Actor relishes rare role of Black WWII sailor
perilous crossing of the North Atlantic’s “Black Pit,” under constant attack by prowling German U-boats.
Even if Krause never eats the food, he comes to appreciate the effort and the relationship. This comes through when Krause is deeply, but subtly, affected after Cleveland is killed in a U-boat battle and buried at sea.
“Cleveland understood Krause more than anyone else on the ship,” Morgan says. “Krause leaned on Cleveland for a certain level of support and appreciated him. There was a closeness.”
Morgan, who portrayed Vietnam veteran and death row inmate Herbert Richardson in “Just Mercy,” spent more than a week with the cast in a naval boot camp on the USS Kidd, a decommissioned WWII-era Fletcher-class destroyer.
“We were immersed in that world, and my responsibility was serving the food,” Morgan says. “I could understand being part of the camaraderie but at the same time understand being segregated. That is what I put into my character.”
He added to the experience by doing his own research on Black Americans serving in World War II, which was “eyeopening. Because you didn’t learn this in school.” Morgan read up about the 92nd Infantry Division and the Tuskegee Airmen and hopes others are inspired to do research as well.
“I’m a proud American all day, every day,” Morgan says. “It just makes you even more proud to know our contributions have allowed all of us to say that we are American.”
But there’s a darker side to the history as well, seeing how the Black soldiers were treated in America after serving the country in war.
“It’s amazing to think about the mindset of the brothers and sisters who participated, returning to an America fixated on segregation and race,” Morgan says. “The treatment people endured, people who put their lives on the line.”