Twenty years ago, today, a film that changed the conversation about AIDS in America opened in theaters.
“Philadelphia” starred Denzel Washington and Tom Hanks, and it won box-office success and critical acclaim.
It netted two Oscars, including one for Hanks who won a Best Actor award for his portrayal of Andrew Beckett, an HIV-positive lawyer who sues his former law firm after he’s unjustly fired.
“Philadelphia” also featured actors whose real lives mirrored the movie: several dozen extras were HIV-positive Philadelphians.
From the Here & Now Contributors Network, WHYY‘s Elana Gordon brings us the story of one of those actors, who is now creating a new script for life with HIV.
Reporter
- Elana Gordon, health and science reporter for WHYY. She tweets @Elana_Gordon.
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![Tom Hanks as Andrew Beckett in the 1993 film, "Philadelphia." (Clinica Estetico via WHYY)](https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/30a7bed/2147483647/strip/true/crop/640x418+0+0/resize/880x575!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fmedia.wbur.org%2Fwordpress%2F11%2Ffiles%2F2013%2F12%2F1223_philadelphia-hanks.jpg)