Jump to content

Larry Kramer - AIDS Activist, Culture Critic, Playwright & Author - Dies at 84


Recommended Posts

Larry Kramer, AIDS Activist, Culture Critic, Playwright & Author, Dies @ 84

101103580_3863257160412855_8263888032256

Following many years of ill health, Larry Kramer, the nation's most iconic AIDS activist — and rattler of cages — died of pneumonia Wednesday at 84.

Mr. Kramer's husband, David Webster, reported that the cause was pneumonia. Kramer was a long-term survivor of HIV and also underwent a liver transplant in 2001, which he — of course — wrote about.

Kramer was born on June 25, 1935, in Bridgeport, Connecticut, and grew up in Maryland. Gay from a young age, he attended Yale, where he attempted suicide. That life-changing event would inform his rage against homophobia going forward.

Freshly graduated, he worked at Columbia Pictures, first in the Teletype department and then as a story editor. He was credited with dialogue for the teen flick Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush (1968), then adapted D.H. Lawrence's Women in Love (1969) for the screen. It was an acclaimed production that netted him an Oscar nomination, but his follow-up — a hokey musical take on the 1937 classic Lost Horizon (1973) — earned him infinitely more money, yet was a colossal bomb. He rarely wrote for the screen thereafter.

Kramer's first play was the gay-themed Sissies' Scrapbook aka Four Friends (1973), but, disappointed by the highs and lows of the theater, he turned to writing his first novel. Upset after ending a relationship with the man he would marry decades later, Kramer crafted an acidic novel, Faggots (1978), which was an incendiary hit. A brutally frank and witheringly critical look at gay life, it turned off both mainstream critics and gay readers, the latter of whom had by then decided Mart Crowley's considerably less caustic play The Boys in the Band of just 10 years prior was already too negative for their taste. But it sold, sold, sold.

Its opening line:

There are 2,556,596 faggots in the New York City area.

By 1980, Kramer, who was disinclined to be politically active, was living and loving on Fire Island, where he noticed acquaintances becoming sick, some even dying. The onslaught of the AIDS epidemic — and, later, in 1988, his own diagnosis — radicalized Kramer, who took it upon himself to hold meetings about the emerging health crisis. The meetings led to the 1982 formation of the Gay Men's Health Crisis, which would become one of the leading groups to tackle AIDS head-on.

When Kramer disagreed with his own group's members, preferring to fight for city recognition and funding rather than simply focus on caring for the sick, he wrote a controversial 1983 essay in The New York Native condemning the health care establishment, the government and Mayor Ed Koch (a closeted gay man), and telling gay men they needed to curtail their sex lives to combat AIDS.

Kramer was already known as a gay traitor, so some of his tactics were brushed aside. When he threw a drink in the face of gay Republican fundraiser Terry Dolan, it was considered shocking. Playwright Robert Chesley wrote that Kramer was a self-loathing alarmist. 

Both men died of AIDS.

Though his activism turned many off, he still had his writing as a tool of persuasion, and in 1985 his play The Normal Heart captured the humanity of the AIDS crisis very early on, and to great acclaim. It also fictionalized his relationship with his lawyer brother Arthur Kramer, who butted heads with Kramer many times over activism, but who wound up his biggest backer, emotionally and financially.

Kramer lived to see a fine film version of The Normal Heart — adapted himself for the screen, his last screen credit — produced in 2014 for HBO. He wrote a sequel, The Destiny of Me, that was a success off-Broadway in 1992.

Kramer in 1987 was there at the genesis of ACT UP (the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power), which wielded great power as it sought to scare and shame the forces conspiring to brush AIDS under the rug.

As much as he loathed Republicans, he could take on Democrats, too, as he did here with Bill Clinton:

He also attacked The New York Times when he felt the ostensibly liberal publication deserved it, so it's something that the paper of record included prominently in his obituary the thought that he somehow undermined himself by being too abrasive:

Kramer continued to be a loud voice on gay issues, often running afoul of the powers that be — and of other queer people, who objected to what they felt were some of his more dated arguments.

On April 2 of this year, Kramer posted to Facebook a seething critique of Jordan Roth, the powerful theater scion, for his inaction:

Many of us know some one person who is important (and probably a Republican). How can you shame him into action? I’ll give you an example. Jordan Roth, who owns Jujamcyn Theaters, is a friend of mine. Every actor in New York is beholden to him. His father Steven Roth is one of the richest men in the world. He is in business with Donald Trump. They own buildings together. I have tried to shame Jordan into action. “Take off all those dresses you seem to wear, get a haircut, and be a man and beg your father to help us,” I wrote to him. That’s the kind of tactic I’m thinking about. We did stuff like this all the time in ACT UP and it worked. We got the drugs. Go after the important person you name and shame him. Don’t be nice about it. Shame is a powerful tool to use.

In-between screeds, Kramer also wrote the plays A Minor Dark Age (1973), Just Say No, A Play About a Farce (1988) and The Furniture of Home (1989), and along with Faggots published the massive novels The American People Volume 1: Search for My Heart (2015) and this year's The American People Volume 2: The Brutality of Fact (2020). He was also the author of Reports from the Holocaust: The Making of an AIDS Activist (1989; 1994) and The Tragedy of Today's Gays (2005), the latter of which was a searing Bush-era condemnation of LGBTQ inaction.

But it was Kramer's opinions that defined him, his disgust with apathy that fueled him, far more than his creative output.

In 2019, he told Ellen Barkin for Interview:

It’s happening again. People are still dying. And we don’t have any gay leaders. We don’t have a Gloria Steinem or a Bella Abzug.

The title of the piece? “Larry Kramer Is Still the Angriest Gay Man in the World.”

And he was.

Kramer is survived by his husband of nearly seven years, David Webster, who he'd been with continuously since 1991, and whom he had met and dated in the '70s.

Kramer is being remembered by a wide variety of entertainers and political figures on social media:

https://www.boyculture.com/boy_culture/2020/05/larry-kramer-aids-activist-author-dies-84.html

 

quote-being-gay-is-a-natural-normal-beau

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Larry Kramer, Playwright and Outspoken AIDS Activist, Dies at 84

He sought to shock the country into dealing with AIDS as a public-health emergency and foresaw that it could kill millions regardless of sexual orientation.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/27/us/larry-kramer-dead.html

 

Larry Kramer, groundbreaking author and Aids activist, dies aged 84

  • Kramer founded pioneering Gay Men’s Health Crisis group
  • Playwright and author died Wednesday morning in Manhattan

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/may/27/larry-kramer-death-playwright-author-hiv-aids-activist

 

Larry Kramer: a titan of gay rights and literature whose prophecies live on

The award-winning writer of The Inheritance pays tribute to the life and works of the acclaimed author and activist who died at the age of 84

https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2020/may/27/larry-kramer-death-activist-gay-rights

 

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

u2gQ1YP.gif What a loss. He was like a typhoon, his energy, not to be toyed with in the slightest. May he rest in peace.

I recommend How to Survive a Plague to anyone who's not seen it.

RmfSyuu.jpg

RWOlgFw.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm actually going to read his book Faggots.I intended to read it before, but just forgot.

Anyway, RIP and he made it to 84 years when so many of his peers died so much younger. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 hours ago, MadFan said:

 

I recommend How to Survive a Plague to anyone who's not seen it.

 

 

Everyone should be required to watch this documentary. Gay and straight. It's a testament of the fight for survival and a memorial for all those people who died way before their time because of this horrible disease. Nothing but respect and gratitude for all those activists of GMHC and Act Up. Larry Kramer was truly a giant. Rest in power.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...