Bobby Reynolds Describes Living with AIDS (1986)

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but the main part of this is it's associated usually with an incredible amount of pain and people are not able sometimes to even swallow their own saliva. [Reynolds]: So here it is now like a week and a half after that started, and they're healing pretty good but I'm still having fevers at night and I'm starting to have night sweats. [Narrator]: Until last year Bobby counted on his lover Mark to see him through the bouts of sickness and the fear of dying from AIDS. They had been together for eight years but Mark died last fall. [Reynolds]: Mark Mark Mark. He had its good points and bad points as we all do. He's a little arrogant. He was very strong willed about certain things. But we had fun. [Narrator]: When Bobby was diagnosed in 1982, Mark was apparently healthy but in April of 85 he too was diagnosed, struck
by cancer, and a debilitating paralysis. The disease progressed quickly in Mark. [Mark]: And I, I truthfully admit that I missed being able to go to restaurants and go to a movie. I mean I'm just not mobile enough to do that and those things are still important. I want to work. You know, I want to go in my kitchen and Cook. I want to be able to help him work in the backyard and - [Reynolds]: Well I tried to prepare myself as much as possible because I knew his death was inevitable. But you really can't. He went into respiratory failure. And he had done that twice before so I called to [inaudible] for the ambulance, the paramedics. But he was gone. He was the most important person in my life for a long time. And I think that says it all for anybody no matter what your sexual preference is, to you have somebody in your life that's the most important
person and that's who he was. Is. What's next? So I'll live it and I'll breathe it and I'll eat it for so long and then I'll say, break time. You know. Let's go blow bubbles, let's go read a murder mystery. Let's just unplug the phone and forget about it. Luckily I can do that.

Bobby Reynolds Describes Living with AIDS (1986)

This excerpt from Those People, a 1986 documentary from KQED (San Francisco, CA) about people with AIDS, tells the story of Bobby Reynolds, a man referred to in contemporary news reports as the longest known survivor of AIDS. Reynolds also became a prominent advocate and supporter of PWAs. In this clip, we learn about his health challenges and his experience losing his longtime partner to the disease. Reynolds died soon after this documentary was filmed, having lived for five years after receiving his AIDS diagnosis.

Express 340; Those People: AIDS In the Public Mind | KQED | July 29, 1986 This video clip and associated transcript appear from 22:38-25:13 in the full record.

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