Following 2 Gay Medical Students During the AIDS Crisis, Love + Science Begins Off-Broadway May 26 | Playbill

Off-Broadway News Following 2 Gay Medical Students During the AIDS Crisis, Love + Science Begins Off-Broadway May 26

The New York City Center play stars The Inheritance's Jonathan Burke and The Play That Goes Wrong's Matt Walker.

Jonathan Burke and Matt Walker Jeremy Varner

Set during the 1980s HIV/AIDS crisis, Love + Science begins previews Off-Broadway at New York City Center Stage II May 26. Written by playwright and scientist David J. Glass, the premiere will open June 4 and run through July 6. 

Starring as two gay medical students living and loving in New York City during the crisis are Jonathan Burke (The Inheritance) and Lucille Lortel nominee Matt Walker (The Play That Goes Wrong). They are joined by ensemble members and Broadway alums Thursday Farrar (Aida), Ryan Knowles (The Lightning Thief: The Percy Jackson Musical), Tally Sessions ( Anastasia), Imani Pearl Williams (1776), and Netflix film star Adrian Greensmith (Metal Lords).

As two gay medical students go about their work in the same retrovirology lab, they form a connection. But then the HIV/AIDS epidemic erupts and they suddenly find themselves on different paths and their relationship upended. Questions are raised about their values as scientists and doctors and their responsibilities as gay men as they try to love and hope while facing a crisis and the realities of scientific progress.

Allen MacLeod directs, leading creative team members scenic designer Zoë Hurwitz, costume designer Camilla Dely, lighting designer Reza Behjat, original music and sound designer Jane Shaw, and intimacy and movement director Dave Anzuelo.

“The panic at the beginning of the COVID pandemic felt eerily similar to the beginnings of the HIV/AIDS epidemic,” said Glass in a statement. “This led me to return to playwriting after decades working in medical research. Love + Science is my attempt to shed more light on a tumultuous moment in New York history that is being forgotten.”

The play is inspired by Glass’ time at New York Medical College where he took care of HIV patients as a medical student. He also conducted postdoctoral research on cancer at Columbia University in a lab focused on HIV and other emerging infectious diseases.

Visit LoveAndSciencePlay.com.

 
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