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AIDS

Filmmaker, AIDS orphan Carla Simon on Spain’s ‘lost generation’

Catalan filmmaker Carla Simon remembers little of the day that, aged six, she joined the ranks of countless orphans left behind by Spain's "lost generation" of AIDS victims.

Filmmaker, AIDS orphan Carla Simon on Spain's 'lost generation'
Carla Simon. Photo: AFP

Her parents were among 50,000 Spaniards who contracted HIV from 1981, when the virus first appeared, until its peak around 1997, with needle-sharing by drug addicts the largest cause of transmission.

“As a kid, when something like that happens to you it's like the memory erases or blocks and I don't remember specific things,” the Catalan director told AFP.

“I remember emotions, like I remember that I didn't cry the day that my mom died and this made me feel very bad.”

Simon went back to that traumatic period for her feature directorial debut “Summer 1993,” looking through old photographs and piecing together half-remembered images and snatches of conversation.

Premiering at Berlin's annual festival and winning best debut feature, the Catalan-language movie made a respectable $1.2 million in Spanish box offices.

It has been gaining momentum in recent months, picking up prizes for best feature, director and writing as well as awards for its cast at festivals around the world ahead of its US release on Friday.

The movie follows a six-year-old Simon reimagined as the fictional Frida, who looks on in silence as the last objects from her recently deceased mother's apartment in Barcelona are placed in boxes.

Her aunt, uncle, and three-year-old cousin, Anna, welcome her with open arms — but it is only very slowly that Frida begins to get used to her new home in the countryside.

Critics have raved about the performances of Laia Artigas as Frida and Paula Robles as her surrogate sister Anna, who make for the film's emotional heart despite being too young to learn their lines.

“I talked a lot during the takes. I would tell them what to do or what they had to say and they would repeat,” Simon told AFP.

“They got used to just hearing my voice, not looking at me and following instructions. And then in post-production we took my voice out.”

By 1997, Spain had 120,000 HIV/AIDS cases in an adult population of around 21 million — the highest rate in the European Union and triple the average.

The virus spread rapidly during years of heavy heroin use, a manifestation of the new liberties enjoyed by Spaniards after the downfall of the Franco dictatorship in 1975.

“Democracy started and everyone was very happy to get their freedom finally. Some of the young people brought this freedom to the extreme,” says Simon.

“They needed to feel free and try and experiment with everything that had been forbidden for many years. Drugs came in and I don't think the government did much to stop that.”

Simon's father — who was separated from her mother — came from Vigo in northwestern Spain, which she says is conspicuous for the “lost generation” of young adults who died in the AIDS crisis.

The filmmaker was just three when he died and remembers nothing about him.

“Lots of these people had kids. So my story is not a particular case — there are many orphans of AIDS in Spain — and I didn't know that it was such a big thing,” she says.

“After releasing the film, when it got released in Spain last June, I got so many messages from people telling me that they had exactly the same story.”

Born in a small Catalan village in 1986, Simon graduated in audiovisual communication from the Universitat Autonoma of Barcelona after spending a year at the University of California.

She directed television series and programs for Catalan television before studying at the London Film School, where she wrote and directed documentary short “Born Positive” and the fictional “Lipstick.”

“Summer 1993” has turned her into a star at home, where the film won best new director at the Goya Awards, Spain's equivalent to the Oscars, and has sealed her reputation at the vanguard of a new generation of Catalan filmmakers, many of whom are women.

It was also picked to represent Spain in this year's coveted Academy Awards foreign-language race, and Simon was further honored at the black-tie Women in Motion Awards at this month's Cannes Film Festival.

“The truth is that I never really thought about universal appeal. My producer told me this is a story that can touch many people and I said I'm not too sure, I just want to tell the story,” Simon said.

“That was before making the film. Really, this film made me discover the power of storytelling in that sense. It's talking about childhood and everyone had a childhood.”

READ ALSO: Spanish cinema stars call for more women in film

AIDS

Curtain to fall on Vienna AIDS ball after 26 years

One of the world's biggest AIDS charity events, Vienna's Life Ball, will be held for the last time in June, the organiser has announced.

Curtain to fall on Vienna AIDS ball after 26 years
In this file photo taken on June 2, 2018 artists perform during the opening ceremony of the "Life Ball" in front of Vienna City Hall. Photo: AFP

Gery Keszler said the progress achieved in fighting AIDS over the 26 years since the ball's inception meant it had become harder to raise funds to hold the event.

“AIDS has changed from a death sentence to being a chronic disease. The paradox of this success is that the number of allies for AIDS charity projects is decreasing both at home and abroad,” Keszler said in a statement.

Launched by former make-up artist Keszler, among others, and hosted in the prestigious surroundings of Vienna's Town Hall, the ball has raised around 30 million euros ($34 million) for anti-AIDS causes within Austria and abroad, according to organisers.

Rooted firmly in activism among Vienna's LGBT community, the ball grew into a major draw for celebrities, also attracting up to 45,000 spectators a year.

The event often grabbed headlines for the lavish costumes worn by famous guests — 2015's “Holy Spring” theme saw the red carpet teem with paradise birds, angels and Amazonian beauties.

Attendees have run the gamut from the world of politics — such as former US president Bill Clinton — to fashion stalwarts like Vivienne Westwood, Jean Paul Gaultier and Naomi Campbell.

Actors, such as Charlize Theron, Sharon Stone, Sean Penn and Antonio Banderas, have also graced the event alongside music stars, such as Elton John and Austria's own Conchita Wurst.

Eurovision winner Conchita said in a Facebook post that the ball had given her “countless beautiful memories”, adding: “It will always remain close to my heart.” 

However, the amount of money raised has progressively fallen — reaching just 1.3 million euros in 2018 — making it more difficult to justify the resources needed to organise the event.

The 26th and final edition of the ball is set for June 8, with American actress Katie Holmes among those attending.

Holmes is an ambassador for the AmfAR anti-AIDS foundation. Extra tickets will be on sale to cater to an expected rise in demand for the last ball, Keszler said.

“They were incredible, fantastic and intense years,” Keszler said, reflecting on the event's history.

“We achieved more than we ever dared hope. I am so eternally grateful,” he said, adding: “It is now time to bring this project to a fitting conclusion.”

He said that the Life+ association, which is responsible for putting the ball on, would continue to combat anti-AIDS stigma and discrimination.

Some of the previous beneficiaries of funds raised by the ball expressed their concerns over the impact of it ending.

The Aids Hilfe Wien association said it feared losing up to 200,000 euros a year which it uses to help HIV patients access treatment.

“We don't know how we will replace these funds,” association president Wolfgang Wilhelm told the APA agency.

Nevertheless Wilhelm thanked Keszler for what he called his “marathon-like efforts” over the years. 

“It has made an incalculable contribution to raising awareness as well as funds,” he said.

AIDS, or the Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome, is the most advanced stage of infection with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), which targets the immune system.

The World Health Organization estimated around 36.9 million people were living with HIV at the end of 2017, with 1.8 million people newly infected that year and 940,000 HIV-related deaths.

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