‘I was living in terror for my life.’ Rupert Everett speaks about life as a gay man during the 80s AIDS crisis

‘I was living in terror for my life.’ Rupert Everett speaks about life as a gay man during the 80s AIDS crisis

Actor Rupert Everett has given a brutally honest interview to The Guardian, painting a picture of life as a gay man during the HIV and AIDS crisis of the 1980s.

The quotes make for essential reading, whether you were born before, during, or after the crisis.

The star of stage and screen, who has appeared in movies such as My Best Friend’s Wedding and A Royal Night Out, said: ‘That whole period, I was living in basic terror for my life.’

He furthermore added: ‘I’d had a very promiscuous sex life from the moment I arrived in London. I’d thrown myself into the gay world, coming from this convent background, and then AIDS began and there was no way of finding out if you carried the virus until 1985 – the HIV test.

‘So my whole world, lots of people that I’d been with, were dying. And dying in a most terrifying way. Everybody was terrorized by the disease. Even people who loved you, your family, you’d notice them taking your plate and washing it separately.

‘That was my whole world – of every 60 seconds, 30 were in sheer panic. Especially being in front of a camera; I lived in fear of a cameraman saying: “What’s that on your face, Rupert?”’

Since the mid-1990s, and the advent of effective medication, the majority of people diagnosed early with HIV are now expected to live a lifespan comparable with someone who is HIV negative.

Rupert shot to fame in the 1984 film, Another Country. In the intervening years, he was one of the few openly gay actors in Hollywood to land leading roles.

Talking about his early career coinciding with the AIDS crisis, he added: ‘I was always wondering where I would go to hide. You were getting quite famous on the one hand, and on the other, preparing to disappear completely.’

Rupert recently returned to the small screen for the BBC Two TV series, Quacks, a sitcom about Victorian medical pioneers.

Previous Go Sit In The Back, Bitch
Next MY SISTER AND THE DRAGON

About author

You might also like

The Happenings 23 Comments

David Beckham Crowned PEOPLE’s Sexiest Man Alive of 2015

David Beckham is a global superstar, devoted husband and down-to-earth dad of four. And now, the British heartthrob is this year’s Sexiest Man Alive. “It’s a huge honor,” Beckham, 40,

The Happenings 0 Comments

“Stories matter. And words matter.” Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie at the PEN America Symposium

On Monday, September 12, at a sold-out event in New York that celebrated the centenary of the free expression group PEN America, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie was among the many literary

The Happenings 14 Comments

Actor Terry Crews reveals he was sexually assaulted by “high level” male Hollywood exec

You wouldn’t necessarily think of 6’3″, 200-pound actor Terry Crews as likely target of sexual assault, but his story goes to show that anybody can be taken advantage of at

4 Comments

  1. Mandy
    August 22, 13:13 Reply

    These recollections of his makes me remember that powerful film, The Normal Heart. God, how gay men must’ve lived in terror in those days.

  2. quinn
    August 22, 14:31 Reply

    Ah the normal heart! I loved it! too bad I had to delete it when I had to give out my computer to my brother to use. it is a good movie

  3. Cleopatro
    August 22, 22:28 Reply

    there are other ways to keep it from his reach Quinn.

Leave a Reply