The Day

Boseman honored in hometown

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Anderson, S.C. (AP) — Actor Chadwick Boseman was mourned, honored and celebrated Thursday in his hometown of Anderson, S.C., where he gave residents a deep sense of pride, event organizers said.

“He was beloved here, the same way he was around the world,” city spokeswoma­n Beth Batson said Thursday.

Boseman, known for his role in “Black Panther” and many other films, died last Friday of colon cancer. He was 43.

Thursday’s tribute was to include a viewing of “Black Panther” at an outdoor amphitheat­er where social distancing will be practiced, Batson said.

Boseman was a playwright who acted and directed in theater before playing the Marvel Comics character T’Challa in “Black Panther,” which became one of the top-grossing films in history. He also had starring roles in the Jackie Robinson film “42” and in “Get On Up,” which portrayed the life of singer James Brown.

Privately, he also was undergoing many surgeries and chemothera­py in his battle with colon cancer.

In Anderson, a city of about 28,000 people, “there’s deep sadness and grief, but it has a bounce out of it that is such inspiratio­n,” Batson said. That’s because Boseman inspired so many people in the community, she said.

“It has been amazing to watch the grief, so to speak, blossom,” she said. “Now young people say ‘‘what can I do, what can I be.’”

Former President Barack Obama saw that phenomenon firsthand in the White House.

“Chadwick came to the White House to work with kids when he was playing Jackie Robinson. You could tell right away that he was blessed,” Obama tweeted shortly after his death.

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