Stars concerned by US budget cuts' effect
23/5/2025 6:13
Famed actors,
directors and music acts like Adrien Brody, Duran Duran and
Spike Lee escaped the Cannes Film Festival's crowded Croisette
boulevard on Thursday evening for the exclusive grounds of the
nearby Hotel du Cap-Eden-Roc for a good cause.
With tickets starting at $25,000, the amfAR charity dinner
has been bringing stars to Cap d'Antibes, Cannes' quieter,
palm-lined neighbour, since 1993 in the name of HIV/AIDS
research.
The charity said the benefit has so far raised nearly $300
million for its research programs on Acquired Immune Deficiency
Syndrome (AIDS), caused by the human immunodeficiency virus
(HIV).
Celebrities including "Sing Sing" actor Colman Domingo,
award-winning actor Taraji P. Henson and Michelle Rodriguez of
the "Fast and Furious" franchise expressed concern about what
U.S. President Donald Trump's budget and staffing cuts could
mean for AIDS research and prevention around the world.
The United States' "recent reduction of a lot of those
resources globally has affected the AIDS community profoundly,"
said Rodriguez on the red carpet ahead of the dinner.
"It becomes more important than ever, the work that amfAR
does, not only in the research to generate drugs, just the
advocacy that they have globally," added the actor.
The United Nations AIDS agency warned in March that there
could be 2,000 new HIV infections a day across the world and a
ten-fold increase in related deaths if funding frozen by the
United States is not restored or replaced.
"It's very disappointing when people are going to die for
something they don't have to die from," said Henson, the event's
host and actor from "Hidden Figures" and TV series "Empire."
Teri Hatcher, Ed Westwick, Heidi Klum and Lauren Sanchez,
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos' fiancee, also attended the dinner
that featured a performance by pop rockers Duran Duran.
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