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25 Oct 2009 01:42 pm
First Andrew Lloyd Webber; Then AIDS
It was tough on Broadway in the early 1990s. Dan Savage interviews Frank Rich and asks why gay equality is so central to Frank's column:
I can't speak for why others don't do it. I am baffled by it. It
seems to me such an obvious civil-rights issue. In my case, I got
interested in it and my eyes were opened precisely because I covered
the theater. In the 1980s, which was the bulk of when I was a Times
drama critic, to the early '90s, two things happened in New York
theater. One was unfortunately the arrival of Andrew Lloyd Webber and
the other was the AIDS epidemic, and it was eye-opening. It was
literally happening on my beat; people, artists I admired, were dying,
getting sick and dying. In some cases, you'd hear about people's deaths
well after the fact, particularly if they weren't famous in the
theater, or under mysterious circumstances in those days.
Of course a
lot of people don't even remember this history now, but you certainly
know it, and it really had the effect of—I guess I wouldn't say
radicalizing me, but really opening my eyes to a whole minority of
America that had been shabbily treated, that had to often live in
secret, and was now being victimized by a ruthless epidemic, while a
lot of people stood around and did nothing.
So at first, it really changed my view of things; it really opened
my mind to stuff I hadn't, embarrassingly, given much thought to. And
then of course, what happened was that theater itself began to take
AIDS as a subject, but that's already well along in the story. You'd
have to have been dead to be on the beat I was on and not say: "What
the hell is going on here?" And so it stayed with me.
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