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								|  Phil Zwickler was a journalist, 
									filmmaker, poet and gay activist who produced a prolific body of work 
									in the few short years before his death from AIDS in 1991. What mattered 
									to Phil in those years before the end of his life was making sure the 
									world knew exactly what was happening to his community-not only Gays and 
									Lesbians, but all those who had been exposed to the AIDS virus. In 1986, 
									Phil helped me establish Realis Pictures, a documentary production company. 
									His landmark film, Rights and Reactions, produced with Jane Lippman, brilliantly 
									documents the struggle of gays and lesbians to have "Intro 2" 
									(popularly known as "The Gay Rights Bill") passed by New York 
									City Council in 1986. His subsequent collaborations in 1988 with German 
									director Rosa von Praunheim (Positive and Silence Equals Death) revealed 
									to an international audience the courageous political and artistic responses 
									of the Gay and Lesbian community to the AIDS epidemic. Phil had been petrified 
									about these collaborations, particulary about Positive, which had meant 
									turning the camera on his own life and disclosing what he was going through 
									as someone who was "Sero-Positive".  But 
									that film allowed Phil to break new ground in his own work. By 1989, he 
									had found his own voice. It was funny, angry, poetic, passionate and political. 
									And he was doing the best work of his career. Fear of Disclosure, 
									his collaborative, six minute video with the late artist David Wojnarowicz 
									(who died of AIDS in 1992), produced at Realis Pictures, takes a chilling 
									look at the issues of sex, death, love and dating for a sero-positive 
									gay man in the late 80's. His final project, Needle Nightmare (1991), 
									portrays Phil's gentler side as he struggles to come to terms with his 
									imminent death. Like everything else Phil did with his life, this final 
									work is angry, insightful and funny. He was 36 when he died. His final 
									days in the hospital were difficult ones made easier by the love and care 
									of his family and friends. He was angry at the injustice of it all and 
									we searched for ways to comfort him as his life was ending. I found that 
									simply talking about his work and how it was "getting out there" 
									provided him with some solace. It meant a lot to Phil to know that his 
									ideas would survive him. 
									-Geoffrey O'Connor	
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