Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Late actor Boseman portrayed Black icons

He stayed quiet about 2016 cancer diagnosis

- By Ryan Pearson

LOS ANGELES — First Chadwick Boseman slipped on the cleats of Jackie Robinson, then the Godfather of Soul’s dancing shoes, portraying both Black American icons with a searing intensity that commanded respect. When the former playwright suited up as Black Panther, he brought cool intellectu­al gravitas to the Marvel superhero whose “Wakanda forever!” salute reverberat­ed worldwide.

As his Hollywood career boomed, though, Boseman was privately undergoing “countless surgeries and chemothera­py” to battle colon cancer, his family said in a statement announcing his death at age 43 on Friday. He’d been diagnosed at stage 3 in 2016 but never spoke publicly about it.

The cancer was there when his character T’Challa visited the ancestors’ “astral plane” in poignant scenes from the Oscar-nominated “Black Panther,” there when he became a producer on the action thriller “21 Bridges,” and there last summer when he shot an adaptation of a play by his hero August Wilson. It was there when he played a radical Black leader — seen only in flashbacks and visions — whose death is mourned by Vietnam War comrades-in-arms in Spike Lee’s “Da 5 Bloods.”

Boseman died at his home in the Los Angeles area with his wife and family by his side, his publicist Nicki Fioravante told The Associated Press.

Boseman is survived by his wife and a parent and had no children, Fioravante said.

Born and raised in South Carolina, where he played Little League baseball and AAU basketball, Boseman graduated from Howard University in Washington, D.C. He wrote plays, acted and directed in theater and had small roles in television before landing his breakthrou­gh role.

His striking portrayal of the color-line-demolishin­g baseball star Robinson opposite Harrison Ford in 2013’s “42” drew attention in Hollywood. A year later, he wowed audiences as Brown in “Get On Up.”

Boseman died on a day that Major League Baseball was celebratin­g Jackie Robinson day.

Expression­s of shock and despair poured in late Friday from fellow actors, athletes, musicians, Hollywood titans, fans and politician­s. Viola Davis, who acted alongside Boseman in “Get On Up” and the upcoming Wilson adaptation, said: “Chadwick…..no words to express my devastatio­n of losing you. Your talent, your spirit, your heart, your authentici­ty.”

“He was a gentle soul and a brilliant artist, who will stay with us for eternity through his iconic performanc­es,” said Denzel Washington, who funded a scholarshi­p Boseman used to study theater at Oxford and produced the upcoming Wilson film.

Vice-presidenti­al candidate Kamala Harris, a Howard alumna, wrote the actor “was brilliant, kind, learned, and humble. He left too early but his life made a difference.”

His T’Challa character was introduced to the blockbuste­r Marvel cinematic universe in 2016’s “Captain America: Civil War,” and his “Wakanda forever” salute became a pop culture landmark after the release of “Black Panther” two years ago.

“I don’t think the world was ready for a ‘Black Panther’ movie before this moment. Socially and politicall­y, it wasn’t ready for it,” he told AP at the time.

The film’s vision of Afrofuturi­sm and the technologi­cally advanced civilizati­on of Wakanda resonated with audiences, some of whom wore African attire to showings and helped propel “Black Panther” to more than $1.3 billion in global box office. It is the only Marvel Studios film to receive a best picture Oscar nomination.

 ?? Jordan Strauss The Associated Press file ?? Chadwick Boseman arrives March 4, 2018, at the Oscars at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. He was diagnosed with stage 3 cancer two years earlier.
Jordan Strauss The Associated Press file Chadwick Boseman arrives March 4, 2018, at the Oscars at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. He was diagnosed with stage 3 cancer two years earlier.

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