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During my morning Twitter read today I read a post from Broadway World which was the text of a letter from Larry Kramer that is distributed to audiences at the conclusion of The Normal Heart performances. I read the play a few years ago–and see it with Will for the first time next Sunday. To say I was moved by it would be an understatement. I imagine I’ll be blown away even more seeing it play out on stage.

The play chronicles New York City at the beginning of the AIDS crisis as a group of friends work to get the real story of the epidemic told. This engagement is the first time in the show’s 25 year history that it has played Broadway. It debuted in 1985 at the Public Theatre and had a off-Broadway revival in 2004. This production grew out of a 25th Anniversary reading that was recently done.

The letter from Kramer, the play’s author, shows exactly how little has been done in the U.S., and around the world, over the past quarter century to stop HIV/AIDS.

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A letter from Larry Kramer

PLEASE KNOW

Thank you for coming to see our play.

Please know that everything in The Normal Heart happened. These were and are real people who lived and spoke and died, and are presented here as best I could. Several more have died since, including Bruce, whose name was Paul Popham, and Tommy, whose name was Rodger McFarlane and who become my best friend, and Emma, whose name was Dr. Linda Laubenstein. She died after a return bout of polio and another trip to an iron lung. Rodger, after building three gay/AIDS agencies from the ground up, committed suicide in despair. On his deathbed at Memorial, Paul called me (we’d not spoken since our last fight in this play) and told me to never stop fighting.

Four members of the original cast died as well, including my dear sweet friend Brad Davis, the original Ned, whom I knew from practically the moment he got off the bus from Florida, a shy kid so very intent on become a fine actor, which he did.

Please know that AIDS is a worldwide plague.

Please know that no country in the world, including this one, especially this one, has ever called it a plague or acknowledged it as a plague, or dealt with it as a plague.

Please know that there is no cure.

Please know that after all this time the amount of money being spent to find a cure is still miniscule, still almost invisible, still impossible to locate in any national health budget, and still totally uncoordinated.

Please know that here in America, case numbers continue to rise in every category. In much of the rest of the world – Russia, India, Southeast Asia, Africa – the numbers of the infected and the dying are so grotesquely high that they are rarely acknowledged.

Please know that all efforts at prevention and education continue their unending record of abject failure.

Please know that there is no one in charge of this plague. This is a war for which there is no general and for which there has never been a general. How can you win a war with no one in charge?

Please know that beginning with Ronald Reagan (who would not say the word ‘AIDS’ publicly for seven years), every single president has said nothing and done nothing, or in the case of the current president, says the right things and then doesn’t do them.

Please know that most medications for HIV/AIDS are inhumanly expensive and that government funding for the poor to obtain them is dwindling and often unavailable.

Please know that the pharmaceutical companies are among the most evil and greedy nightmares ever loosed on humankind. What ‘research’ they embark upon is calculated only toward finding newer drugs to keep us, just barely, from dying, but not to make us better or, god forbid, cured.

Please know that an awful lot of people have needlessly died and will continue to needlessly die because of any and all of the above.

Please know that the world has suffered at the very least some 75 million infections and 35 million deaths. When the action of the play that you have just seen begins, there were 41.

I have never seen such wrongs as this plague, in all its guises, represents, and continues to say about us all.

Larry Kramer

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I do the Braking the Cycle ride to help as best I can to shed light on this horrible disease and raise some much needed cash for the LGBT Community Center in NYC so they can provide critical services to those living with the disease and do outreach to help make sure others don’t become infected. Because I do the ride and the fundraising, I get to talk about these issues and hopefully raise some additional awareness. You can lend your support to the cause by donating to my 2011 ride today.

It’s great to see that The Normal Heart is also helping several excellent LGBT organizations during its limited run: The Actor’s FundamfAR (The Foundation for AIDS Research), Freedom to Marry, Friends in DeedHuman Rights Campaign and The Trevor Project.