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A01=Alan Bowne
A01=Charles Ludlam
A01=Colm O Clubhan
A01=George Whitmore
A01=Harry Kondoleon
A01=James Kirkwood
A01=Robert Chesley
actor-performers
AIDS Plays Project
Author_Alan Bowne
Author_Charles Ludlam
Author_Colm O Clubhan
Author_George Whitmore
Author_Harry Kondoleon
Author_James Kirkwood
Author_Robert Chesley
bisexual plays
Broadway
Category=DD
Category=DDC
Category=DSG
drag
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_poetry
forthcoming
HIVAIDS
oral histories
Queer history
queer theatre history
theatre history
theatre students
twentieth-century culture

Product details

  • ISBN 9781350588073
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Nov 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Trailblazing, visionary, and too often neglected – this collection honours and celebrates seven queer playwrights from America, Ireland, and Britain whose lives were cut short by HIV/AIDS.

Curated by The AIDS Plays Project, and edited by its director, Alastair Curtis, this anthology revives seven plays written by pioneering queer playwrights, providing a platform that restores and mends the link between queer artists and their audiences that has largely been severed by the ongoing AIDS crisis.

The plays in this collection showcase a striking a striking, eclectic range of styles and stories - from a nineteenth-century drag-infused riff on La Traviata to a comedy about a bisexual ghost haunting rural Massachusetts, to a San Francisco-set tragedy about phone sex and an urgent exploration of Irish politics in a London pub. It also highlights these writers' lasting impact on queer culture and activism—whether by introducing the first bisexual characters on Broadway, performing agitprop theatre on the streets of South London, or promoting sex positivity during the darkest days of the epidemic.

The lives of each playwright are retold through moving accounts by those who knew them, brought their writing to life on stage, or championed their work. These are paired with responses from contemporary queer theatre-makers, forging an intergenerational connection and contributing to an ongoing exploration of twentieth-century queer history.

Ultimately, the collection acts as a blueprint for how studying and performing the queer past can shape the future of queer playwriting and performance, and ensures that the voices of the writers lost in the AIDS epidemic are not forgotten.

Alastair Curtis is the founder of The AIDS Plays Project, a campaign to revive and republish the theatrical works of writers whose lives were cut short by HIV/AIDS. The project has been featured in Interview, The Face, Hero, The Evening Standard, and The Financial Times, who wrote, “play by play, The AIDS Plays Project is reshaping the queer theatrical canon.” His writing has been published in Frieze, Prospect, The Economist, AnOther, and The Observer, while his debut short film, Sweetheart, set in an eighteenth-century Molly House, premiered at Sundance 2025. He studied English at University College London and the University of Oxford.

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