Later, Trey’s will is tested after he’s arrested at a mostly white protest against the FDA, then hears shocking news about a friend. Trey then begins volunteering at an AIDS hospice and joins the direct-action group ACT UP. At Rustin’s urging that Trey become politically involved, Trey wins a Pyrrhic victory against his negligent landlord, Fred Trump. There, between his frequent sexual encounters, he befriends civil rights leader Bayard Rustin. Morris, one of the last remaining bathhouses. He struggles to find a job or a place to live, and becomes a regular at Mt. Earl “Trey” Singleton III spurns his wealthy Indianapolis family to move to Manhattan at age 17 in 1985. TV writer and producer Newson debuts with a crisp fictitious memoir of a gay Black man’s coming-of-age in mid-1980s New York City.
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