This is what we should be talking about today..Not the *sinful *nature of PWA"S
.These names and those of the 40 million people who are currently living with AIDS along with the 25 million who are gone..Not to mention all of our felow forum mebers living with AIDS.. You would be surprised how many of us are posting here.
Athletes
Arthur Ashe (1943-1993), tennis player and social activist; infected via transfusion during heart surgery
John Curry (1949-1994), figure skating champion, died of AIDS-related illness
Esteban De Jesus (1951-1990), world champion boxer
Rudy Galindo (b. 1969), figure skating champion
Magic Johnson (b. 1959), probably most famous for his public announcement in 1991 that he had been infected with the virus HIV and would retire from basketball
Greg Louganis (b. 1960), diver; knew he was HIV-positive since 1988, announced it in 1995
Tommy Morrison (b. 1969), world champion boxer, tests in 1996 revealed he was HIV-positive, automatically retiring him from boxing as a competitor; underwent a technique known as "sperm washing", designed to allow HIV-positive men to have HIV-negative children
Rubén Palacios world champion boxer
Tim Richmond (1955-1989), NASCAR driver. Won 7 races in 1986 and finished 3rd in points.
Trevis Smith (b. 1976), linebacker for the CFL's Saskatchewan Roughriders
[edit]
Entertainers
Peter Allen, (1944-1992), screen and stage entertainer
Néstor Almendros (1930-1992), cinematographer
Emile Ardolino (1943-1993), filmmaker (Sister Act, Dirty Dancing)
Howard Ashman (1950-1991), film songwriter
Rick Aviles (1952-1995), American actor
Andy Bell, (b. 1964), lead singer of the pop group Erasure
Michael Bennett, (1943-1987), choreographer
Christopher Bernau, (1940-1989), actor (Guiding Light)
John Bindon, (1943-1993), British Actor
Amanda Blake, (1929-1989), actress (Kitty Russell on Gunsmoke)
Sandra Brea, (d. 2000), Brazilian television actress
Joseph Breen, (b. 1958), soap opera star (As the World Turns)
Jim J. Bullock, (b. 1955), television actor (Too Close for Comfort)
Geoffrey Burridge, (1949-1987), British Actor
Carlos Busquets, Puerto Rican astrologer
Merritt Butrick, (1959-1989), actor
Michael Callen, (1955-1993), Singer, songwriter, AIDS activist and author, Michael is recognized as a co-inventor of safe(r) sex.
Cazuza, (1958-1990), Brazilian singer, composer and poet, died of AIDS-related illness
Ian Charleson (1950-1990), British actor and star of the film (Chariots of Fire) (1981)
Cyril Collard, (1957-1993), French writer/actor/director of Les Nuits fauves (Savage Nights)
Patrick Cowley, (1950-1982), synthesizer artist
Robbin Crosby, (1960-2002), guitarist for rock band Ratt; HIV-infected by a tainted needle while addicted to heroin; died of AIDS-related causes
Brad Davis, (1949-1991), American actor (Midnight Express)
Bobby Debarge, (1945-1995), American singer
Patrick Esposito Di Napoli (d. 1994), Canadian musician (Les Colocs)
Kiki Djan (1957-2004), Ghanian singer
Eazy-E, (1963-1995), rapper, member of NWA
Denholm Elliott, (1922-1992), distinguished British actor
Kenny Everett, (1944-1995), British actor and disc jockey
Wayland Flowers, (1939-1988), entertainer, puppeteer (Wayland Flowers and Madame, Madame's Place)
Richard Frank, (1953-1995), American actor (Anything But Love)
Leonard Frey, (1938-1988), Acted in Fiddler on the Roof on Broadway and in the movie
Thomas Fuccello, (1936-1993), American actor (Dallas)
Christopher Gillis, (1951-1993), dancer and choreographer, Paul Taylor Dance Company
Kevin Peter Hall (1955-1991), played the title role in Predator opposite Arnold Schwarzenegger
Anthony Hamilton, (1952-1995), actor also known as Tony Hamilton
Dan Hartman, (1950-1994), American, singer, songwriter and record producer
Ofra Haza, (1957-2000), Israeli pop singer
John Hargreaves, (1945-1996), Australian actor
Fred Hersch (born 1955), jazz pianist
René Highway (1954-1990), Canadian Cree actor and dancer
Rock Hudson, (1925-1985), Hollywood star, first major American celebrity whose AIDS diagnosis became public knowledge
Richard Hunt, (1951-1992), Muppet performer (Beaker,
Scooter, Statler)
Paul Jabara, (1948-1992, American Actor (Hair) and songwriter of Donna Summer's Last Dance
Derek Jarman, (1942-1994), film director, made the film Blue while blind (as a result of AIDS related causes)
Holly Johnson, (b. 1960), lead singer of Frankie Goes to Hollywood
Michael Jeter (1952-2003), actor (Open Range, The Green Mile)
Larry Kert, (1930-1991), Broadway performer (West Side Story)
Fela Kuti (1938-1997), Nigerian musician and political activist, died from AIDS-related heart failure
Paul Lekakis, singer and actor, best known for his 1987 #1 dance single "Boom, Boom (Let's Go Back to My Room)"
Liberace, (1919-1987), pianist
Lar Lubovitch, (1943-), choreographer, Lar Lubovitch Dance Company
Jimmy McShane (1957-1995), British/Irish singer known as Baltimora
John Megna (1952-1995), actor; died from AIDS, played Dill Harris in the 1962 "To Kill a Mockingbird"
Freddie Mercury (1946-1991), singer and musician; died from bronchial pneumonia (his death from AIDS-related causes led to The Mercury Phoenix Trust anti-AIDS charity and the Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert for AIDS Awareness)
Andy Milligan, (1929-1991), director of exploitation movies
Jacques Morali, (1947-1991), disco composer and co-creator of the Village People
Timothy Patrick Murphy, (1959-1988), American actor (Dallas)
Klaus Nomi, (1944-1983), singer, died of AIDS-related illness in 1983, one of the first celebrities to die of this disease
Rudolf Nureyev (1938-1993), dancer
Chuck Panozzo, rock bassist (Styx)
Anthony Perkins (1932-1992), pneumonia, brought on by AIDS
Dack Rambo, (1941-1994), American actor
Gene Anthony Ray (1962-2003), actor (Fame), complications of a stroke
Sharon Redd, (1945-1992), American disco singer
Robert Reed, (1932-1992) actor on The Brady Bunch
Tony Richardson, (1928-1991), British actor, producer and director
Arthur Russell, (1951-1992), musician
Franklyn Seales, (1952-1990), American actor (Silver Spoons)
Tommy Sexton (1955-1993), Canadian television comedian
Ray Sharkey, (1952-1993), American actor
Paul Shenar, (1936-1989), American actor
Hugo Soto (1954-1994), Argentine actor
Michael Staniforth, (1945-1987), British stage actor
Jermaine Stewart, (1957-1997), American singer, liver cancer caused by AIDS.
Michael Sundin, (1961-1989), British children's television presenter and actor, died from AIDS-related complications
Sylvester, (1944-1988), disco artist and drag performer
Charlotte Valandrey, (b. 1968), French actress (Rouge baiser)
Ron Vawter (1949-1994), actor; died from a heart attack
Ricky Wilson (1953-1985), original member of The B-52's
[edit]
Politicians
Sheldon Andelson, (died 1987) University of California Regent
Brian Huskins, Canadian political candidate
Larry McKeon, only openly gay member of the Illinois House of Representatives
Peter McWilliams, author and libertarian activist
Chris Smith, former UK Secretary of State for Culture
Jean-Luc Romero, french political candidate.
[edit]
Writers and artists
Reinaldo Arenas (1943-1990), novelist
Isaac Asimov, (1920-1992), science fiction writer; infected by transfused blood during heart surgery
Ron Athey, performance artist
Joseph Beam, anthologist
Leigh Bowery, (1961-1994), performance artist, fashion designer, dancer, model
Melvin Dixon, author
Michel Foucault, (1926-1984), philosopher
Hervé Guibert, (1955-1990), novelist
Keith Haring, (1958-1990), artist
Essex Hemphill, author
Peter Hujar, (1934-1987), American photographer
Gibson Kente, (1932-2004), playwright
Larry Kramer, novelist and playwright
Christine Maggiore, writer
Michael McDowell (1950-1999), screenwriter and novelist
James Merrill, (1926-1995), poet
Douglas Rezek
Paul Monette (1945-1995), novelist and poet
Marlon Riggs, author and video producer
Assoto Saint, author
Barabara Samson
Dennis Schuetz (d. 1989), novelist
Randy Shilts (1951-1994), American journalist and author
Andrew Sullivan, conservative journalist
Félix González-Torres, (1957-1996), conceptual artist
LeRoy Whitfield, (1969-2005), writer and activist [1]
David Wojnarowicz, (1954-1992), artist, writer and activist
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Others
.
Rebekka Armstrong (b. 1967), HIV educator and former Playboy Playmate
Omar Q. Beckins (1957-1989), medical researcher who contracted AIDS in a lab accident
Kimberly Bergalis (1968-1991), first known doctor-to-patient transmission
Allan Bloom (1930-1992), political philosopher and academic
Dave Brindle, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation journalist
David Brudnoy (1940-2004), Boston radio talk show host, merkel-cell carcinoma unrelated to AIDS
Gia (1960-1986), model, died of complications resulting from AIDS in 1986, at the age of 26
Tina Chow (1951-1992), restauranteur and model
Roy Cohn (1927-1986), lawyer
Joey DiPaolo (b. 1979), contracted AIDS by a blood transfusion at the age of four, activist.
Gaëtan Dugas (1953-1984), famous as the subject of an early epidemiological study into HIV/AIDS
Althea Leasure Flynt (1953-1987), wife of publishing magnate and Hustler founder Larry Flynt, as well as a Hustler co-publisher.
Eve van Grafhorst (d. 1993)
Halston (1932-1990), American fashion designer
Sighsten Herrgård (1943-1989), Swedish fashion designer
Nkosi Johnson (1989-2001), AIDS advocate
Patrick Kelly (1954-1990), American fashion designer
Lance Loud (1951-2001), part of the PBS reality TV show An American Family
Suzi Lovegrove
Troy Lovegrove
Makgatho Mandela (19502005), son of Nelson Mandela
Robert Mapplethorpe (1946-1989), photographer
Sgt. Leonard Matlovich (1943-1988), decorated Vietnam War veteran; fought the US military in 1975 for the right to serve as an openly gay man
Ernesto Pimentel, Peruvian, Chola Chabuca
Margrethe (Grethe) Rask (1930-1977), Danish physician and surgeon, first non-African known to have died from AIDS.
Stephanie Ray (b. 1986), AIDS advocate
Mitch Rosario (1972-2003), hairdresser to celebrities such as Ricky Martin and Paulina Rubio
Max Robinson (1939-1988), American Broadcasting Corporation journalist
Steve Rubell (1943-1989), owner of Studio 54 disco in the 1970s
Eliza Jane Scovill (2002-2005), died from untreated AIDS-related pneumonia. Her mother, Christine Maggiore, wrote a book titled What If Everything You Thought You Knew About AIDS was Wrong? and father Robin Scovill directed a movie, The Other Side of AIDS to encourage HIV+ people to refuse standard treatment.
Willi Smith (1948-1987), American fashion designer
Ryan White (1971-1990), See Ryan White CARE Act ([2])
Pedro Zamora (1972-1994), The Real World participant