WASHINGTON — Dionne Warwick has heard the question for 50 years — yes, she knows the way to San Jose and everyplace else, thank you very much. (So enough with the corny jokes, people.) The singer, now 77, made her way to Washington on Tuesday for the lesser-known side of her legacy: her decadeslong fight for AIDS patients.
Warwick, one of the biggest music stars of the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s, was one of the very first celebrities to talk about the AIDS crisis when the disease was little understood and much feared. She persuaded Elton John, Stevie Wonder and Gladys Knight to join her in recording “That’s What Friends Are For” — which turned into an international AIDS anthem and raised millions for research — and she was asked by President Ronald Reagan to be a public ambassador to educate the public about the crisis.
So her trip to the nation’s capital this week was dedicated to that work: A tour of the University of Maryland’s Institute of Human Virology, led by co-founder and AIDS researcher Robert Gallo; a second tour of a Baltimore patient facility; and a dinner at D.C.’s Cafe Milano hosted by owner and IHV board member Franco Nuschese, who first met Warwick 35 years ago when she was performing in Las Vegas.
“I had the most incredible day,” she told the dinner guests about meeting patients and researchers. “I’ve dedicated my being to be a part of it until that train ride I got on at the beginning has finally found its destination. We’re going to all work toward making that happen.” Then Warwick got choked up but stopped herself: “I’m not going to cry because it will mess up my mascara.”