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In ‘Fight Back,' the Audience Learns to Act Up

In ‘Fight Back,' the Audience Learns to Act Up

New York Times3 days ago

On Monday evening at the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center, in Manhattan's Greenwich Village, anyone entering Room 101 would step directly into March 13, 1989.
Thirty-six years ago, the AIDS activist group Act Up New York had the space that night for its weekly meeting — an event that David Wise's immersive theater experiment 'Fight Back' seeks to recreate.
Audience members are by definition participants, too. Each has been assigned the persona of someone who was involved with the organization early on. Act Up was in emergency mode then, trying desperately to get the culture to treat the catastrophic epidemic with greater urgency.
Just days before the meeting, AIDS had killed Robert Mapplethorpe at 42. Within a year, it would claim Alvin Ailey at 58, Keith Haring at 31 and many thousands more. For the people in the room, death had become a far too frequent part of life.
That is the cauldron in which the real meeting took place, and into which 'Fight Back' means to drop its audience, as an exercise in empathy. As Wise, 47, explained by phone, he doesn't expect people in 2025 to be able to access the breadth of emotions the activists felt in 1989.
'But I do think that there's something about inhabiting with your body,' he said, 'and doing the actions that someone was doing, and saying the words that someone might have been saying, that is really effective, and affecting.'
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On Monday evening at the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center, in Manhattan's Greenwich Village, anyone entering Room 101 would step directly into March 13, 1989. Thirty-six years ago, the AIDS activist group Act Up New York had the space that night for its weekly meeting — an event that David Wise's immersive theater experiment 'Fight Back' seeks to recreate. Audience members are by definition participants, too. Each has been assigned the persona of someone who was involved with the organization early on. Act Up was in emergency mode then, trying desperately to get the culture to treat the catastrophic epidemic with greater urgency. Just days before the meeting, AIDS had killed Robert Mapplethorpe at 42. Within a year, it would claim Alvin Ailey at 58, Keith Haring at 31 and many thousands more. For the people in the room, death had become a far too frequent part of life. That is the cauldron in which the real meeting took place, and into which 'Fight Back' means to drop its audience, as an exercise in empathy. As Wise, 47, explained by phone, he doesn't expect people in 2025 to be able to access the breadth of emotions the activists felt in 1989. 'But I do think that there's something about inhabiting with your body,' he said, 'and doing the actions that someone was doing, and saying the words that someone might have been saying, that is really effective, and affecting.' Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

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