New Channel 4 drama It's A S explor the Aids crisis which saw the gay muny shunned, feelg hopels and treated like 'scum' say some of the people who lived through
Contents:
- C4 ANNOUNC NEW SEASON, 50 SHAS OF GAY
- IT’S A S IS A LOVE LETTER TO 1980S GAY CULTURE – AND HATE MAIL TO THE ERA’S HOMOPHOBIC HEGEMONY
- YOU’LL WISH YOU WERE GAY: CHANNEL 4’S IT’S A S REVIEWED
- ‘IT’S A S BROUGHT BACK THE SADNS AND ANGER OF POLIL IMPOTENCE AND IGNORANCE’: THE AIDS CRISIS REMEMBERED BY GAY NURS
- WHY ARE GAY MEN MORE AT RISK FOR HIV?
- 'IN THE 80S HIV WAS EMED THE GAY PLAGUE AND THOSE WH WERE TREATED LIKE SCUM'
C4 ANNOUNC NEW SEASON, 50 SHAS OF GAY
TV drama It’s a S looked back at a dark era for the gay muny. Here, some of those who remember tell of the real-life agony – and the hope * channel 4 gay aids *
But now, thanks to Rsell T Davi’s movg five-part Channel 4 drama seri, It’s a S, we are all able to look at a vivid, troublg and yet ultimately upliftg picture of those dark and adly younger dienc, may be shockg to learn jt how exclud and hidn the gay muny was om mastream life. It was route, as It’s a S remds , for gay men and lbians to nceal their sexual inti om their fai and was the furtive environment which Aids surfaced.
Then beme known as “Grid” – gay-related immune ficiency – before acquired immunoficiency syndrome was fally ed (Aids) spread to the UK, a muny that was jt begng to fd s public voice and nfince was hered back to the shadows by a homophobic prs mpaign.
IT’S A S IS A LOVE LETTER TO 1980S GAY CULTURE – AND HATE MAIL TO THE ERA’S HOMOPHOBIC HEGEMONY
Channel 4 announc 50 Shas of Gay season markg the 50th anniversary of the partial-crimalisatn of homosexualy England and Wal * channel 4 gay aids *
Terms like the “gay plague” were wily ed and the belief was fostered that the disease uld be transmted by any kd of gay muny was held spicn by all sectors of society, cludg the health service where, aga as Davi shows, Aids patients were often placed harsh ndns of isolatn. As wh the current panmic, many people died lonely aths, only the se of HIV there was no medil reason for their as bleak as the perd was, also gave birth to an upsurge gay activism and support groups that helped transform the posn of the gay muny this, four people who were at the foreont of the stggl brought so powerfully to life It’s a S, tell their stori their own Whaker, the -founr of the Terence Higgs Tst. His fay swooped and kicked out all the gay iends and forced him on his ath bed to rent his homosexualy and accept the last r or he was gog to burn had the most vile thgs done to people who were credibly vulnerable.
But I thk we wouldn’t have gay marriage now if hadn’t been for Aids, bee showed first of all that we were real people and Whaker is a psychiatrist and one of Europe’s longt-survivg people wh HIV. He -found the Terrence Higgs Tst, named after his partner who was one of the first people the UK to die om Aids-related illns July Power, left, who worked on the Gay Swchboard the 1980s. ‘It was a time of nfn and then a time of nsirable fear’Lisa Power, sexual health and LGBT rights mpaignerI was workg on the Gay Swchboard durg the Aids outbreak.
”This was the time when gay pubs didn’t have wdows, (a) bee they would have been stoved and (b) nobody would go if they uld be seen om the outsi.
YOU’LL WISH YOU WERE GAY: CHANNEL 4’S IT’S A S REVIEWED
Rsell T. Davi's "betifully gay" seri creat an evotive, personal time psule of an 1980s London bet by the Aids crisis. * channel 4 gay aids *
This was a time when nobody was out as gay the police and very few were out as gay the health profsn, bee got you to all kds of there were thoands of people who got stuck all over the untry tryg to help out, lots of them lbians, lots of them other gay men, who were terrified but ntually faced their fear to provi sential Bton, send om right, who worked for many years as a nurse wh HIV patients. The channel will unver the history of homosexualy laws and the evolvg perceptns of homosexualy Bra over the last 50 years four documentari and a llectn of shorts.
‘IT’S A S BROUGHT BACK THE SADNS AND ANGER OF POLIL IMPOTENCE AND IGNORANCE’: THE AIDS CRISIS REMEMBERED BY GAY NURS
To promote his new drama seri about Aids the early 1980s, Rsell T. Davi sisted an terview that gay characters should be played only by actors who are actually gay. This was madng for a number of reasons, startg wh blatant hypocrisy. One of the thgs that ma Davi’s Queer As Folk so * channel 4 gay aids *
Not Guilty tells the stori of some of the 15, 000 Brish men livg wh crimal rerds for offenc mted unr anti-homosexualy laws UK and their experienc long after the 1967 Act to crimalise homosexualy Bra. The film shows how the aln overme homophobic prs, and the hostile voice of Margaret Thatcher, to create a mpaign that would change perspectiv about AIDS and the gay muny.
In 50 Shas of Gay, Rupert Everett lv to the chang gay life and culture over the last fifty years, speakg to men their eighti who had experienc wh palace guards, to young transgenr people g out ral parts of the untry. Everett livers his own personal take on how gay life has changed sce 1967, reflectg on how far people have e acceptance and openns, and what aspects of gay culture has fad to the mastream over the years.
The documentary reflects on the fearls artists who ed pop mic and their stat to promote the acceptance of homosexualy after 's legalisatn 50 years ago.
WHY ARE GAY MEN MORE AT RISK FOR HIV?
'It's a S' creator Rsell T. Davi on the journey of the HBO Max AIDS drama, stg gay actors gay rol and the show's "queer energy." * channel 4 gay aids *
As well as the season of documentari explorg the years followg the homosexualy legalisatn, Channel 4 has missned three programm that look to the history behd explosive royal and polil headl. Epimic [w/t] tells how an unlikely aln of gay mpaigners, Tory policians, and pneerg doctors me together to fight AIDS the 1980s – and changed Bra the procs.
'IN THE 80S HIV WAS EMED THE GAY PLAGUE AND THOSE WH WERE TREATED LIKE SCUM'
What's behd the higher rat of fectn among gay men? Dr. David bunks myths and explas why some groups are and areas are more affected by HIV/AIDS than others. * channel 4 gay aids *
Born This Way (w/t) reveals that while mpaigners were battlg Parliament for legal reforms, pop mic was changg hearts and mds, brgg gay culture to the livg rooms of Bra. And Bra’s Great Gay Buildgs, famo fac such as Simon Callow, Lord Waheed, Anna Richardson and Mary Portas champn the buildgs where extraordary moments Bra’s gay history took place.
Far om herg an end to prejudice, 1967 unleashed a backlash of homophobia enforced by the police and the urts, as many aspects of gay life ntued to be illegal. The film tells the stori of some of the 15, 000 men who fell foul of Bra’s homophobic laws durg the past half century - and expos how the jtice ntu today. This landmark film tells the behd-the-scen upliftg story of how an unlikely aln of Tory policians, pneerg doctors and gay men me together to fight a adly disease wh no cure – and how Bra was changed forever by the battle agast AIDS the 1980s.
Together they overme a homophobic prs, the ignorance of the medil tablishment, and the outright hostily of Margaret Thatcher, orr to create a mpaign that would change hearts and mds about AIDS – and gay men. In this documentary, Rupert Everett livers his personal and ank take on the velopments gay life Bra sce the crimalisatn of homosexualy 50 years ago. Channel 4 marks this momento anniversary wh the story of the fearls & flamboyant artists– om global ins to hidn hero – who ed pop mic as gay culture’s Trojan Horse, scg all wh a soundtrack to die for.
The betifully ma HBO/Channel 4 miseri about gay men 1980s London n’t help but show the way that tragedi bee trop. * channel 4 gay aids *
Channel 4's dited short arts strand Random Acts is partnerg wh Tate on s Queer Brish Art 1861-1967 exhibn, which marks the 50th anniversary sce the crimalisatn of male homosexualy the UK. In Bra’s Great Gay Buildgs, prented by Stephen Fry, 7 famo gay fac champn the buildgs that have helped fe Bra’s gay history, revealg the groundbreakg events that happened them and extraordary people who lived and worked them.
The Reverend Richard Cole reviss Heaven Nightclub after many years to reveal s hedonistic past, Mary Portas viss Shibn Hall Yorkshire to disver the secret diari of a Yorkshire heirs, Craig Revel Horwood revels the story of Bra’s drag scene at the Royal Vxhall Tavern, Simon Callow tells the story of Osr Wil’s downfall at the Old Bailey, Rikki Beadle Blair viss the Theatre Royal Haymarket to disver how the Brish public showed their support for Sir John Gielgud after his arrt for ttagg, Liz Carr travels to Bletchley Park to vis the place that fostered one of Bra’s greatt scientists Alan Turg and Lord Waheed Alli tells the story of the Ho of Parliament’s recent battle for gay rights. Davi’s “betifully gay” seri creat an evotive, personal time psule of an 1980s London bet by the Aids crisis – ’s the first great Brish seri on the subject. They ci to share a flat, named the ‘Pk Palace’, 1980s London – the seri tak place between 1981 and 1991 – but the utopia of Rchie, Jill, Rose, Col and Ash is threatened when mours beg to circulate about a adly vis that seems to be targetg gay men.
It’s a S has moments where gay men are seen a negative, or at least dangeroly stubborn, light – a scene where an activist is btally thrown out of a gay bar for handg out leaflets warng patrons about the spread of HIV. Aids mpaigners take to the streets It's a SDpe the swagger of s protagonists, It’s a S expertly picts how shame, nurtured by the homophobia prevalent the Brish prs and, of urse, Thatcher’s ernment, tensified the crisis.