Thought
I’d write a bit about the ways these works depict HIV+ characters. Neither is perfect, in my opinion, but both
have certain strengths and major, often complementary differences. It’s to be expected – they were written ten
years apart, and understanding of HIV changed a lot in that time, and both pieces
have different agendas. Still, I thought
it’d be interesting to explore.
(Note: for this blog, I’ll be
focusing on the versions from my recent reviews – The Normal Heart’s 2014 HBO film and RENT’s 1996 Broadway production.)
We’ll
start with the major time-period differences.
In the early-to-mid ‘80s, almost nothing was known about HIV. We didn’t know how it was spread, who could
catch it, how to identify those who were HIV+ but not yet sick, or how to treat
it. It was a terrifying, unknown monster
that struck without warning and cut down men in their prime. By the mid-90s, HIV was a serious virus that
led to fatal illness, but it was less of a shadowy bogeyman. We knew a lot more about it, and we had support
groups, medicines, and a population of HIV+-identified people who hadn’t
developed AIDS yet. So, from the get-go,
we’re dealing with different worlds.
RENT’s HIV+ characters are, for the most part, much
more developed than The Normal Heart’s. Roger, Mimi, Collins, and Angel are all full
characters with distinct personalities, and we get to know them very well over
the course of the musical, whereas in The
Normal Heart, Felix is the only HIV+ character who gets much focus. The others have smaller supporting roles, mainly
existing in the story to fall ill and die.
There are far more of them than there are in RENT, even counting the Life Support members, so the sense of
horror is heightened, but the personal investment in individuals isn’t as
strong.
I love RENT’s emphasis that these people are
more than a virus; though they know it will take them in the end, it doesn’t
get to own them. Look at the toast “To
people living with, living with, living with, / Not dying from disease” – the distinction
it so vital it’s said three times. I get
why The Normal Heart doesn’t dwell on
this – besides the historical differences mentioned above, it was written with
a vastly different goal. It’s an
unnerving political lion designed to shake audiences from complacency, so it
makes sense to focus on the horror. It’s
shrewd politics, but as a story, it paints the HIV+ characters as tragic
statistics rather than people.
At the
same time, The Normal Heart always
treats HIV as a gravely serious matter, while RENT sometimes takes an almost-cavalier attitude toward it. Not always – look at “Will I?” or “One Song
Glory” – but there are some awfully glib remarks. It seems disingenuous for a terminally ill
person to say, “I die without you,” and the Life Support leader is pretty
dismissive of a young HIV+ man’s fears. Mimi
has no qualms about offering herself to Roger on a plate before realizing he’s HIV+,
too. Not that people with HIV can’t have
sex, but it seems like something a prospective partner should know
upfront.
One
final nitpick for each – I really dislike that in RENT, the straight man
and woman have a history of intravenous drug use and the two gay men don’t. While I know it’s not stated how any of them
contracted it, it still perpetuates the idea that gay men get HIV from having
sex while straight people get it from shooting up, a false and damaging belief. Also, The
Normal Heart is so white. Seriously, there’s maybe one PoC in the whole
thing; RENT clearly has the edge
there.
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