
Audio By Carbonatix
Billy Porter is opening up about a secret he has kept for 14 years. The 51-year-old Pose actor tells The Hollywood Reporter that he was diagnosed as HIV-positive in June 2007.
Porter says he kept his diagnosis a secret from almost everyone in his life, choosing instead to live vicariously through his HIV-positive Pose character, Pray Tell.
“I was able to say everything that I wanted to say through a surrogate,” he says, noting that no one involved with Pose knew he was drawing from his own experience for the role.
He tells his story to THR with Pose creator Ryan Murphy by his side as well as "a cadre of documentary cameras."
"Having lived through the plague, my question was always, 'Why was I spared? Why am I living?'" Porter says. "Well, I’m living so that I can tell the story. There’s a whole generation that was here, and I stand on their shoulders. I can be who I am in this space, at this time, because of the legacy that they left for me. So it’s time to put my big boy pants on and talk."
He talks about a dark time in 2007 where in addition to his HIV diagnosis, he had also been diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes and filed for bankruptcy.
"The shame of that time compounded with the shame that had already [accumulated] in my life silenced me, and I have lived with that shame in silence for 14 years," he says.

Porter, who is an Oscar shy of an EGOT, went on to explain that he was afraid to share his diagnosis for fear of what it would do to his career at the time.
"For a long time, everybody who needed to know, knew — except for my mother. I was trying to have a life and a career, and I wasn’t certain I could if the wrong people knew," he says. "It would just be another way for people to discriminate against me in an already discriminatory profession. So I tried to think about it as little as I could. I tried to block it out. But quarantine has taught me a lot. Everybody was required to sit down and shut the f**k up."
Porter says he initially planned to wait until his mother died before going public with the news, to spare her further "persecution" that she had already experienced in her church community "because of my queerness." But as the years went on and his mother remained alive, he finally decided to tell her.
"She said, 'You’ve been carrying this around for 14 years? Don’t ever do this again. I’m your mother, I love you no matter what. And I know I didn’t understand how to do that early on, but it’s been decades now,'” Porter recalls of telling his mother, Cloerinda Ford.
Porter says that much of his shame came from the fact that "it had happened in the first place."
"Yes, I am the statistic, but I’ve transcended it," he says of moving past the stigma. "This is what HIV-positive looks like now. I’m going to die from something else before I die from that. My T-cell levels are twice yours because of this medication."
"I go to the doctor now — as a Black, 51-year-old man, I go to the doctor every three months. That doesn’t happen in my community. We don’t trust doctors. But I go to the doctor, and I know what’s going on in my body. I’m the healthiest I’ve been in my entire life."
As for the critics, Porter has a clear message, "I don’t care what anyone has to say. You’re either with me or simply move out of the way."
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