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photograph of Elton John with Elizabeth Taylor, is from here |
Elizabeth Taylor was a grand and bright star, a premiere Hollywood celebrity, who has always been in my life. I grew up watching her movies. But she most came to prominence for me when she became an AIDS activist. It was then she showed the depth of her humanity publicly, taking up a cause the president of the United States, Ronald Reagan, wouldn't touch. Most people didn't want to discuss the AIDS crisis of the mid-1980s because it was so linked to U.S. gay men's sexual lives. And gay men's sex lives is something the U.S. still has a problem with. But Elizabeth understood as much as anyone, this was a matter of life and death. No time to be prudish. No time to postpone conversations or action to stop the spread of AIDS. Unfortunately, AIDS continues to take the lives of so many people, disproportionately poor now, and African, and Black, and female, which is also why most of white Amerikkka won't discuss it.
She was an activist, and for that and so much more, I appreciate her and remember her fondly.
All that follows is from the
Los Angeles Times. The following article was written by Elaine Woo.Please click on the title just below to link back to the L.A. Times.
Elizabeth Taylor, star of stage and screen who married multiple times, became a successful businesswoman and helped to pioneer the fight against AIDS, dies of congestive heart failure.
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