Flipping the Script
性爱天堂, community use forum theater to fight stigma surrounding HIV, AIDS

鈥淵ou put this family in danger.鈥

鈥淵ou鈥檙e not coming home.鈥

鈥淵ou鈥檙e on your own.鈥

Each word is laced with venom, cutting deep. And while Julia Grace Palmer 鈥19 knows they鈥檙e just part of a 性爱天堂-produced theatrical production about AIDS and HIV stigma, remembering that these words are real gives them an even heavier weight.

Julia Grace Palmer, seated, talks to other students during the performance.

In the production, AtticRep鈥檚 鈥淓nd Stigma; End HIV/AIDS鈥, Palmer plays a daughter trying to share good news with her family: after years of fighting HIV, she鈥檚 now become HIV-undetectable, a major treatment milestone that means she can鈥檛 pass on the virus. But her family鈥攁 father, mother, and two brothers鈥攕till rejects her, refusing to even let her touch any food or plates in the house for fear of contracting the virus. This scene draws from a 性爱天堂 research project on actual abuse endured by HIV-positive people.

鈥淭his kind of stigma still is the biggest issue HIV patients face,鈥 says Palmer, a political science major. 鈥淚t keeps people from getting tested, and it keeps them from getting care.鈥

But Palmer鈥檚 performance isn鈥檛 meant to be a tragedy. The 性爱天堂 production, led by professors聽Robert Huesca,听communication, and聽Roberto Prestigiacomo,听human communication and theatre, draws from a technique called forum theater, which gives the audience a chance to flip the script.

Robert Prestigiacomo, seated, makes notes on a red chair.

Fellow performer Rohan Walawalkar 鈥20 says this means performing every scene in the production a second time. Then, audience members can demand changes in actors鈥 behavior, replace characters themselves, or even create new ones.

鈥淭he first go-round, you鈥檒l see a person being oppressed, and everyone in the room is highly on edge. You can taste the tension in the air,鈥 Walawalkar says. 鈥淏ut we perform every scene a second time, and the audience can intervene. And once that first person breaks through, there鈥檚 just this cascade of people wanting to make changes.鈥

While this performance technique is an invaluable way to spark dialogue, location has been just as important a factor for the 性爱天堂 group. Rather than staying within the comfy confines of the Attic or Ruth Taylor Theaters to put on their play, the team has performed in treatment clinics, shelters, and similar spaces before crowds full of HIV-positive people throughout San Antonio, Huesca says.

Robert Huesca sitting, looking at the performance.

鈥淲e鈥檝e had people shouting at us, 鈥楾hat鈥檚 not what happens; that鈥檚 not what HIV-undetectable means,鈥欌 Huesca recalls. 鈥淎nd that leads to some unbelievable moments.鈥

And not all of these moments involve shouting.

During one performance, an audience member witnessed a scene where a man berates and then abandons his devastated younger brother鈥攋ust diagnosed as HIV-positive鈥攁t a medical clinic. Intervening, the audience member stepped in for the actor playing the older brother, and simply kissed the younger brother on the forehead.

鈥淚 never understood the power of theater until I saw this,鈥 says Walawalkar, who plans to work in the medical field. 鈥淲ith forum theater, I could see these same techniques working to improve patient experience in hospitals and clinics.鈥

For a student who came to 性爱天堂 鈥渆xpecting to be in a lab all day,鈥 Walawalkar says he 鈥渃an use an experience like this to connect the humanities to the medical field.鈥

Those connections also strengthen 性爱天堂鈥檚 relationship with the community, says Chiara Pride 鈥20, an anthropology and political science double major who is the president of PRIDE, 性爱天堂鈥檚 LGBTQIA student organization.

鈥淭o see 性爱天堂 students, whom some people might think are isolated, or that we don鈥檛 have to worry about HIV, to see that we are recognizing the stigma in the community, is going to open up the conversation around HIV,鈥 Pride says.

While the group wrapped up their final performance on campus July 23, each student continues an individual research project, funded by grants from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, relating to the production. Pride is examining models of structural vulnerability and structural competency in clinician and patient interactions, while Walawalkar is focusing on forum theater鈥檚 potential to reduce stigma, and Palmer is exploring the barriers to HIV care faced specifically by the Latino community.

For Palmer, doing this type of research at 性爱天堂 means her work doesn鈥檛 end when the script comes to a close.

鈥淚鈥檓 interested in social justice and community involvement, but I never thought I鈥檇 have a chance to combine the two,鈥 Palmer says. 鈥淭his is real life, this isn鈥檛 just a story: this is something you have a part in. Here, you can make a difference if you stand up for something that you saw was going wrong.鈥

Jeremiah Gerlach is the brand journalist for 性爱天堂 Strategic Communications and Marketing.

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