HIV is typically transmitted through unprotected sex or intravenous drug use, and is often associated with marginalized groups such as gay men, drug users and sex workers. For these reasons, and also because of fears of contagion, people living with HIV are frequently subjected to stigma and discrimination.[3] Publicity campaigns around the world have aimed to counter HIV-related prejudices and misconceptions and to replace them with an accurate understanding that helps to prevent new infections. These efforts have been aided by various celebrities—including American basketball star Magic Johnson and South African judge Edwin Cameron—who have publicly announced that they are HIV-positive.[4]
Name |
Life |
Comments |
Reference |
Amanda Blake |
(1929–1989) |
American actress best remembered for her role as Kitty Russell in the television series Gunsmoke. |
[5] |
Jim J. Bullock |
(born 1955) |
American actor who starred in the sitcom Too Close for Comfort. |
[6] |
Merritt Butrick |
(1959-1989) |
American actor best remembered for playing Captain Kirk's son in the films Star Trek II and III. |
[7] |
Ian Charleson |
(1949–1990) |
British actor whose best-known role was the part of athlete Eric Liddell in the film Chariots of Fire. |
[8] |
Brad Davis |
(1949–1991) |
American actor, played the part of Billy Hayes in the film Midnight Express. |
[9] |
Robert Drivas |
(1938–1986) |
American film, television and stage actor. |
[10] |
Denholm Elliott |
(1922–1992) |
British actor; won three BAFTA awards as best supporting actor for Trading Places, A Private Function and Defence of the Realm, as well as an Academy Award nomination for A Room with a View. |
[5] |
Richard Frank |
(1953–1995) |
American television and motion picture actor best known as Father Vogler in the film Amadeus |
[11] |
Leonard Frey |
(1938–1988) |
American Broadway and film actor, earned an Academy Award nomination as Best Supporting Actor in the film version of Fiddler on the Roof. |
[5] |
Tom Fuccello |
(1936–1993) |
American actor, known for his role as Dave Culver in the television series Dallas. |
[12] |
Kevin Peter Hall |
(1955–1991) |
American actor, played in Predator and Harry and the Hendersons. |
[13][14] |
Christian Haren |
(1935-1997) |
American actor and model best known for portraying the Marlboro Man in print advertisements. |
[15] |
Rock Hudson |
(1925–1985) |
American actor, first major American celebrity to publicly disclose HIV status. |
[16] |
Michael Jeter |
(1952–2003) |
American film and theatre, won a Tony Award in 1990 for the musical Grand Hotel. |
[5] |
Larry Kert |
(1930–1991) |
American film and theatre actor |
[17] |
Irving Allen Lee |
(1948–1992) |
American soap opera and musical actor. |
[18] |
Tom McBride |
(1952–1995) |
American actor and model; best known for his role in Friday the 13th Part 2 and for his modeling stint as the Marlboro Man |
[19] |
John Megna |
(1952–1995) |
American former child actor, To Kill a Mockingbird. |
[20] |
Cookie Mueller |
(1949–1989) |
American actor and writer who featured in many of filmmaker John Waters' early films. |
[8] |
Timothy Patrick Murphy |
(1959–1988) |
American actor, played the role of Mickey Trotter in the television series Dallas |
[5] |
David Oliver |
(1962–1991) |
American actor, played in Another World and A Year in the Life |
[21] |
Ilka Tanya Payán |
(1943–1996) |
Dominican born American actress, attorney and activist. She was one of the first Latino celebrities to publicly disclose her status. |
[22] |
Anthony Perkins |
(1932–1992) |
American actor best known for his role as Norman Bates in the Alfred Hitchcock film Psycho. |
[5] |
Keith Prentice |
(1940–1992) |
American theatre and soap opera actor. |
[23] |
Kurt Raab |
(1941–1988) |
German actor known for his work with cult film director Rainer Werner Fassbinder. |
[24] |
Dack Rambo |
(1941–1994) |
American actor who played Jack Ewing in the television series Dallas. |
[5] |
Gene Anthony Ray |
(1962–2003) |
American actor and dancer; best known for his portrayal of the street smart dancer Leroy in the 1980 motion picture Fame and the television spin-off. |
[25] |
Robert Reed |
(1932–1992) |
American actor; played the role of Mike Brady on The Brady Bunch. |
[5] |
Tony Richardson |
(1928–1991) |
British film director; received two Academy Awards (Best Director and Best Picture) for Tom Jones (1963). |
[5] |
Larry Riley |
(1952–1992) |
American actor; played the role of Frank Williams in the soap opera Knots Landing |
[8] |
Howard Rollins |
(1950–1996) |
American actor, nominated for the 1981 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in the film Ragtime |
[26] |
Tommy Sexton |
(1955–1993) |
Canadian actor and comedian. |
[27] |
Ray Sharkey |
(1952–1993) |
American actor; won a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for his performance in The Idolmaker. |
[5] |
Paul Shenar |
(1936–1989) |
American film and theatre actor; played in the film Scarface. |
[5] |
Stephen Stucker |
(1947–1986) |
American actor and comedian; best known for the Airplane! films. |
[5] |
Tom Villard |
(1953–1994) |
American actor. |
[5] |
Name |
Life |
Comments |
Reference |
Zackie Achmat |
(born 1962) |
South African AIDS activist; founder and chairman of the Treatment Action Campaign. |
[28] |
Rebekka Armstrong |
(born 1967) |
American former Playboy Playmate and HIV/AIDS educator. |
[29] |
Richard Berkowitz |
(born 1955) |
American activist and author |
[30] |
Marvelyn Brown |
(born 1984) |
American activist and author |
[31] |
Gideon Byamugisha |
(born 1959) |
First openly HIV positive religious leader in Africa; founder of the ANERELA and winner of the 2009 Niwano Peace Prize. |
[32][33] |
Michael Callen |
(1955–1993) |
American AIDS activist, author and singer–songwriter. In 1983 he testified before the President's Commission on AIDS and before both houses of the United States Congress. |
[34] |
Bobbi Campbell |
(1952–1984) |
American AIDS activist and one of the first people to publicly acknowledge his HIV infection. |
[35] |
Paddy Chew |
(1960–1999) |
Singaporean AIDS activist. He was the first person in Singapore to publicise his HIV-positive status. |
[36] |
Dolzura Cortez |
(19??–1992) |
Filipina AIDS activist. She was the first person in the Philippines to publicise her HIV-positive status. |
[37] |
Joey DiPaolo |
(born 1979) |
American AIDS activist who won a court case to remain at his school. He co-founded the Joey DiPaolo AIDS Foundation. |
[38] |
Stephen Gendin |
(1966–2000) |
American AIDS activist involved in ACT UP and other groups; columnist for POZ Magazine. |
[39] |
Alison Gertz |
(1966–1992) |
American AIDS activist. She was voted Woman of the Year by Esquire magazine. |
[40] |
Elizabeth Glaser |
(1947–1994) |
American AIDS activist for pediatric causes, and wife of actor Paul Michael Glaser. She co-founded the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation. |
[41] |
Bob Hattoy |
(1950–2007) |
American activist on issues related to gay rights, AIDS and the environment. |
[42] |
Nkosi Johnson |
(1989–2001) |
South African child, who made a powerful impact on public perceptions of the pandemic and its effects before his death at the age of twelve. |
[43] |
Cass Mann |
(1948–2009) |
AIDS activist/dissident and founder of the holistic AIDS charity Positively Healthy. One of the first people diagnosed HIV positive in 1985. |
[44] |
Eliana Martinez |
(1981–1989) |
American girl whose mother appealed a court ruling that the girl would only be allowed to be in school if she would be in a glass cage during classes. |
[45] |
Simon Nkoli |
(1957–1998) |
South African anti-apartheid, gay rights and AIDS activist. |
[46] |
Ricky Ray
Robert Ray
Randy Ray |
(1977–1992)
(1978–2000)
(born 1979) |
American brothers who were the subject of a federal court battle against the DeSoto County School Board to allow them to attend public school despite their diagnoses. |
[47] |
Jorge Saavedra Lopez |
(19??—) |
Mexican AIDS activist and director of CENSIDA, Mexico's top AIDS agency, since 2003. |
[48] |
Beatrice Were |
(born c. 1966) |
Ugandan AIDS activist and co-founder of the non-governmental organization NACWOLA. |
[49] |
Ryan White |
(1971–1990) |
American teenager and AIDS activist. The Ryan White Care Act, a federal legislation that addresses the unmet health needs of persons living with HIV/AIDS in the United States, was named after him. |
[50] |
Name |
Life |
Comments |
Reference |
Peter Adair |
(1943–1996) |
American documentary filmmaker. |
[60] |
Néstor Almendros |
(1930–1992) |
Spanish born cinematographer, director and human rights activist; won the Academy Award for Best Cinematography for the film Days of Heaven. |
[61] |
Emile Ardolino |
(1943–1993) |
American film director and producer; directed the films Dirty Dancing and Sister Act. |
[62] |
Howard Ashman |
(1950–1991) |
American playwright and lyricist; along with music composer Alan Menken he received two Grammy Awards, two Golden Globes and two Oscars for best song for the films The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast. |
[63] |
Rob Astbury |
(born 1948) |
Former Australian television sports presenter. |
[64] |
Dave Brindle |
(19??—) |
Canadian television journalist; anchor for CBC Newsworld. |
[65] |
David Brudnoy |
(1940–2004) |
American talk radio host in Boston from 1976 to 2004. |
[66] |
Tom Cassidy |
(1950-1991) |
Business anchor for CNN and founder of the weekend show 'Pinnacle' in 1982. |
[67] |
Kenny Everett |
(1944–1995) |
British disc jockey and television entertainer; starred and wrote in his own music and comedy television series The Kenny Everett Television Show. |
[68] |
Vincent Hanley |
(19??–1987) |
Irish RTÉ radio DJ and television presenter |
[69] |
Colin Higgins |
(1941–1988) |
American screenwriter, director, and producer; wrote the screenplay for the 1971 film Harold and Maude. |
[8] |
Richard Hunt |
(1951–1992) |
American Muppet puppeteer; played the character of Scooter on The Muppet Show. |
[70] |
Derek Jarman |
(1942–1994) |
British film director, stage designer, artist, and writer. |
[71] |
Peter Jepson-Young |
(1957–1992) |
Canadian medical doctor who promoted AIDS and HIV awareness and education in the early 1990s through his regular segment on CBC Television news broadcasts. |
[72] |
Melvin Lindsey |
(1955–1992) |
American radio and television personality in the Washington, D.C. area; pioneered the Quiet Storm radio format. |
[73] |
Roy London |
(1943–1993) |
American acting coach, actor and director. |
[74] |
Lance Loud |
(1951–2001) |
American columnist; best known for his role in An American Family, widely considered television's first reality show. |
[75] |
James K. Lyons |
(1961–2007) |
American actor and film editor, film "Far from Heaven" |
[76] |
Michael McDowell |
(1950–1999) |
American novelist and screenwriter. |
[77] |
Andy Milligan |
(1929–1991) |
American playwright, screenwriter and film director. |
[78] |
Norman René |
(1951-1996) |
American film director and producer |
[79] |
Marlon Riggs |
(1957–1994) |
American author and documentary filmmaker. |
[80] |
Max Robinson |
(1939–1988) |
American journalist; was the first African American network news anchor for ABC World News Tonight. |
[81] |
Anthony Sabatino |
(1944–1993) |
American art director, won an Emmy Award for his work on the television show Fun House. |
[82] |
Murray Salem |
(1950–1998) |
American television actor and screen writer; wrote the script for the film Kindergarten Cop. |
[83] |
Bill Sherwood |
(1952–1990) |
American filmmaker, known for the film Parting Glances. |
[8] |
Jack Smith |
(1932–1989) |
American underground film director. |
[8] |
Michael Sundin |
(1961–1989) |
British television presenter and actor; was presenter of the BBC children television show Blue Peter. |
[84] |
Joseph Vásquez |
(1962–1995) |
American independent filmmaker. |
[85] |
Pedro Zamora |
(1972–1994) |
American television personality; cast member of MTV's The Real World reality series. |
[86] |
Name |
Life |
Comments |
Reference |
Peter Allen |
(1944–1992) |
Australian born songwriter and singer; wrote the expatriate's anthem "I Still Call Australia Home". |
[5] |
Andy Bell |
(born 1964) |
British musician; singer of the synthpop duo Erasure. |
[87] |
Nadja Benaissa |
(born 1982) |
German musician; member of the girl group No Angels. |
[88] |
Black Randy |
(1952-1988) |
American leader of west coast art-punk soul band Black Randy and the Metrosquad. |
[89] |
Jorge Bolet |
(1914–1990) |
Cuban pianist and conductor, well remembered for his performances and recordings of large-scale Romantic music. |
[90] |
Cazuza |
(1958–1990) |
Brazilian singer and composer. |
[91] |
Stuart Challender |
(1947–1991) |
Australian conductor; second Australian-born Chief Conductor of the Sydney Symphony (1987-91), |
[92] |
David Cole |
(1963–1995) |
American dance music producer, part of C+C Music Factory |
[93] |
Patrick Cowley |
(1950–1982) |
American synthesizer artist. |
[94] |
Robbin Crosby |
(1960–2002) |
American guitarist nicknamed "The King", member of the glam metal band Ratt. |
[95] |
Tony De Vit |
(1957–1998) |
British club disc jockey |
[96] |
Bobby DeBarge |
(1956–1995) |
Singer, member of the American musical band DeBarge. |
[97] |
Kiki Djan |
(1957–2004) |
Ghanaian singer, member of the musical band Osibisa. |
[98] |
Eazy-E |
(1963–1995) |
American rapper, member of gangsta rap group N.W.A. |
[99] |
Youri Egorov |
(1954–1988) |
Soviet classical pianist, defected to the United States. |
[13][100] |
Patrick Esposito Di Napoli |
(1964–1994) |
French Canadian singer |
[101] |
Tom Fogerty |
(1941–1990) |
American musician who played rhythm guitar in Creedence Clearwater Revival, elder brother of John Fogerty, the lead singer and guitar player in that band. |
[102] |
Andy Fraser |
(born 1952) |
British musician who played bass guitar in the influential 1970s group Free. Wrote the hit "All Right Now." |
[103] |
Ray Gillen |
(1959–1993) |
American singer, best known for his work with the bands Black Sabbath and Badlands. |
[104] |
Paul Giovanni |
(1933–1996) |
American playwright, actor, director, singer and musician, best known for writing the music for the film The Wicker Man |
[105] |
Kenny Greene |
(1969–2001) |
American R&B singer from the group Intro. |
[106] |
Howard Greenfield |
(1936–1986) |
American songwriter; was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1991. |
[107] |
Steven Grossman |
(1952–1991) |
American singer-songwriter from the 1970s. |
[108] |
Calvin Hampton |
(1938–1984) |
American organist and sacred music composer. |
[109] |
Dan Hartman |
(1950–1994) |
American singer, songwriter and record producer. |
[5] |
Ofra Haza |
(1957–2000) |
Israeli singer; gained international recognition with the single "Im Nin'alu". |
[110] |
Jerry Herman |
(born 1933) |
American composer/lyricist; composed the scores for the hit Broadway musicals Hello, Dolly!, Mame, and La Cage aux Folles. |
[111] |
Fred Hersch |
(born 1955) |
American contemporary jazz pianist. |
[112] |
Paul Jabara |
(1948–1992) |
American actor and songwriter: wrote Donna Summer's Oscar-winning hit "Last Dance." |
[113] |
Paul Jacobs |
(1930–1983) |
American pianist. |
[8] |
Jobriath |
(1946–1983) |
American Glam Rock musician. |
[114] |
Holly Johnson |
(born 1960) |
British singer, former lead singer of Frankie Goes to Hollywood. |
[115] |
Bernard Kabanda |
(1959–1999) |
Ugandan guitarist. |
[13][116] |
Fela Kuti |
(1938–1997) |
Nigerian musician and political activist. |
[117] |
Héctor Lavoe |
(1946–1993) |
Puerto Rican salsa singer and composer. |
[118] |
Paul Lekakis |
(1966-) |
American singer and actor |
[93] |
Liberace |
(1919–1987) |
American pianist and entertainer. |
[119] |
Andreas Lundstedt |
(born 1972) |
Swedish musician best-known as a member of the pop-disco group, Alcazar. |
[120] |
Philly Lutaaya |
(1951–1989) |
Ugandan composer and musician, AIDS prevention activist in Africa. |
[121] |
Billy Lyall |
(1953–1989) |
British keyboard player; member of Pilot (band) and the Bay City Rollers. |
[122] |
Freddie Mercury |
(1946–1991) |
British musician and lead singer of the band Queen. |
[123] |
Jacques Morali |
(1947–1991) |
French disco composer, and co-creator of the Village People. |
[5] |
Alan Murphy |
(1953–1989) |
English guitarist. Worked with Kate Bush and Level 42, among others. |
[124] |
Klaus Nomi |
(1944–1983) |
German countertenor singer. |
[125] |
Stephen Oliver |
(1950–1992) |
English composer; known for his operas. |
[126] |
Chuck Panozzo |
(born 1948) |
American bass player; founding member of the rock band Styx. |
[127] |
Lonnie Pitchford |
(1955–1998) |
American blues musician and instrument maker. |
[128] |
Louis Potgieter |
(1951–1993) |
South African singer, fronted the German novelty act Dschinghis Khan. |
[129] |
Sharon Redd |
(1945–1992) |
American disco singer. |
[130] |
Scott Ross |
(1951–1989) |
American harpsichordist. |
[131] |
Frankie Ruiz |
(1958–1998) |
Puerto Rican salsa singer and composer. |
[132] |
Arthur Russell |
(1951–1992) |
American disco artist and cellist. |
[133] |
Renato Russo |
(1960–1996) |
Brazilian founder and leader of the rock band, Legião Urbana. |
[134] |
Mano Solo |
(1963–2010) |
French singer |
[135] |
Jermaine Stewart |
(1957–1997) |
American pop singer. |
[5] |
Sylvester |
(1944–1988) |
American disco artist and drag performer. |
[136] |
Umanji |
(c. 1968–2008) |
South African musician and songwriter. |
[137] |
António Variações |
(1944–1984) |
Portuguese musician and songwriter. First known case in Portugal among famous people. |
[138] |
Ricky Wilson |
(1953–1985) |
American guitarist; original member of The B-52's. |
[139] |
Zombo |
(1979–2008) |
South African singer, songwriter and music producer, best known as a member of kwaito group Abashante. |
[140] |
Name |
Life |
Comments |
Reference |
Edwin Cameron |
(born 1953) |
South African Supreme Court of Appeal judge. |
[141] |
Roy Cohn |
(1927–1986) |
American lawyer; came to prominence during the investigations by Senator Joseph McCarthy into alleged Communism in the U.S. government, especially the Army–McCarthy hearings. |
[142] |
Brian Coyle |
(1944-1991) |
Minneapolis City Council member, president of the City Council. |
[143] |
Terry Dolan |
(1950–1986) |
American New Right political activist who founded and chaired the National Conservative Political Action Committee (NCPAC). |
[144] |
James K. Dressel |
(1943–1992) |
American state representative for the Republican Party in the Michigan legislature; gay rights activist. |
[145] |
Thomas Duane |
(born 1955) |
American politician; first openly HIV-positive member of the New York City Council and the New York State Senate |
[146] |
Nicholas Eden |
(1930–1985) |
British Conservative politician and son of Prime Minister Anthony Eden |
[147] |
Paul Gann |
(1912–1989) |
American politician, co-author of California Proposition 13 (1978) |
[148] |
Greg Harris |
(born 1955) |
American politician from Illinois. |
[149] |
Richard A. Heyman |
(1935–1994) |
American politician; mayor of Key West, Florida in 1983-85 and 1987-89. |
[150] |
Ryuhei Kawada |
(born 1976) |
Japanese member of parliament who sued the government for failing to prevent HIV transmission through tainted blood products. |
[151] |
Michael Kühnen |
(1955–1991) |
German leader of the neo-Nazi scene. |
[152] |
Makgatho Mandela |
(1950–2005) |
South African attorney; was the son of former South African president Nelson Mandela. |
[153] |
Larry McKeon |
(1944-2008) |
American politician and member of the Illinois House of Representatives. |
[154] |
Stewart McKinney |
(1931–1987) |
American Congressman; represented Connecticut in the United States House of Representatives from 1971 until his death. |
[155] |
Chris Smith |
(born 1951) |
British Labour Party politician; member of the House of Lords and former Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport. |
[156] |
Name |
Life |
Comments |
Reference |
Mark Anthony |
(born 1967) |
British pornographic actor. |
[157] |
Brooke Ashley |
(born 1973) |
South Korean born American pornographic actress. |
[158] |
Bianca Biaggi |
(born 1964) |
Brazilian adult film actress. |
[159] |
Dawson |
(born 1973) |
American pornographic actor |
[160]. |
Jessica Dee |
(born 1978) |
American pornographic actress; see Darren James entry. |
[161] |
Tricia Devereaux |
(born 1975) |
American pornographic actress. |
[162] |
Karen Dior |
(1967–2004) |
American transvestite pornographic actress. |
[163] |
Casey Donovan |
(1943–1987) |
American pornographic actor. |
[164] |
John Holmes |
(1944–1988) |
American pornographic actor; one of the most famous male porn stars of all time. |
[158] |
Darren James |
(born 1964) |
American pornographic actor; transmitted to Lara Roxx, Miss Arroyo and Jessica Dee, causing an international pornography-industry AIDS scare. |
[164] |
Lisa De Leeuw |
(1958–1993) |
pornographic actor |
[165] |
Miss Arroyo |
(born 1977) |
American pornographic actress; see Darren James entry. |
[166] |
Wade Nichols |
(1946–1985) |
American pornographic actor and soap opera actor; committed suicide after receiving HIV diagnosis. |
[167] |
Scott O'Hara |
(1961–1998) |
American pornographic actor, poet and editor/publisher. |
[164] |
Al Parker |
(1952–1992) |
American pornographic actor, director and producer. |
[168] |
Johnny Rahm |
(1965–2004) |
American pornographic actor. |
[169] |
Lara Roxx |
(born 1982) |
Canadian pornographic actress; see Darren James entry. |
[164] |
Aiden Shaw |
(born 1966) |
British pornographic actor. |
[170] |
John Stagliano |
(born 1951) |
American pornographic actor; best known for his Buttman series of films, which is credited with sparking the gonzo adult film genre. |
[171] |
Joey Stefano |
(1968–1994) |
American pornographic actor; was a model in Madonna's book Sex. |
[172] |
Marc Wallice |
(born 1959) |
American adult film actor. |
[158] |
Name |
Life |
Comments |
Reference |
Alvin Ailey |
(1931–1989) |
American modern dancer and choreographer. |
[198] |
A. J. Antoon |
(1944–1992) |
American stage director who won a Tony Award in 1972 for directing the play That Championship Season. |
[8] |
Rick Aviles |
(1952–1995) |
American Stand-up comedian and actor. |
[5] |
Tony Azito |
(1948–1995) |
American dancer and character actor. |
[199] |
Alan Bowne |
(1945–1989) |
American playwright and author. |
[200] |
Michael Bennett |
(1943–1987) |
American musical theater director, choreographer, and dancer; was the choreographer of the Broadway production of A Chorus Line. |
[5] |
Christopher Chadman |
(1948–1995) |
American dancer and choreographer |
[201] |
Gerald Chapman |
(1950-1987) |
English theater director and educator |
[202] |
Robert Chesley |
(1943–1990) |
American playwright, theater critic and musical composer. |
[8] |
Dorian Corey |
(circa 1937-1993) |
American drag queen; best known for his appearance in the documentary film Paris Is Burning. |
[203] |
Martin de Maat |
(1948–2001) |
American teacher and artistic director at The Second City in Chicago. |
[204] |
Jorge Donn |
(1947–1992) |
Argentine ballet dancer with the Maurice Béjart ballet company and artistic director of the Béjart's Ballet of the 20th Century. |
[8] |
Ulysses Dove |
(1947–1996) |
American contemporary choreographer. |
[205] |
Ethyl Eichelberger |
(1945–1990) |
American drag performer, playwright and actor. |
[8] |
Wayland Flowers |
(1939–1988) |
American entertainer and ventriloquist. |
[206] |
Christopher Gillis |
(1951–1993) |
Canadian dancer and choreographer; formed the Paul Taylor Dance Company. |
[207] |
Choo San Goh |
(1948–1987) |
Singaporean choreographer of ballet. |
[8] |
Hibiscus |
(1949–1982) |
American founder of the psychedelic drag queen troupe The Cockettes. |
[208] |
René Highway |
(1954–1990) |
Canadian Cree actor and dancer. |
[209] |
John Hirsch |
(1930–1989) |
Hungarian-Canadian theatre director |
[210] |
Robert Joffrey |
(1930–1988) |
American dancer, teacher, producer, and choreographer. |
[211] |
Gibson Kente |
(1932–2004) |
South African playwright; known as the Father of Black Theatre in South Africa. |
[212] |
Larry Kert |
(1930–1991) |
American Broadway performer; played in West Side Story and Company. |
[213] |
Charles Ludlam |
(1943–1987) |
American actor and playwright. |
[8] |
Jean-Louis Morin |
(1953–1995) |
Canadian choreographer and dancer |
[214] |
Willi Ninja |
(1961–2006) |
American dancer and choreographer; best known for his appearance in the documentary film Paris Is Burning. |
[215] |
Rudolf Nureyev |
(1938–1993) |
Russian ballet dancer; is regarded as one of the greatest male dancers of the 20th century. |
[216] |
Ongina |
(born 1982) |
Filipino American drag queen and spokesperson for MAC Cosmetics |
[217] |
Michael Peters |
(1948–1994) |
American choreographer; choreographed the fifteen-minute Michael Jackson music video "Thriller". |
[218] |
Craig Russell |
(1948–1990) |
Canadian female impersonator. |
[8] |
John Sex |
(1956–1989) |
American cabaret singer and performance artist. |
[13][219] |
Ron Vawter |
(1949–1994) |
American actor; founding member of the artists ensemble The Wooster Group. |
[220] |
Anji Xtravaganza |
(circa 1966 - 1993) |
American drag queen; best known for his appearance in the documentary film Paris Is Burning. |
[221] |
Arnie Zane |
(1947-1988) |
Co-founder with Bill T. Jones of Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company |
[222] |
Name |
Life |
Comments |
Reference |
Carlos Almaraz |
(1941–1989) |
Mexican American artist and an early proponent of the Chicano street arts movement. |
[8] |
Mario Amaya |
(1933–1986) |
American art critic, museum director, magazine editor |
[223] |
Richard Amsel |
(1947-1985) |
American graphic artist and illustrator best known for his iconic movie posters from the 1970s and 1980s. |
[224] |
Joe Average |
(born 1957) |
Vancouver-based Canadian visual artist |
[225] |
Way Bandy |
(1941–1986) |
American celebrity makeup artist. |
[8] |
Crawford Barton |
(1943–1993) |
American photographer whose work is known for documenting the blooming of the openly gay culture in San Francisco, in the 1960s and 1970s. |
Tom Bianchi |
(born 1945) |
American writer and photographer who specializes in male nude photography. |
[226] |
Crawford Barton |
(1943–1993) |
American photographer whose work is known for documenting the blooming of the openly gay culture in San Francisco, in the 1960s and 1970s. |
[80] |
Leigh Bowery |
(1961–1994) |
Australian performance artist, fashion designer, dancer and model. |
[126] |
Gia Carangi |
(1960–1986) |
American supermodel of the late 1970s and early 1980s. |
[227] |
Tina Chow |
(1951–1992) |
American restaurateur and model. |
[228] |
Perry Ellis |
(1940–1986) |
American fashion designer; his name still represents the sportswear fashion house he founded in the mid-1970s. |
[229] |
Vincent Fourcade |
(1934–1992) |
French American interior designer. |
[8] |
Félix González-Torres |
(1957–1996) |
Cuban-American artist. |
[230] |
Halston |
(1932–1990) |
American fashion designer. |
[231] |
Keith Haring |
(1958–1990) |
American artist social activist whose work responded to the New York street culture of the 1980s. |
[232] |
Sighsten Herrgård |
(1943–1989) |
Swedish fashion designer; first Swedish celebrity to publicize his HIV-positive status. |
[233] |
Peter Hujar |
(1934–1987) |
American photographer. |
[234] |
Patrick Kelly |
(1954–1990) |
American fashion designer |
[235] |
Robert Mapplethorpe |
(1946–1989) |
American photographer. |
[236] |
Frank Moore |
(1953–2002) |
American artist; designer of the red ribbon symbol of AIDS awareness. |
[237] |
Tommy Nutter |
(1943–1992) |
British Savile Row tailor and fashion designer. |
[8] |
Felix Partz |
(1945–1994) |
Canadian artist, member of the artist collective General Idea. |
[238] |
Joel Resnicoff |
(1948-1986) |
American artist and fashion illustrator. |
[239] |
Herb Ritts |
(1952–2002) |
American photographer and video director. |
[5] |
David Seidner |
(1957–1999) |
American photographer. |
[240] |
Willi Smith |
(1948–1987) |
American fashion designer. |
[241] |
David Wojnarowicz |
(1954–1992) |
American artist, writer and activist. |
[8] |
Jorge Zontal |
(1944–1994) |
Canadian artist, member of the artist collective General Idea. |
[238] |
Name |
Life |
Comments |
Reference |
Sam D'Allesandro |
(1956–1988) |
American poet and fiction writer. |
[242] |
Gordon Stewart Anderson |
(c. 1958–1991) |
Canadian writer whose novel The Toronto You Are Leaving was published by his mother 15 years after his death. |
[243] |
Reinaldo Arenas |
(1943–1990) |
Cuban novelist who committed suicide while living in New York. |
[244] |
Jean-Paul Aron |
(1925–1988) |
French writer and journalist; One of the first people of renown in France to die of AIDS. |
[245] |
Isaac Asimov |
(1920–1992) |
Russian-born American author and biochemist, a highly successful and exceptionally prolific writer best known for his works of science fiction and for his popular science books. He became infected with HIV through a tainted blood transfusion during his 1983 triple heart bypass surgery. |
[246] |
Simon Bailey |
(1955–1995) |
British Anglican priest and writer. |
[247] |
John Boswell |
(1947–1994) |
American historian and a professor at Yale University. |
[248] |
Harold Brodkey |
(1930–1996) |
American author whose works include the memoir This Wild Darkness: The Story of My Death, which documents his battle with AIDS. |
[5] |
Bruce Chatwin |
(1940–1989) |
British novelist and travel writer, best known for the influential In Patagonia. |
[249] |
Cyril Collard |
(1957–1993) |
French writer, actor and director of his autobiographical novel and film Les Nuits fauves (Savage Nights). |
[250] |
Timothy Conigrave |
(1959–1994) |
Australian playwright and author of memoir Holding the Man. |
[251] |
Serge Daney |
(1944–1992) |
French influential film critic. |
[8] |
Nicholas Dante |
(1941–1991) |
American Tony Award and Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright best known for the musical A Chorus Line |
[252] |
Tory Dent |
(1958–2005) |
American poet, art critic and commentator on the AIDS crisis. |
[253] |
David B. Feinberg |
(1956–1994) |
American writer and AIDS activist with ACT UP. |
[254] |
Michel Foucault |
(1926–1984) |
French philosopher and writer; known for his critical studies of various social institutions. |
[255] |
Jaime Gil de Biedma |
(1929–1990) |
Spanish poet |
[256] |
Hervé Guibert |
(1955–1990) |
French writer and filmmaker. |
[257] |
Essex Hemphill |
(1957–1995) |
American poet and activist. |
[258] |
Guy Hocquenghem |
(1944–1988) |
French writer and philosopher |
[13][259] |
Arturo Islas |
(1938–1991) |
Mexican-American professor of English and writer. |
[260] |
Larry Kramer |
(born 1935) |
American dramatist, author and gay rights activist. |
[261] |
Didier Lestrade |
(born 1958) |
French journalist and author. |
[262] |
Peter McGehee |
(1955–1991) |
American-born Canadian writer |
[263] |
Peter McWilliams |
(1940–2000) |
American writer and libertarian activist. |
[264] |
James Merrill |
(1926–1995) |
American Pulitzer Prize winning poet. |
[265] |
Ernest Matthew Mickler |
(1940–1988) |
American author of the cookbook White Trash Cooking. |
[266] |
Paul Monette |
(1945–1995) |
American novelist and poet. |
[267] |
John Preston |
(1945–1994) |
American author of gay erotica and an editor of gay nonfiction anthologies. |
[268] |
Manuel Ramos Otero |
(1948–1990) |
Gay Puerto Rican short story writer |
[269] |
Vito Russo |
(1946–1990) |
American gay activist, film historian and author. |
[8] |
Barbara Samson |
(born 1975) |
French poet who was infected with HIV at the age of seventeen. Her story was made into the French television film Being Seventeen. |
[270] |
Severo Sarduy |
(1937-1993) |
Gay Cuban poet and author |
[271] |
Dick Scanlan |
(born 1961) |
American librettist, writer and actor. |
[272] |
Nicholas Schaffner |
(1953–1991) |
American author, wrote books about Pink Floyd and The Beatles. |
[273] |
Jay Scott |
(1949–1993) |
Canadian film critic. |
[274] |
Randy Shilts |
(1951–1994) |
American journalist and author; wrote the book And the Band Played On which documented the outbreak of AIDS in the United States. |
[5] |
Ian Stephens |
(died 1996) |
Canadian poet and spoken word artist (Diary of a Trademark) |
[275] |
Andrew Sullivan |
(born 1963) |
British-American journalist and blogger. |
[276] |
Yvonne Vera |
(1964–2005) |
Zimbabwean author. |
[277] |
Matthew Ward |
(1951–1990) |
American English/French translator noted for his 1989 rendition of Albert Camus' The Stranger. |
[278] |
Edmund White |
(born 1940) |
American novelist, short-story writer and critic. |
[279] |
LeRoy Whitfield |
(1969–2005) |
American writer and AIDS activist who chronicled his personal experience with HIV infection and AIDS. |
[280] |
Alex Wilson |
(1953–1993) |
American-born Canadian writer, teacher, landscape designer, and community activist. |
[281] |
Name |
Life |
Comments |
Reference |
Sheldon Andelson |
(1931–1987) |
American regent of the University of California. |
[282] |
Victoria Arellano |
(1984–2007) |
Mexican immigrant who died from HIV-related illness while in custody of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement |
[283] |
Kuwasi Balagoon |
(1946–1986) |
American member of the Black Liberation Army. |
[284] |
Nozipho Bhengu |
(1974–2006) |
South African who became famous for opting not to take antiretroviral medication after being influenced to do so by health minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang. |
[285] |
José María Di Bello |
(born 1968) |
One of the first gay Argentine citizens (along with partner Alex Freyre) to be granted right to marry in Argentina |
[286] |
Dean Faiello |
(born 1959) |
American criminal and murderer |
[287] |
Althea Flynt |
(1953–1987) |
American; wife of publishing magnate and Hustler founder Larry Flynt. |
[288] |
Xavier Fourcade |
(1927–1987) |
French American contemporary art dealer. Brother of Vincent Fourcade who also died of AIDS. |
[289] |
Kendall Francois |
(born 1971) |
Haitian American serial killer. |
[290] |
Alex Freyre |
(born 1970) |
One of the first gay Argentine citizens (along with partner José María Di Bello) to be granted right to marry in Argentina |
[291] |
Eve van Grafhorst |
(1982–1993) |
Australian child, forced to migrate to New Zealand due to ostracism from her local community in Australia. |
[292] |
David Hampton |
(1964–2003) |
American con artist. His story became the inspiration for a play and later a film, titled Six Degrees of Separation. |
[293] |
Terry Higgins |
(1945–1982) |
One of the first British people to die of AIDS; gave his name to the Terrence Higgins Trust. |
[294] |
Gervase Jackson-Stops |
(1947–1995) |
British architectural historian and journalist. |
[126] |
Michael Lupo |
(1953–1995) |
Italian serial killer; in revenge for his contracting HIV he murdered four homosexuals. |
[295] |
Christine Maggiore |
(1957-2008) |
American AIDS denialist who refused interventions to reduce the risk of transmitting HIV to her children; her three-year-old daughter died of complications of AIDS in 2005. |
[296][297] |
Steve Maidhof |
(died 1991) |
American BDSM activist who was best known for founding the National Leather Association International. |
[298] |
Leonard Matlovich |
(1943–1988) |
American decorated Vietnam War veteran, fought U.S. military in 1975 for the right to serve as an openly gay man. |
[299] |
Kongulu Mobutu |
(c. 1970–1998) |
Son of Mobutu Sese Seko, former president of the Democratic Republic of the Congo; officer in the presidential guard. |
[300] |
Ed Savitz |
(1942–1993) |
American businessman accused of sexually abusing children. |
[301] |
Michael Shernoff |
(1951–2008) |
American mental health professional who wrote extensively on HIV/AIDS prevention and the mental health concerns of gay men. |
[302] |
Lucille Teasdale-Corti |
(1929–1996) |
Canadian physician, surgeon and international aid worker, who worked in Uganda and contributed to the development of medical services in the country. |
[303] |
Ösel Tendzin |
(died 1990) |
American Buddhist regent. |
[304] |