New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

AIDS activist, Connecticu­t native Larry Kramer dies

- By Michael Fornabaio Includes prior reporting from The Associated Press.

BRIDGEPORT — When Jim Gricar moved to New York in 1989 “as a young activist in training,” he met a Bridgeport native named Larry Kramer at a meeting of ACT UP, the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power.

“Larry was irascible,” Gricar, now a Weston resident, said Wednesday, “but also irresistib­le.”

Kramer, an author, playwright and prominent activist in the fight against

AIDS, died Wednesday at 84. Kramer’s husband, David Webster, told The New York Times that Kramer died of pneumonia.

“We have lost a giant of a man who stood up for gay rights like a warrior,” Elton John said on Instagram.

“His anger was needed at a time when gay men’s deaths to AIDS were being ignored by the American government; a tragedy that made the Gay Men’s Health Crisis and ACT UP movements so vital.”

Kramer was born in Bridgeport Hospital on June 25, 1935.

In a 1997 profile that appear in the Connecticu­t Post, Kramer recalled his childhood growing up in Bridgeport, talking about the “magical atmosphere” of Pleasure Beach; rememberin­g his grandparen­ts, Harry and Lena Wishengrad, who ran a grocery store on

North Main Street.

He graduated in 1957 from Yale University in New Haven with an English degree before moving to New York City, although he would eventually resettle in his home state, buying a 10room mansion on a hillside overlookin­g lush woodland in northweste­rn Connecticu­t

Kramer was already a well-known writer by the early 1980s, when AIDS began decimating New

York’s gay community. Kramer and others began Gay Men’s Health Crisis to raise money and awareness. He soon left the organizati­on, in conflict with other board members, and later helped found ACT UP.

“That’s not fun. Screaming is not fun. Effigies are not fun,” Kramer told the Connecticu­t Post in 1997. “But we tried all the nice ways.”

ACT UP’s protests sped Food and Drug Administra­tion approval of drugs to fight HIV/AIDS and led Burroughs-Wellcome to lower its price for AZT, one of those drugs.

One of his battles and later reconcilia­tions was with Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases since 1984 and one of the public faces of the government’s fight against COVID-19.

Gricar said he admired the fervor Kramer put into later activism for poor people’s health, even as Kramer’s own health faded; Kramer had learned he was HIV positive in 1988, suffered from Hepatitis B and needed a 2001 liver transplant, among other issues.

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