mean? That makes sense, that makes sense, that
makes sense, and I just got some notes and its really my first list of notes,
and there are one or two things, like If youre doing thing X at the beginning
of this scene and it just dawned on me its like the most basic thing, like,
Could you enter this scene with an intention please?
10

(Laughter)
DC: And I spent all this time, all these years throwing up my hands about
actors, saying Why cant they just figure out basic shit when they come in,
and I cant do any of it. I know my lines, some of them, and I dont put my
hands in my pockets
PJP: Whats this shift like for you? You did Long Days Journey Into Night
with Bob Falls 12 years ago and you did Love Song of J. Robert Oppenheimer
about eight years ago. But other than that you havent been acting for other
people or with other people.
DC: No, no.
PJP: So whats this shift like?
DC: I still believe that I can play the role and there are things about it that I
think I have easy access to and there are things about it that I dont have
access to at all yet. I worried a little bitthis is probably a dangerous thing
to saybut you have to stick to it, you cant drift in and out of it as an art
form. I can probably play catch up a little bit and get away with it but I
havent been exercising the muscles well enough, so its going to be a little bit
of a crash course in getting back in. And I dont just mean physical shape, I
dont mean like vocally or anything like that, I just mean like Oh, right you
have be.
I have my work cut out for me just trying to do the things a halfway decent
actor is supposed to be doing. So the transition for me is fine.
PJP: Do you find that your role in the rehearsal room is different than it is
when youre a director? As a director you have to be the leader in the room in
one respect but now while it is very much an ensemble show, its Neds story.
Ned is Larry Kramer, so you have to be a leader in a different respect. Does it
feel different than how youre a leader as a director?
DC: I expect my lead actors to be much more generous than I am being.
(Laughs)
NB: It reminds me, you said something to me very early on in our
conversations on the phone. You said something like We need to be partners
on this. Not just because were both directors or whatever, but because
anyone whos playing Ned Weeks and the director need to be partners, and
its felt that way and thats exciting.
Whats great about you Cromer is that youve brought ideas into the room
that are directorial ideas, but thats what I want from every actor. And youre
doing it in the most gracious, smart and helpful way, so its actually been
really a good relationship and process that way. Id say youre leading that for
the cast and thats a way I think youre a natural leader like a director but
youre shifting that into your acting, which is cool.
11

DC: OK good, well, well keep doing that.


NB: Yep, good job. Keep it up. Two weeks down.
DC: Yeah, two weeks down.
PJP: David, prior to starting this you got to meet and spend some time with
Larry Kramer.
DC: I did. I hopefully will have another opportunity to do it. Its one of those
things where Im always bad at meeting the famous person, having a
conversation. I always have to go to meetings and things like those, I mean I
have to sit down and have lunch with, you know, Person X.
NB: Drop. Drop it.
DC: Yeah, with whoever.
PJ: Lets have some names, David.
DC: You know, like Larry Kramer. And it never goes well. Im never
interesting, Im never clever, I never ask the right questions so its always a
little bit of an Oh, doh.
So its a little bit trying to rewrite history and fix it after Im done with it. We
met at the opening night of Hit the Wall at the Barrow Street Theatre. And
he said he was very excited that I was going to be doing it.
I went over to his house in the afternoon and he gave me a signed copy of
Faggots and its the apartment that is the apartment in the thing and Ed
Koch had just died.
PJP: Wow.
DC: I googled Larrys address to get directions from the subway and it said,
Mayor Kochs apartmentthey lived in the same building.
Larry said one or two things to me that really struck me. I said, Had you
ever been involved in anything politically before that? and he said, Never. I
dont know if thats fully accurate but in his assessment of it at this point in
his life he was saying I never had a mission before, Thats what I took. And
the other thing is that he said hes actually very shy.
PJP: Wow.
DC: I didnt get enough information about him and his brother. I didnt know
to ask. But what I did get was the idea that I think his behavior is I wont
say fearless. I think that he is very brave. I think about how many conflicts,
how many situations, how many arguments, I walk away from, that all of us
do all the time, just because were not willing to be disliked.
NB: Yeah. Thats it, right.
12

DC: Were just not willing to be disliked. You know? And he would always do
that. He was shy, he didnt like to talk to people he didnt like and be
confrontational with people. If he was shy, doing that would have taken a
great deal of courage. Learning to be unpopular would be, for a shy and needy
person, would be harrowing, you know? So I thought that was interesting.
NB: He takes that journey in this play. It has to start that hes not inherently
that person who doesnt mind not being liked. In some way he hears that for
the first time from Emma Brookner, the doctor in the play. Shes the one that
points it out to him. And the fascinating thing is how much you end up liking
Larry Kramer or Ned Weeks for not caring about not being liked.
DC: And its only part way through that Emma says it to Ned, in scene 8
NB: The beginning of the second act.
DC: The beginning of the second act, which is when you realize retroactively
that he has been worried about it, wanting to be liked.
NB: Yeah. Thats right.
DC: That Larry conversation also helped me with something very basic that I
forget which is what we all know here as actors and/or directorsthat you
cant play the end at the beginning, you know? And I was probably thinking
about the first scene as if he was already Larry Kramer, as if he was already
a pushy militant.
NB: Right.
DC: He just followed his nose to this doctors office, you know?
NB: Yeah.
DC: And so its about the birth of someone becoming
NB: It is. Yeah, thats right.
PJP: David, here we are sitting in our home on Wellington Avenue and the
first play I ever saw in this building in 1998, a year before TimeLine
unexpectedly took over the space and made it our home, was your production
of Angels in America. In this building in 1998 you directed that play and also
played Louis.
Its interesting. The Normal Heart isnt going to take place in this building
were doing it over at Stage 773but the times that Angels in America and
The Normal Heart are mentioned in the same sentence is often. I think there
are some similarities between Louis and Ned as an agitator. Whats it like
coming back into this building after 15 years and taking on the other great
AIDS play, the other great agitator in an AIDS play?

13

DC: First of all, theres echoes in Angels in America that I can only imagine
are aggressively an homage to The Normal Heart.
NB: Yeah. Feels that way.
DC: Im taking this line from The Normal Heart because its a great line:
You cant not know, how can you not know that?
NB: Right.
DC: Its something that Louis says to Joe about Joseph McCarthy and its
something that Ned says to Hiram about the health crisis.
Ive thought about that because they are New York Jews of a certain age with
almost identical tracks. The difference is Louis is not strong enough to do what
he knows he is supposed to do. And Larry, Ned, somehow is. So I dont think its
an issue of being made of sterner stuff necessarily. I think its about whether
the thing you want is important enough to get over what youre scared of.
I identify far more with Louis because I understand my own cowardice. Im
not flagellating, Im simply saying: Im very comfortable with the idea of
seeing this person, Louis would like to have this conviction, he would like to
say this, he would like to make this point, but he cant really.
NB: Right.
DC: Hes just got to dither, hes just got to go in the corner and dither. Where
as Larry and Ned committed their lives to a fight.
PJP: And this just popped into my head. Didnt Joe Mantello play Louis also?
DC: He played Louis, yeah.
PJP: Yeah, I think I saw him play Louis. Wow, thats freakiness. And Nick,
youve directed Angles in America, too.
NB: Yes I have. It was (laughs) challenging.
DC: You had the craziest schedule in the world, right? Like some stupid
schedule.
NB: It was a challenging. It was a stupid schedule and, frankly, it was in the
shadow of Cromers production.
PJP: Which was pretty good.
NB: Which was damned good and it was earth-shattering that you decided to
go in the direction of incredibly simple, the complete stripped-down
production of Angels in America. So then to follow that, right after that, out
in DuPage at Buffalo Theatre Ensemble, I had a possibility to do something
similar, which seemed wrong, just blatant stealingor to try to go in a
different direction, which is what we tried to do. In some ways I think your
production of Angels screwed me up. Im going to tell you that.
14

(Laughter)
DC: It screwed me up, too. It screwed us all up. Id never seen it, I didnt have
any context for it.
I was just thinking about how that play and this play have a power. They
have the power of the word and they have the power of an event and the
power of an idea that almost no other plays have. Theyre really devastating
and people tend to be devastated by productions of them, and then I get very
nervous. We have to find our way to be devastating.
NB: Right, right.
PJP: Nick, just riffing on this space and now us doing The Normal Heart, not
in our home but over in Stage 773. You probably more than any other
director at TimeLine have exploited in great ways the versatility of our home.
At Stage 773, we benefit from getting to play to a larger audience, but we do
not have that versatility. How have you approached this play without as
much of a blank canvas as you get in our home, but still with your inimitable
innovation?
NB: Thank you.
DC: Fundamental Nick.
NB: One of the starting points in this space that we get to play around with
is having the audience be a flexible thing. Normally, in almost every theatre
experience you dont get that. We can make a decision here to put something
in the round or to make it a proscenium or to make it thrust or to make it
runway, and that decision by itself is an enormous decision.
If youre going in the round youre not going to have walls, probably. So that
already says its not going to be so realistic that you can have doors slamming
and walls and all that.
Thats something that you take away over at Stage 773. But we actually get
some things over there that we dont have here. Theres some scale there
thats quite beautiful, theres a canvas to play with that is not flexible but its
bigger than the canvas that we get here.
Weve really tried to use as inspiration Larry Kramers apartment itself.
There are some beautiful pictures of Larry in his house in front of his
bookshelf that became very inspiring to us. That bookshelf has become a
backdrop for us. And the play needs so many locations, from hospitals to
offices to apartments, that theres an inherent coldness that comes with that
many space changes because of how spare you need to be. So weve tried to
find the balance in this very heated play of not putting it in an incredibly cold
world. This bookshelf is one way that weve found that brings this layer of
personal and mess and human to the play.
15

DC: Its where you keep all your stuff. I might be experiencing this wrong,
but I got this impression it wasnt only going to be books, right?
NB: Its not. Its going to be pictures and memoriesits what would go on a
bookshelf.
DC: Stuff. Yeah. Its like all these people, all these lives, all these people
weve lost.
NB: Thats right.
DC: I dont mean to be reductive about the imagery here at all but its just
the idea that thats where you put your stuff. As you have a life you say, I
read this, Im going to put this over here.
NB: Yeah.
DC: Heres that tsotchke.
NB: Its these little bits, right.
DC: Heres some tsotchke here.
PJP: My office is filled with shelves of tsotchkes.
NB: Right. These little bits of all these peoples lives and in some ways it
stands as a memorial. Were looking at this play from such distance now,
looking back at it, and its not that this crisis of this plague is over, it surely
isnt, but in some ways there needs to be this sort of living memorial along
with the actual play itself. That was the idea.
PJP: Just briefly shifting gears and then Ill let you get off to rehearsal.
David, so now youve caught the acting bug and youre going to do A Raisin in
the Suna play that were ironically also currently running with this
young upstart actor named Denzel Washington.
DC: Yes, I have high hopes for him.
PJP: Is this just a coincidence that youre doing two acting things back to back?
DC: Thats a good question. Yes, it is a coincidence. It just happened to land
that way. Part of it was led by doing The Normal Heart, which is, I was
pretty burned out. I just did six plays in 12 months in four cities, some
ridiculous large number of plays. So I was a little tired and I was not taking
other work. And I had no idea how I was going to make any money and so
luckily I
PJP: You said, Come to TimeLine, thats where the cash is!
NB: Big bucks.
DC: I said, you know, You want to make some money, come and act
16

NB: In Chicago.
DC: make some money in this business. I just needed a break, but I dont
really take breaks that far away from my
PJP: Yeah. Youre not a Sandals Resort kind of guy.
DC: Nah, I just take the job where I get to leave, where I get to be one of the
first people out the door at the end of the day. (Laughs) So long suckers!
PJP: Are you going to enjoy today after the runyou dont have to stay for
the production meeting?
DC: Oh my god. Do you guys watch shows now and watch a moment in a
show and think, Oh, I know what that production meeting was like.
(Laughter)
NB: Yes.
DC: Ive been to that meeting.
PJP: Either that, or you watch a moment and youre like, How did no one
question that in a production meeting, how did that not come up?
Nick, up next for you here is something very different, your first musical at
TimeLine in six years.
NB: Yeah, were doing the Chicago premiere of Joseph Stein and Marc
Blitzsteins Juno, which is based on Sean OCaseys classic Irish dark comedy
Juno and the Paycock. Its a gorgeous score and I think it helps answer that
question of Why make a play into a musical? The music in this case feels so
right with that lyrical Irish language and the music adds even a deeper level
of despair and a higher level of comedy, so it pushes the boundaries of both
those elements that make great Irish theatre.
PJP: Well, great.
DC: Ill see that.
PJP: Thank you both for being so generous with your time before rehearsal.
Keep up this great partnership!
NB: Thank you.
PJP: Thanks guys.

17

The People
Many of the characters in The Normal Heart are based on real people. Ned
Weeks stands in for Larry Kramer, Ben Weeks for Kramers brother Arthur.
Dr. Emma Brookner is based on Dr. Linda Laubenstein, who used a wheelchair
because of childhood polio. GMHC co-founder Paul Popham was the inspiration
for Bruce. Tommy is based on former GMHC Executive Director Rodger
McFarlane; Mickey is based on Dr. Lawrence Mass, another co-founder of
GMHC. Hiram Keebler is based on Mayor Ed Kochs liaison to the gay
community, Herb Rickman. Other characters are a composite or fiction.
We have our own lives and our own set of problems; I
dont ask you to fight my battles dont expect and demand
that I fight yours. Larry Kramer quoting his brother
Arthurs response to his demands for support in his activism8
Arthur Kramer is Larry Kramers brother. He graduated from Yale Law
School in 1953 and co-founded the law firm Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel
since many established firms were averse to hiring Jews. His conflicts with
and support of his brother are represented in the person of Ben Weeks in The
Normal Heart.
Arthurs law firm was and remains the attorneys for Gay Mens Health Crisis
and more recently, the firm has been among those arguing in support of gay
marriage. However, initially when Larry asked Arthur for his firm to represent
them, Arthur said he had to run it by committee. Larry went to another
partner, Maurice Nessen, who said the firm could represent them, and a furious
Larry stopped speaking to his brother for a time, as depicted in the play. At
about the same time, Larry called for protests on MCI for discriminating
against gay employees. MCI was one of Arthurs biggest clients and he
perceived this as a hostile act toward him and the brothers stopped speaking
again. While his portrayal as the straight brother who could not fully accept his
gay brother as normal pushed on the relationship, the two are now close,
although Kramer describes the depiction in the play as all true.
Larry Kramer was quoted in a 2006 New York Times piece about his relationship
with his brother: He and my lover are the two most meaningful people in my
life. Arthur raised Larry, who was the unwanted second child, and both
brothers expressed distaste for their parents. Arthur said he regretted putting
Larry in therapy (after Larrys suicide attempt at Yale and the revelation that
he was gay) to try to cure him, and over time came to acknowledge that Larry
was born the way he is. Larry for his part felt that ultimately the work he did
with many psychiatrists was valuable. In 2001, Arthur gave Yale $1 million to
found the Larry Kramer Initiative for Gay and Lesbian Studies. Arthur died
from a stroke on January 31, 2008 at the age of 81.9
Kramer,Larry.ReportsFromtheHolocaust,St.MartinPress,NewYork,NY,1994,(218).
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/25/nyregion/25kramer.html?pagewanted=all
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/31/nyregion/31kramer.html
8
9

18

"She is incredibly important in the history of AIDS, a


genuine pioneer and a real fighter for what she believed."
Larry Kramer on Linda Laubenstein in her New York Times
obituary
Dr. Linda Laubenstein was
the inspiration for Dr. Emma
Brookner. Born in Boston,
Laubenstein contracted polio as
a child. Three operations left
her in a wheelchair at the age
of 5. Throughout her life she
suffered from asthma and
weakness related to polio.
She graduated from Barnard and New York Universitys medical school
where she specialized in hematology and oncology. She also served as a
clinical professor at the New York University Medical Center. She was one of
the first doctors to begin investigating the mysterious disease that would
come to be known as AIDS. She started by investigating Kaposis Sarcoma, a
rare disease of skin lesions that seemed to be affecting homosexual men with
collapsing immune systems.
By May 1982, she had seen 62 patients with AIDS, one fourth of all cases
recorded in the United States at that time. With her colleague Dr. Alvin
Friedman-Kien, she arranged the first full medical conference on AIDS at
NYU in 1983. Her practice became primarily AIDS patients and she was
known to be an attentive doctor, using her motorized wheelchair to visit her
patients at home and in the emergency room.
She was also outspoken on the seriousness of the epidemic and the need for
homosexual men to refrain from sexual behavior that might put them at risk.
She founded Multitasking, a nonprofit employing people with AIDS as the
workers since many lost their jobs after the disease was known. She also
founded the Kaposis Sarcoma Research Fund in 1983. She died on August
14, 1992, at the age of 45.10
AIDS pointed up the inequitable status of gays. We were
forced to take care of ourselves because we learned that if
you have certain diseases, certain lifestyles, you cant
expect the same services as other parts of society.
Rodger McFarlane in a 1983 interview in The New York Times

10 http://www.nytimes.com/1992/08/17/nyregion/lindalaubenstein45physicianandleaderindetectionofaids.html
http://nymag.com/health/features/49240/index4.html
http://www.capecodonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20110423/LIFE/104230304/1/rss10

19

Rodger McFarlane was the inspiration for Tommy in The Normal Heart.
He was born February 25, 1955, in Mobile, Alabama. He played football in
high school and attended the University of South Alabama. He enlisted in the
Navy and served on a nuclear submarine. He moved to New York and worked
as a respiratory therapist. He walked into Gay Mens Health Crisis and
offered his services as a volunteer. He ended up starting a crisis hotline, at
first using his home phone. He was the first paid Executive Director of
GMHC and served in that role between 1982 and 1985.
Rodger and Larry Kramer were lovers for a time after Larry had left GMHC
and it caused certain tensions for Rodger with members of the board.11 He
went on to lead a number of prominent AIDS organizations. From 1989 to
1994 he was Executive Director of Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS. He
later served as President of Bailey House, an organization providing housing
for homeless people with AIDS. He was Executive Director of the Gill
Foundation, which advocates for civil rights for gay, lesbian, bisexual and
transgender civil rights.
He was caregiver to his brother David, who was also gay, and who died of
AIDS in 2002. In 1998, he co-wrote with Philip Bashe The Complete Bedside
Companion: No-Nonsense Advice on Caring for the Seriously Ill. He
committed suicide on May 18, 2005. He had broken his back in 2002 and was
debilitated by heart and back problems.12
Nobody wanted us. We had no money, no office space, and
single-handedly Rodger took this struggling ragtag group
of really frightened and mostly young men, found us an
office and set up all the programs. The G.M.H.C. is
essentially what he started: crisis counseling, legal aid,
volunteers, the buddy system, social workers. 13
Larry Kramer quoted in The New York Times obituary of
Rodger McFarlane
Paul Graham Popham was the inspiration for Bruce in The Normal Heart.
Popham was born in Emmett, Idaho, on October 6, 1941. He graduated from
Portland State College in Portland, Oregon. As a first lieutenant in the Fifth
Air Cavalry during the Vietnam War, he was decorated with the bronze star
after his platoon had been a lure for the North Vietnamese. He retired in
1969 as a Special Forces Major in the Army Reserves.
He worked as a Wall Street banker for the Irving Trust Company, retiring as a
president in 1980. He then worked for McGraw Hill as a General Manager. He
was president of the Gay Mens Health Crisis between 1981 and 1985. He also
helped found and was chairman of the lobbying group, the AIDS Action Council.

Kramer,Larry.ReportsFromtheHolocaust,St.MartinPress,NewYork,NY,1994,(77).
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/19/nyregion/19mcfarlane.html?_r=0
13 http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/19/nyregion/19mcfarlane.html?_r=0
11
12

20

Popham was diagnosed with AIDS in 1985 and remained active with AIDS
organizations until he became too sick to participate. He died from
complications from AIDS on May 7, 1987 at the age of 45.
His fights with GMHC co-founder Larry Kramer are represented in the play
The Normal Heart. Kramer has written that at the time he was half in love
with Popham and that increased the discomfort between the two of them as
well as their fundamentally different approaches to how the GMHC should
take action. Popham was also closeted, which prompted more caution on his
part and was another source of tension with Kramer. Kramer and Popham
reconciled, as Popham grew weaker from AIDS. On his deathbed, Popham
repeated to Kramer on the phone, keep fighting, keep fighting, keep
fighting.14 He was survived by his mother, brother, two sisters and his
longtime partner Richard DuLong.15
Ed Koch was the Democratic Mayor of New
York City between1978 and 1989 during the
emerging AIDS crisis. His sexuality was the
subject of rumor for years and during the 1977
mayoral elections signs appeared that said,
Vote for Cuomo not the Homo. He refused to
speak publicly about his sexuality except in a
1989 interview in which he said he was
heterosexual. Many homosexuals in New York
City blamed his lack of response to the AIDS
crisis on his closeted lifestyle. A recent documentary, Outrage, features
interviews with friends of a man who claimed to be Kochs lover for two years,
then was threatened that bad things either physical or financial would
happen to him if he went public.16

Kramer,Larry.ReportsFromtheHolocaust,St.MartinPress,NewYork,NY,1994,(161).
http://www.nytimes.com/1987/05/08/obituaries/paulpopham45afounderofaidsorganizationdies.html
16 http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/02/nyregion/edwardikochexmayorofnewyorkdies.html?pagewanted=all
http://www.apnewsarchive.com/1989/MayorKochImAHeterosexual/ida2878d372adbfd2c50331ea6ed62d74d
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michelangelosignorile/edkochhowthegayclose_b_2614722.html
14
15

21

The Context
A very strange thing has happened in the post-AIDS
generation. I don't know what to call them; it's not really
post-AIDS, but let's call them the healthier, younger ones.
They don't want to know. They don't want to know the old
people; they don't want to know the history; they don't
want to acknowledge that the people who died were even
part of their history. I talk about this a lot. How can you
dare to ignore everything that happened? These people
died so that you could live. Those drugs are out there
because people died for them. [It's] shocking what's going
on now in the gay population. I have lost a great deal of
pride in being gay. ...17
Larry Kramer in an interview with PBSs Frontline
The poor homosexuals--they have declared war against
nature, and now nature is exacting an awful retribution.
Pat Buchanan in a 1983 editorial18
We've got to have some common sense about a disease
transmitted by people deliberately engaging in unnatural
acts. Jesse Helms on AIDS, in an interview with The New
York Times, 199519
AIDS is the wrath of a just God against homosexuals.
Jerry Fallwell20
Because the first cases of what would come to be
known as AIDS were among homosexuals, Haitian
refugees, intravenous drug users, and hemophiliacs,
the press and the general public were slow to respond
to the growing number of mysterious deaths from the
disease. Worse, it opened up the disease to a series of
moral judgments from the religious right and
churches, which suggested that AIDS was Gods
punishment. President Ronald Reagan would not say
the word AIDS publicly until 1985.21
As the disease spread, anxiety and fear spread. When
it was unclear how the disease spread, rumors about
17

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/aids/interviews/kramer.html
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2006/05/14/howaidschangedamerica.html
19 http://www.nytimes.com/2001/08/26/weekinreview/ideastrendsthequotationsofchairmanhelmsracegodaidsand
more.html
20 http://www.cbsnews.com/8301500486_1622816499500486.html
21 http://www.actupny.org/reports/reagan.html
18

22

getting AIDS from toilet seats and drinking fountains abounded, and there
was little government leadership to calm public fears and offer clear
information. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop, an evangelical Christian,
angered many when he treated AIDS as the illness it is and tried to
disseminate clear scientific information. President Reagan had not met with
him even when he was going to do his first press conference on AIDS.
How that information is used must be up to schools and
parents, not the government. But lets be honest with
ourselves, AIDS information cannot be what some call
value neutral. After all, when it comes to preventing AIDS,
dont medicine and morality teach the same lessons?
Ronald Reagan in an April 2, 1987, press conference
Fears about AIDS, while largely focused on the homosexual community, also
spread to other patients. Hemophiliac AIDS patient Ryan White was forced
out of one school and had a shot fired at his home before his family moved
and he was able to attend school elsewhere.
As an AIDS test became available, new fears about human rights violations
that might occur if testing became mandatory spread through the gay
community. Congress banned people who were HIV positive from entering
the United States.
For the homosexual community, no one was untouched by the death of a
friend, acquaintance or lover, and fears over the seemingly unstoppable
progress of the disease, the ineffectiveness of treatments, and the slow
response of the government and health organizations was a cause for fear
and frustration. Hospitals unwilling, unable or uncertain how to respond to
the disease sometimes turned patients away or imposed strict quarantines
surrounding patients, which were often humiliating and demoralizing.

The Disease: HIV vs. AIDS


Many people refer to HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) and AIDS
(Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome) as though they are the same thing.
HIV is a virus that can cause the weakening of the immune system, which
leads to the cluster of opportunistic infections and symptoms known as AIDS.
These definitions have become even more complicated as successful drug
treatments may reduce the amount of the virus and increase the number of
T cells to the point that a patient no longer has AIDS.
Difficulties with false positives in various AIDS tests, insurance definitions
and even definitions used by national and international health agencies can
result in different estimates of the numbers of those infected with AIDS. The
virus may remain dormant for years before AIDS develops.
23

Most treatments developed to stop the course of the virus work to disrupt the
enzymes involved in the replication of the virus. The virus essentially takes
over the cell and uses the cell to create virions, an extracellular virus which is
designed to transmit nucleic acid genome when it permeates a host cell. Part
of the difficulty in describing the actions of viruses and HIV in particular is
that a virus is not alive and can remain dormant until provided with a host.
Then the bits of RNA in the virus begin to interact with human cells and
replicate, like a simple microorganism.22

The Continued Fight Against HIV/AIDS


This article courtesy of the AIDS Foundation of Chicago.
AIDS isnt over. It can be temptingand perhaps
easyto look at this disease and say that its under
control in the U.S., that its an overseas issue that
affects people in the developing world. But thats
simply not true.
Lets focus on Chicago: More than 35,000 people in and around the city are
living with HIV/AIDS, and only half have access to care. Half. That means
that 50 percent of this population is living with a life-threatening disease and
is at risk of transmitting it. Whats more, studies estimate that more than
6,000 people dont even know theyre infected.
If we broaden our perspective to include all of the United States, one person
receives a positive diagnosis every nine-and-a-half minutes. Thats 15 people
during the course of this play. Once somebody tests positive, connecting them
with care is paramount for the individuals health and cost effective for the
community.
Early HIV treatment can significantly reduce HIV spending. Medical costs
more than double from an estimated $13,885 per year for someone with HIV
who is healthy to $36,352 per year for someone who has advanced HIV.
You can change the story.
The AIDS Foundation of Chicago (AFC) encourages everybody to know their
HIV status. Testing is vital to linking people to care and suppressing viral
loads. This in turn reduces infection rates and creates a healthier, more
knowledgeable society.
We also urge people to join AFCs statewide advocacy network, IL ASAP,
which educates public officials on sound HIV policy. Work in this field
changes laws that discriminate against people with HIV and creates a more
just society.

22

http://www.niaid.nih.gov/topics/HIVAIDS/Understanding/Biology/pages/hivreplicationcycle.aspx

24

Finally, donate. AIDS service organizations need money to function, but just
as important, they need time. Volunteering to fight HIV/AIDS is meaningful.
It destigmatizes the disease and helps to create a culture of change because
someday, we believe, this disease will be over.

Members of the TimeLine/Normal Heart team at the


2013 AIDS Run & Walk Chicago, on their way to raising
more than $3,500 to support the AIDS Foundation of Chicago.

25

United States AIDS Statistics by Year23


New U.S. AIDS Cases to date

U.S. AIDS Deaths to date

1981

159

1982

771

618

1983

2,807

2,118

1984

7,239

5,596

1985

15,527

12,539

1986

28,712

24,559

1987

50,378

40,849

1988

82,362

61,816

1989

117,508

89,343

1990

160,969

120,453

1991

206,563

156,143

1992

254,147

194,476

1993

360,909

234,225

1994

441,528

270,870

1995

513,486

319,849

1996

518,429

362,004

1997

614,086

390,692

1998

688,200

410,800

1999

773,374

429,825

2000

774,467

448,060

2001

816,149

462,653

2002

886,000

501,669

2003

930,000

524,060

2004

940,000

529,113

As of 2012, between 32.2 million and 38.8 million people are living with HIV
worldwide. Since the start of the epidemic 63-89 million people have become
infected and between 30 and 42 million people have died worldwide.24

23
24

http://www.amfar.org/thirtyyearsofhiv/aidssnapshotsofanepidemic/
http://www.unaids.org/en/resources/campaigns/globalreport2013/factsheet/

26

Glossary of AIDS Terminology


AIDS Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome is the name given to the
collection of symptoms and opportunistic infections that result when HIV has
compromised the immune system. When a T cell count (CD4) falls below 200
and/or a patient manifests a number of the series of 26 opportunistic infections.
Antiviral Drugs are a class of drugs designed to attack a virus or prevent
viruses from either attaching to a host cell or replicating. The side effects of
antiviral drugs can be quite severe, particularly with the prolonged treatment
necessary for AIDS patients. Side effects can include anemia, bone problems,
wasting, or the collection of fat in certain areas of the body, liver, kidney and
heart problems. Current treatments (including switching between the 26 drugs
available to help avoid the HIV mutation) extend the life of patients an average of
6-8 years, although some patients are doing well 10 years out. Most patients will
have to be on other drugs such as antibiotics to treat opportunistic infections.25
ARC AIDS Related Complex is used to refer to patients who are HIV
positive and are showing symptoms that are often less severe than AIDS, and
the destruction of the immune system has not progressed as far as in AIDS.
AZT, azidothymidine, also called zidovudine, is a drug
used to delay development of AIDS in patients infected
with HIV. AZT belongs to a group of drugs known as
nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs). In
1987 AZT became the first of these drugs to be approved
by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the
purpose of prolonging the lives of AIDS patients.26
Its initial cost was $10,000 per year per patient. It was
developed with public funds but the government gave
the drug company Burroghs Wellcome a patent on the drug, which allowed
for the incredible cost. ACT Up protested and closed down Wall Street to
protest the cost. Three days after the protests, the cost was lowered. The side
effects of the treatment with AZT were often severe and many patients could
not tolerate the treatments. The virus became resistant to AZT and it was not
the miracle drug many had hoped it would be.27
CD4 is a large glycoprotein that is found on the surface of helper T cells,
regulatory T cells. Its normal function is to assists the T cell receptor (TCR)
to activate its T cell following an interaction with an antigen, prompting an
immune response to the antigen. CD4 is a primary receptor used by HIV1 to
gain entry into host T cells.

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/aids/virus/fighting.html
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/46868/AZT
27 PBSFrontline:TheAgeofAIDS
25
26

27

Combination Therapy is used because HIV reproduces so rapidly that


treatment with a single drug is often not effective as the virus mutates and
adapts to the drug. Combination Therapy uses multiple drugs together to
attack the virus in a variety of ways before the virus has a chance to mutate.
The most popular version of this was known as the triple cocktail. The
expense of the cocktail was about $16,000 per year, making it available to
those with health insurance in Western nations, but it was not financially
available to the poor or those in developing countries.28
Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) is a molecule that encodes the genetic
instructions used in the development and function of organisms and many
viruses. Most DNA is double stranded or double helix.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is an agency of the United States
Department of Health and Human Services. ACT UP protested at the FDA
over the slow approval of drugs for treatment and the double blind studies
that meant many patients could not try the experimental drugs even if they
wanted to.
Fusion Inhibitors are a class of drug that stops HIV from entering CD4
cells in the first place.
GRID Gay Related Immunodeficiency is one of the early names used to
describe the illness that would come to be known as AIDS.
Hepatitis B is a liver disease caused by the Hepatitis B virus. It was
common in the gay community in the 1980s. It is spread through sexual
contact or syringe drug use. It can be a short-term illness or become a chronic
disease. The relationship of Hepatitis and AIDS was studied in the early
years of the crisis when it was still not clear what HIV was, because many
patients had been infected with Hepatitis B as well.29
Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) is
a slow reproducing retrovirus that causes the
progressive failure of the immune system
allowing for a variety of opportunistic
infections to develop.
A scanning electron micrograph of the HIV virus (in
green) pictured at right.

Human Cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a viral genus of the Herpes virus


family. The virus normally does not cause problems unless the immune
system is compromised, in which case it can be fatal. It is an opportunistic
infection in AIDS patients and those suffering with HCMV could develop
retinitis and blindness.30

PBSFrontline:TheAgeofAIDS
http://www.cdc.gov/hepatitis/b/
30 http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/publications/alert/article.cfm?id=2593
28
29

28

Integrase is an enzyme found in retroviruses including HIV that permits the


viral DNA to be integrated into the DNA of the infected cell.31
Integrase Inhibitors are a fourth class of drugs that stop viral DNA from
being inserted into the T-cell's DNA and are currently in late-stage clinical
trials and have shown promising results.32
Kaposis sarcoma is a skin cancer common in
many AIDS patients, now known to be caused by
Human Herpes Virus 8 (HHV8) (although this
was not known until 1994). Symptoms include
purple, red or brown patches on the skin, which
can become raised. These lesions may also be
present in the mouth or other mucous
membranes. Lesions in the groin area can become large and restrict the flow
of fluids in the legs and feet resulting in pain and swelling. Internal lesions in
the lungs can cause difficulty breathing and those in the intestines can cause
abdominal pain, diarrhea or bleeding. Diagnosis may require a small biopsy
of the lesion and chest x-ray, and bronchoscopy or endoscopy may be used to
view internal lesions. It is one of several opportunistic infections that began
affecting gay men in the early years of the AIDS crisis.33
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report
(MMWR) is a publication of the CDC that
looks at the death rates related to various
diseases. It is one of the first places where
mysterious illnesses in homosexuals were
noted. It is public and became a resource for
activists attempting to track the progress of
the disease and urge further action.34
Monotherapy is the process of treating
HIV with only a single drug, which proved to
be less effective because of the viruss ability to mutate and adapt to a single
drug. Combination therapy would come to replace monotherapy.
Opportunistic infections (OI) are any number of infections that may take
hold when the immune system is compromised. The presence of these
infections and a low T cell count are used to give a diagnosis of AIDS.
Kaposis Sarcoma and pneumocystis pneumonia are among many
opportunistic infections that were the early hallmarks of the AIDS crisis.

http://www.niaid.nih.gov/topics/HIVAIDS/Understanding/Biology/pages/hivreplicationcycle.aspx
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/aids/virus/fighting.html
33 http://www.cancer.org/cancer/kaposisarcoma/detailedguide/kaposisarcomadiagnosis
34 http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/
31
32

29

Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP) is a form


of pneumonia caused by yeast-like fungus
commonly found in the lungs of healthy
humans. In patients suffering with AIDS, it is
one of many opportunistic infections that take
advantage of the compromised immune system.
Symptoms include weight loss, cough,
shortness of breath, and lack of oxygen to the
extremities. It can be diagnosed through symptoms, blood tests and chest x-rays.
Pneumocystic cysts stained blue pictured above.

Poppers is the nickname for a type of amyl


nitrite or alkyl nitrite inhaled stimulant and
aphrodisiac. It was popular on the club scene
starting in the 1970s. Because of their use in the
gay club scene, they were incorrectly targeted as
being a possible cause of Kaposis Sarcoma.
Various brands of poppers pictured at right.

Protease is an enzyme that hydrolyzes or cuts proteins and is important in


the final steps of HIV maturation.35
Protease Inhibitors prevent the new virions from cutting their enzymes
into usable pieces.36
Retrovirus is a group of viruses that replicate by reverse transcription. It is
composed of a single strand of RNA rather than DNA. When it infects a cell, a
retrovirus uses reverse transcriptase (an enzyme) to convert its RNA into
DNA, which can then hijack the cell's machinery to produce more viruses.
Reverse transcriptase is an enzyme found in HIV that creates double
stranded DNA using viral RNA as a template and host tRNA as primers.37
Reverse Transcription is a means of replicating DNA by copying a single
strand of RNA. Retroviruses take advantage of the cells system of replication
to replicate the virus using the enzyme reverse transcriptase.
Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors are a group of drugs that disrupt the
reverse transcription process by stopping viral RNA from being turned into
DNA. There are two types (nucleoside and non-nucleoside) that target
slightly different parts of the enzyme.38

http://www.niaid.nih.gov/topics/HIVAIDS/Understanding/Biology/pages/hivreplicationcycle.aspx
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/aids/virus/fighting.html
37 http://www.niaid.nih.gov/topics/HIVAIDS/Understanding/Biology/pages/hivreplicationcycle.aspx
38 http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/aids/virus/fighting.html
35
36

30

Ribonucleic Acid (RNA) is a family of molecules that are necessary to code,


decode and regulate the expression of genes. RNA is usually single stranded,
as opposed to DNA, which is double stranded. In HIV the viral RNA inserts
itself into the host cell DNA and is able to replicate and spread.39
T cells or T Helper Cells are a type of white blood cells involved in human
immune function. HIV attacks the T cells, and a low T cell count is used as a
measure in the diagnosis of AIDS.
Triple Cocktail is the nickname for the combination therapy developed in
1996 which showed great success in treating AIDS and has been used to treat
the illness ever since. Protease inhibitors seemed to work better when used in
combination with two reverse transcriptase inhibitors. Patients described the
treatment as the Lazarus effect because those who had been on the verge of
death got out of bed, gained weight and went back to work. Dr. David Ho was
named Time magazine's Man of the Year and hailed as a pioneer of what
became known colloquially as the triple cocktail. The success of the
treatment was due to the mathematical improbability that HIV could mutate
around three drugs at the same time. The expense of the cocktail was about
$16,000 per year, making it available to those with health insurance in
Western nations, but it was not available financially to the poor or those in
developing countries.40
Virion is a single and complete infective form of a virus that consists of an
RNA or DNA core with a protein coat or envelope a particle of a virus or
viral material. It is outside the host cell and as a result dormant.41
Virus is an infective agent that typically consists of a nucleic acid molecule
(DNA or RNA) in a protein coat with a semi permeable membrane. It
multiplies only within the living cells of a host. It can be seen either as an
extremely simple microorganism or as very complex group of molecules.42

http://www.niaid.nih.gov/topics/HIVAIDS/Understanding/Biology/pages/hivreplicationcycle.aspx
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/aids/virus/fighting.html
41 http://www.virology.ws/2010/07/22/thevirusandthevirion/
42 http://www.virology.ws/2010/07/22/thevirusandthevirion/
39
40

31

The Organizations
We have many small organizations that dont cooperate,
many duplicating the same efforts and budgets and
responsibilities and fighting for the same turf. We have
too many Boards of Directors and Task Forces and
Defense Funds and Advocates and Action Councils and
AIDS networks and Coalitions and Alliances for this and
that. Each fights for the same dollars, and, hence, none of
them receives enough to be truly effective.
Larry Kramer in an October 17, 1987 speech accepting the
Arts and Communication Award at the Sixth Annual Human
Rights Campaign Fund Dinner43
AIDS Coalition to Unleash
Power (ACT UP)
Larry Kramer spoke at the Gay
and Lesbian Community Center
in New York City on March 10,
1987 (after Nora Ephron had to
cancel). After his galvanizing
speech, there was much
discussion among the large
number of attendees and a
meeting was set for 2 days later.
Those who met pledged to be a direct action protest group, concentrating in
particular on fighting for the release of experimental drugs.
On numerous occasions over the ensuing years, the group organized protests
on Wall Street, at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the National
Institutes for Health (NIH), drug companies and elsewhere to advocate for
speedier drug testing and lower prices for existing treatments. Their protests
garnered national and international media attention and resulted in the cost of
the AIDS drug AZT being reduced, among other successes.
Ultimately, like GMHC before it the group split (TAG broke off) and changed
focus, as it got larger and institutionalized.44 Today there are ACT UP
chapters around the United States and beyond, united in anger and
committed to direct action to end the AIDS crisis.
Image by Keith Haring of ACT UP members protesting.

43
44

Kramer,Larry.ReportsfromtheHolocaust,1994,St.MartinsPress,NY(p187188)
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2006/05/14/howaidschangedamerica.html

32

While these two organizations, GMHC and ACT UP, have


given me a certain pride that I helped to start them, Ive
discovered from both experiences that Im better as an
idea man than as someone easy to have around after that.
The kind of Energy that helps start organizations, and
fuel them in the tentative early days, is also the same kind
of energy that becomes embarrassing to organizations
once they become healthy large and, in the case of GMHC,
bureaucratized.
Larry Kramer reflecting on the founding of ACT UP in
Reports from the Holocaust45
American Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR) was founded in April
1983 to fill the gap in research funds by using private funds to support
medical and scientific research on AIDS. Its founding Chairman was Dr.
Mathilde Krim, a researcher at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.
Elizabeth Taylor served on the Board.46
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) originally opened on
July 1, 1946, to stop the spread of malaria. The CDC is a government agency
tasked with trying to prevent and control infectious and chronic diseases.
They were a target of protests by AIDS activist because of the slowness of
their response and lack of support for immediate research.47
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is the government agency in
charge of the health and safety of food and prescription and over the counter
drugs. Their slowness to approve new AIDS drugs or allow patients to
volunteer for experimental drugs opened them to criticism from AIDS
activists as well.
The only thing that makes people fight is fear. That's
what we discovered about AIDS activism
Larry Kramer, The Daily Beast May 14, 200648
Gay Mens Health Crisis (GMHC)
In 1981, Larry Kramer, Nathan Fain, Dr. Lawrence Mass, Paul Popham,
Paul Rapoport, Edmund White and their friends gathered in writer Larrys
New York living room to address the gay cancer and raise money for
research. This informal meeting provided the foundation for what would
soon become Gay Mens Health Crisis. In 1982, an answering machine in the
home of volunteer Rodger McFarlane acted as the first AIDS hotline
receiving more than 100 calls the first night. Today, GMHC continues to
work on HIV prevention, care and advocacy.
Kramer,Larry.ReportsFromtheHolocaust,St.MartinPress,NewYork,NY,1994,(138).
http://www.amfar.org/AboutamfAR/IntroductionandHistory/
47 http://www.cdc.gov/about/history/ourstory.htm
48 http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2006/05/14/howaidschangedamerica.html
45
46

33

As the group grew, Kramer became frustrated that the focus shifted entirely
to providing services and information to people with AIDS (which he felt the
city should be providing) rather than to putting pressure on political figures
and keeping AIDS in the public eye.
Kramer was often the spokesman for the group, but his anger and sharp
words rubbed the more diplomatic members of the group, often Paul Popham,
the wrong way. When the board prevented him from attending a meeting
with Mayor Ed Koch, which had been two years in the making, he quit in a
rage. He tried to get back into the organization without success, although
now his is on friendlier footing with the current leadership.49
Multitasking is a nonprofit organization selling office services to other
businesses and employing people with AIDS as the workers. It was founded
by Dr. Linda Laubenstein, who was concerned that AIDS patients often lost
their jobs. She felt that work was vital to emotional and physical health as
well as to financial support.50
National Institutes of Health (NIH) is the government agency that is to
provide research into a range of health issues. ACT UP protested at the NIH
in 1990 during the Presidency of George H. W. Bush about the inaccessibility
of clinical trials to many people with AIDS.51
Treatment Action Group (TAG) in 1992 members of the Treatment and
Data Committee of ACT UP broke away to form TAG and focus on
accelerating treatment research.52

49 http://www.gmhc.org/aboutus
Kramer,Larry.ReportsFromtheHolocaust,St.MartinPress,NewYork,NY,1994,(22).
50 http://www.nytimes.com/1992/08/17/nyregion/lindalaubenstein45physicianandleaderindetectionofaids.html
51 http://www.nih.gov/
52 http://www.treatmentactiongroup.org/

34

Timeline: The Early Years of the AIDS Epidemic53


1979 Epidemic becomes apparent in Haiti.
1981 No T-cells are found in a Los Angeles man.
On July 3, MMWR reports 26 cases of Kaposis sarcoma (KS), a rare
cancer, in homosexual men in both New York and California.
In August, Larry Kramer reads a New York Times article by Dr. Alvin
Friedman-Kien on cancer in the homosexual community and holds a
meeting in his apartment in New York. Within a year they form the
Gay Mens Health Crisis (GMHC), the first AIDS activist organization.
1982 Gay Mens Health Crisis official forms.
Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) holds hearings on what is being called
gay-related immunodeficiency syndrome (GRID).
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) convenes and gives
the illness a name acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS).
On November 5, CDC issues a warning to health workers to treat
AIDS patients like those being treated for Hepatitis B.
1983 In January, Dr. Francoise Barre Sinoussi, a researcher at virologist Luc
Montagnier's lab at the Pasteur Institute in Paris, finds evidence of the
enzyme reverse transcriptase (RT) in lymph node tissue taken from an
AIDS patient, suggesting AIDS is being caused by a retrovirus.
AIDS Medical Foundation (AMF) is formed by Dr. Mathilde Krim, a
cancer researcher at New Yorks Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer
Center. It is the precursor to the American Foundation for AIDS
research, which will be formed two years later.
People with AIDS (PWA) issues The Denver Principles, a statement
from their advisory committee advocating that blame or
generalizations not be made about those with AIDS.54
The first AIDS discrimination case is brought to court by Dr. Sonnabend,
a cofounder of AMF, to prevent his practice from being evicted.
President Reagan names Margaret Heckler Secretary of Health and
Human Services.

53 http://www.amfar.org/thirtyyearsofhiv/aidssnapshotsofanepidemic/
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/aids/cron/
54http://www.actupny.org/documents/Denver.html

35

Throwing money at the problem was exactly the kind of


philosophy that President Reagan would have hated and
was not authorized. Former Secretary of Health Heckler
interviewed by Frontline 55
Kramer writes an article for the gay newspaper the New York Native
called 1,112 and Counting, calling on the gay community to act to
save themselves.
The Denver Principles are published by the National Association of
People With AIDS, calling for a humane response to the crisis and
giving healthcare providers a list of recommendations on how to treat
people with AIDS.
The CDC reports of a possible problem with the blood supply.
AIDS cases have now been reported in 33 countries.
1984 On April 23, Secretary of Health and Human Services Margaret
Heckler announces that Dr. Robert Gallo of the National Cancer
Institute (NCI) has isolated the virus that causes AIDS. It is later
found to be similar to a sample isolated by French researchers and
sent to Gallo. A dispute between the researchers would be settled out
of court and give joint credit to the teams.
Gallo also develops a blood test, known as ELISA, to determine the
presence of the virus. However, the test raises concerns about
confidentiality and civil rights for patients.
San Franciscos Director of Public Health, Dr. Merv Silverman, orders
the Bathhouses closed. 14 bathhouses sue to reopen.
The AMF distributes its first 18 basic research grants.
1985 President Ronald Reagan responds to a question
about AIDS at a press conference. He gives an
ambiguous answer to a question about sending a
child to school with another child with AIDS,
despite having been briefed that there is no risk.
White House lawyer (and future U.S. Supreme
Court Chief Justice) John Roberts had sent him a
memo saying, I would not like to see the president
reassuring the public on this point.
Hemophiliac teenager, Ryan White is denied entry
to school in Kokomo, Indiana. After a court battle
he is allowed to return, but his family moves after
a bullet is fired into their house.

55

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/aids/cron/

36

The first international AIDS conference is held in Atlanta, Georgia.


The Normal Heart opens at The Public.
AmFAR (the American Federation for AIDS Research) is founded by
Dr. Mathilde Krim and Dr. Michael Gottlieb to unify AIDS research
organizations on the East and West coast. Elizabeth Taylor is the
national chair and Rock Hudson donates $250,000 to the organization.
In February, the Review of the Public Health Service's Response to
AIDS" is prepared by the Office of Technological Assessment in
response to a request from Congress. The report is highly critical of
the lack of federal funding for research.56
Rock Hudson dies of AIDS in October; he had previously allowed his
doctors to confirm his AIDS diagnosis publicly.
1986 U. S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop calls for a comprehensive
program of AIDS and sex education and urges the use of condoms.
Dr. Krim and Elizabeth Taylor testify before Congress on the need for
clinical research and accelerated access to experimental HIV/AIDS drugs.
Fashion designer Perry Ellis dies of AIDS.
1987 Kramer founds ACT UP (AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power) to agitate
politically for attention to the AIDS crisis.57
Aidovudine (AZT) becomes the first anti-HIV drug
approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
At $10,000 for a one-year supply, AZT is the most
expensive drug in history.
The AIDS Quilt went on display at the National Mall
for the first time.
And the Band Played On, by reporter Randy Shilts, a
history of the AIDS epidemic, is published.
The U.S. Government bars HIV-infected travelers and
immigrants from entering the country.
1988 In New York City, new AIDS cases that result from shared needles
exceed those attributable to sexual contact, and the city's Health
Department begins an experimental needle exchange program.
ACT UP demonstrates at FDA headquarters to protest the slow pace of
AIDS drug approval.

56
57

http://www.princeton.edu/~ota/disk2/1985/8523/852301.PDF

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/aids/interviews/kramer.html

37

The federal government mails an educational pamphlet,


"Understanding AIDS," to 107 million homes nationwide.
Anthony Fauci, M.D., is named acting director
of NIH's new Office of AIDS Research.
The World Health Organization designates
December 1 as World AIDS Day.
1989 amfAR establishes a Community-Based
Clinical Trials (CBCT) program and awards
grants to 16 research units.
The NIH funds 17 community-based AIDS
clinical research units as part of a federally
sponsored research program.
The FDA approves treatments for AZT-induced anemia and
Mycobacterium avium complex and a new method of preventing
pneumonia.
Robert Mapplethorpe dies of AIDS.
1990 Ryan White dies; his funeral is attended by Michael Jackson, Elton John
and First Lady Barbara Bush and broadcast on national television.
Congress passes the Americans with Disabilities Act, which protects
individuals with disabilities, including both people with HIV/AIDS and
those suspected of being infected, from discrimination.
To date, nearly twice as many Americans have died of AIDS as died in
the Vietnam War.
Elizabeth Taylor and Jeanne White testify before Congress, in support
of the Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency (CARE)
Act of 1990.
Keith Haring dies of AIDS.
Halston dies of AIDS.
1991 The CDC reports that one million
Americans are infected with HIV.
Congress enacts the Housing
Opportunities for People with AIDS
(HOPWA) Act of 1991 to provide
housing assistance to people with
HIV/AIDS.
Earvin "Magic" Johnson
announces that he is infected with HIV.

38

The red ribbon is introduced as a symbol of hope and compassion in the


face of AIDS.
The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that nearly 10
million people are infected with HIV worldwide.
Freddy Mercury dies of AIDS.
1992 Both the Democratic and Republican national conventions are
addressed by HIV-positive women.
The first clinical trial of combination antiretroviral therapy begins.
The FDA issues new rules that allow accelerated approval of new AIDS
drugs based on surrogate markers of their efficacy, such as
laboratory tests, rather than long-term clinical outcomes such as the
relief of symptoms or prevention of disability and death.
President Clinton establishes a new White House Office of National
AIDS Policy.
Anthony Perkins dies of AIDS.
1993 AIDS patients start to show signs of resistance to AZT.
The CDC's decision to revise its definition of AIDS to include new
opportunistic infections, cervical cancer, and HIV-positive people with
T-cell counts under 200 results in an 111% increase in the number of
U.S. AIDS cases. Many of these new cases are among women.
A three-year European study shows no evidence that AZT delays the
onset of AIDS.
The FDA approves a female condom for sale in
the U.S.
Tom Hanks wins an Oscar for his role as a gay
man with AIDS in the film Philadelphia.
Tennis player Arthur Ashe dies of AIDS.
Ballet dancer Rudolf Nureyev dies of AIDS.
1994 An NIH-funded trial demonstrates that AZT can reduce the risk of
mother-to-infant HIV transmission in humans.
U.S. Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders, a vocal advocate for increased
AIDS education, is forced to resign.
Drs. David Ho and George Shaw show that following initial infection
HIV replicates in the body continuously, producing billions of copies
each day.
Elizabeth Glaser dies of AIDS.
Randy Shilts dies of AIDS.
39

1995 The New York Times reports that AIDS has become the leading cause
of death among all Americans ages 25 to 44.
Between 1991 and 1995, the number of American women diagnosed
with AIDS has increased by more than 63%.
A clinical trial establishes dual combination therapy with AZT and
other nucleoside analogues as a standard approach for HIV treatment.
The FDA approves the first protease inhibitor (saquinavir).
Actress Sharon Stone becomes Chairman of amfAR's Campaign for
AIDS Research.
Author Paul Monette dies of AIDS.
1996 For the first time in the U.S., a larger proportion of AIDS cases occur
among African Americans (41%) than among whites (38%).
The FDA approves the first non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase
inhibitor (nevirapine), as well as a new viral load test that can
measure the level of HIV in a patient's blood.
Combination therapy is made available to HIV/AIDS patients for the
first time, leading to a dramatic decline in AIDS-related deaths.
The Joint United Nations Programme on AIDS (UNAIDS) is
established to coordinate a global response to the pandemic.
Reports from the XI International Conference on AIDS in Vancouver,
Canada, indicate that new combination therapies that include a
protease inhibitor are extending the lives of some HIV/AIDS patients.
The FDA approves the first home HIV test.
The U.N. estimates that 22.6 million people are infected with HIV and
6.4 million people have died of AIDS worldwide.

40

The Poem
The windiest militant trash
Important Persons shout
Is not so crude as our wish:
What mad Nijinsky wrote
About Diaghilev
Is true of the normal heart;
For the error bred in the bone
Of each woman and each man
Craves what it cannot have,
Not universal love
But to be loved alone.
***
All I have is a voice
To undo the folded lie,
The romantic lie in the brain
Of the sensual man-in-the-street
And the lie of Authority
Whose buildings grope the sky:
There is no such thing as the State
And no one exists alone;
Hunger allows no choice
To the citizen or the police;
We must love one another or die.
Excerpts from September 1, 1939 by W. H. Auden

41

Discussion Questions
About the play
1. The words AIDS or HIV are never used in The Normal Heart. Why do
you think Kramer avoids those words?
2. Do you think Ned is an effective activist?
3. The title comes from a poem by Auden. What do you think a normal
heart is?
About the production
1. Projections and music are used in the production, particularly between
scenes. How did the images and music create a certain mood or
highlight certain themes in the play?
2. The set is filled with books from floor to ceiling. What do think the books
represent for the character of Ned Weeks? What details did you notice?
About the context
1. When was the last time you heard AIDS mentioned in relationship to
the U.S. population? Do you think AIDS has fallen out of our current
cultural consciousness? Why or why not?
2. How do you think attitudes about AIDS have changed since the play
was written?

Resources

Aids Foundation of Chicago


http://www.aidschicago.org/

Season of Concern
http://www.seasonofconcern.org/

Howard Brown Health Center


http://www.howardbrown.org/

UNAIDS
http://www.unaids.org/en/

World AIDS Day


http://www.worldaidsday.org/

AIDS.gov
http://www.aids.gov/
42

Gay Mens Health Crisis


http://www.gmhc.org/

NIH Aids Information


http://aidsinfo.nih.gov/

AmFar
http://www.amfar.org/

The Names Project / AIDS quilt


http://www.aidsquilt.org/

CDC HIV/AIDS
http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/

References

Feldman, Douglas and Julia Wang Miller. The AIDS Crisis: a


Documentary History, Greenwood Press, Westport, Conn. 1998.

Kramer, Larry. The Normal Heart, Samuel French, New York. NY,
1985.

Kramer, Larry. Reports From the Holocaust: The Story of an AIDS


Activist, St. Martin Press, New York, NY, 1994.

Kramer, Larry. Faggots, Plume, New York, NY. 1978.

Kramer, Larry. The Tragedy of Todays Gays, Penguin. New York,


NY, 2005.

Kramer, Larry, "The FDA's Callous Response to AIDS, The New York
Times

Mass, Lawrence D., ed. We Must Love One Another or Die: The Life and
Legacies of Larry Kramer, Palgrave McMillan, New York, NY, 1997.

Documentaries

Frontline: The Age of Aids available online at


http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/aids/view/

How to Survive a Plague

We Were Here

Outrage

The Band Played On

43

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