Showing posts with label 1980s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1980s. Show all posts

Friday, June 14, 2019

Documentary: "5B" Chronicles First Hospital Ward Dedicated To Treating AIDS Patients In 1980s

The new documentary, 5B, tells the inspirational story of the trailblazing nurses and caregivers who showed up at one of the darkest times in our community’s history.

Pride Month is not only about celebrating the LGBTQ community today, but also remembering how we got here.

The new documentary, 5B, tells the inspirational story of the trailblazing nurses and caregivers who showed up at one of the darkest times in our community’s history.

Through first-person testimony, archival clips, and photos, co-directors Paul Haggis and Dan Krauss chronicle the story of San Francisco General Hospital’s ward 5B - the first in the nation dedicated to patients with AIDS.

It was a time when fear ran rampant as friends, partners and family members passed away in a matter of weeks upon diagnosis. But 5B celebrates the hospital ward, which operated from 1983 to 2003, and its nurses who led the way in offering a more humane way to treat those afflicted.

The documentary shares not only the somber, emotional toll the disease took on the LGBTQ community at the height of the epidemic, but also the inspiring, heroic actions of hospital staffers who stepped up and over bigotry and fear.


As the tagline reads,"When people were consumed by fear, a few heroes showed the world the power of human touch."

In the trailer below, one of the nurses explains, “You had to get out of the mode that you were here for curing people; you were here to care for people."

"We decided if we can't save these folks, we're going to touch them," says another.

The Los Angeles Times calls the “superbly told” 5B a “stirring portrait” that is “moving, powerful and essential.”

More from the critics:

“An uplifting film about profound human decency and generosity of spirit.” - The Hollywood Reporter

“Grips the heart exactly where it needs too.” - Variety

5B is in theaters now. Click here for ticket information.

Friday, April 26, 2019

#FBF: Irene Cara "Flashdance...What A Feeling"


Some #FBF action here as I recently came across this 1983 performance by Irene Cara of her award-winning "Flashdance - What a Feeling" on the 1980s music countdown, Solid Gold.

Cara co-wrote "Flashdance"with Giorgio Moroder and Keith Forsey, and the collaboration led to her winning the 1983 Academy Award for Best Song (Oscar).

It was only the second Oscar to be won by an African American woman, following Hattie McDaniels' win for Supporting Actress in 1940 for Gone With The Wind (which she had to accept from a segregated hotel).

Cara also took home the 1984 Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance, 1984 Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song, and American Music Awards for Best R&B Female Artist and Best Pop Single of the Year for "Flashdance."

p.s. I really wanted to be a Solid Gold dancer.



Thursday, September 20, 2018

Eloquent Memory Of The AIDS Crisis Goes Viral On Twitter


A young gay couple holding hands on a train and an overheard comment stirred powerful memories for a gay man who survived the terrifying heights of the AIDS epidemic.

Tucker Shaw, an editor for America’s Test Kitchen and Cook’s Country, took to Twitter recently to share a personal journey through a time not so long ago.

“I overheard a young man on the train on the way home today, talking to another young man,” Shaw begins. “Holding hands. In college, I guessed. About that age anyway. Much younger than I am.”

“He was talking about AIDS, in a scholarly way. About how it had galvanized the gay community. How it had spurred change. Paved the way to make things better, in the long run.”

“The long run,” he repeated.

“Maybe he’s right. I don’t know. It’s not the first time I’ve heard the theory. He spoke with clarity and with confidence. Youthful, full of conviction. But.”

And with that ‘but,’ Shaw began a look-back with a tone and manner that only experience could inform in order to express so vividly.

“Remember how terrible it was, not that long ago, during the worst times. How many beautiful friends died. One after the other. Brutally. Restlessly. Brittle and damp. In cold rooms with hot lights. Remember? Some nights, you’d sneak in to that hospital downtown after visiting hours, just to see who was around. It wasn’t hard.”

“You’d bring a boom box. Fresh gossip. Trashy magazines and cheap paperbacks. Hash brownies. Anything. Nothing. You’d get kicked out, but you’d sneak back in. Kicked out again. Back in again. Sometimes you’d recognize a friend. Sometimes you wouldn’t.”

Shaw’s memories continued.

“Other nights, you’d go out to dance and drink. A different distraction. You’d see a face in the dark, in the back of the bar. Is it you? Old friend! No. Not him. Just a ghost.”

“At work, you’d find an umbrella, one you’d borrowed a few rainstorms ago from a coworker. I should return it, you’d think. No. No need. He’s gone. It’s yours now. Season after season. Year after year.”

Then, Shaw seems to take a somewhat more personal turn.

“One day you’d get lucky and meet someone lovely. You'd feel happy, optimistic. You’d make plans. Together, you’d keep a list of names in a notebook you bought for thirty cents in Chinatown so you could remember who was still here and who wasn’t, because it was so easy to forget. But there were so many names to write down. Too many names. Names you didn't want to write down. When he finally had to go too, you got rid of the notebook. No more names.”

“Your friends would come over with takeout and wine and you’d see how hard they tried not to ask when he was coming home because they knew he wasn’t coming home. No one came home. You’d turn 24. When he’d been gone long enough and it was time to get rid of his stuff, they’d say so. It’s time. And you’d do it, you’d give away the shirts, sweaters, jackets. Everything.”

Shaw then leans into even more detail.

“Except those shoes. You remember the ones. He loved those shoes, you’d say. We loved those shoes. I’ll keep those shoes under the bed. You’d move to a new neighborhood. You’d unpack the first night, take a shower, make the bed because it’d be bedtime. You’d think of the shoes. For the first time, you’d put them on. Look at those shoes. What great shoes.”

“Air. You’d need air. You’d walk outside in the shoes, just to the stoop. You’d sit. A breeze. A neighbor steps past. ‘Great shoes,’ she’d say. But the shoes are too big for you. You’d sit for a while, maybe an hour, maybe more. Then you’d unlace the shoes, set them by the trash on the curb. You’d go back upstairs in your socks. The phone is ringing. More news.”

“The long run. Wasn’t that long ago.”

The touching Twitter thread has had over 70,000 likes and been retweeted more than 19,000 times.

And readers did more than just click.

Several added their own remembrances of the height of the AIDS epidemic.

One man, RacerXJax, shared, “This had me in tears. I used to go down to THE hospital and seek out the dying brothers who had no one. They would tell me their story. I was with so many when they died.”

Another reader, Randy X Ochoa, wrote, “Once read about a man who worked in a gay bar. Everyday he’d come in and this group of men would be huddled around a local gay newspaper looking at the reported aids related deaths. One day he came in and they were crying not bc someone died, but because no one had that day.”

Amalia Morris was clearly there: “NYC - 1985-91. St.Vincent’s hospital, Gary’s bedside, middle of the night. Nurse down the hall singing, ’see the pyramids along the Nile…’ hearing her walking into rooms, ‘goodnight angel.’ Fluorescent lights and beeping monitors. Memories are never far.”

And Andrew Wortman expressed his thanks, saying, “This is beautifully written and heartbreaking. Thanks for enlightening a millennial gay about this.”

You can find the full thread on Twitter here.




Friday, March 18, 2016

Flashback Friday: Pat Benatar "We Belong"


Released in 1984, Pat Benatar received a Grammy Award nomination for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance for "We Belong," which was the lead single from her sixth studio album, Tropico.

I've always had a visceral thing for the chorus' drum beat. And, seriously, Benatar's vocals are fab.


Saturday, September 19, 2015

T-Shirt Of The Day

Dorothy in the streets, Blanche in the sheets

For hubby Michael, who is a big Golden Girls fan. While he's not a senior, he does like to identify as a "Blanche."

Friday, August 14, 2015

Matt Baume On 70s/80s Sitcoms And The Homos


In a very worthwhile 7 minute history of the portrayal of gays on sitcoms in the 1970s and 1980s, Matt Baume tracks how gays slowly gained visibility (and a voice) on TV.
When did TV first permit joking while gay? I've been combing through sitcoms to figure out when queers stopped being a scary threat, and were allowed to be real people with love lives and funny punch lines. Here are just a few of my favorite early gay characters on sitcoms.
As Baume states at the end, a 7 minute video can't provide enough time to cover all the good and bad of the gay 70s and 80s. I am a bit surprised he skipped over Showtime's Brothers which featured an openly gay lead character that was memorably positive.

But, again, how much can you fit into a web video?

Very good watch here.

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

TV: 1980s FAME Gets Greenlight For Reboot


The 1980s TV series FAME (based on the hit movie of the same name) has gotten the green light for a reboot over on Lifetime.

From NewNowNext:

Penning the show will be Josh Safran, who was an Executive Producer on Gossip Girl and served as a Showrunner during the season season of Smash.

The plot will remain the same: A group of talented teens face the up and downs of attending the prestigious New York High School of the Performing Arts, all expressed in a smattering of musical and dance numbers.

First airing in 1982, the original series ran for six seasons, starring Debbie Allen. Supporting players during the show’s seven year run included a young Janet Jackson and recent Tony Award-winner, Michael Cerveris.

Nigel Lythgoe (So You Think You Can Dance, American Idol) is also attached as an executive producer.

You'll recall in 2009 a remake of the series totally flopped.

The original movie was raw, edgy (for it's time) and was a part of my teenage landscape as a performer. It rang true on so many levels. For many of my generation in the arts, it evoked a visceral reaction.

To this day, I still "get" that ineffable, hard to explain thing that makes us all want to express ourselves in the arts.

Fingers crossed the powers that be find a way to communicate THAT to a new audience.

Monday, January 12, 2015

Workout For The Waist


I'm not sure what's more fascinating here:

• The "exercises" done here that clearly did not get these men in shape

• The fact that men actually wore shorts that short anywhere but Fire Island

• The breathy voice-over and music that belong in an 80s porn flick


(h/t kenneth in the 212)

Sunday, June 8, 2014

Video compilation: 1980s News Clips on Gay Rights


Dale Evans at SuchIsLife on YouTube has put together an amazing time capsule of the 1980s via  news reports including topics that range from gay rights to AIDS to housing and immigration issues to Barney Frank to gay pride parades.