By Margaretta wa Gacheru (August 2020)
News that
Wakanda Forever King Chatwick Boseman, 43, died last Friday, 28 August hit
Black Panther fans like a ton of bricks. Diagnosed with colon cancer in 2016,
the illustrious African American actor went on to play a range of iconic Black characters
despite the chemotherapy he silently endured these last four years.
Tributes
immediately flooded in on social media from across Hollywood and the world. Everyone from Barack Obama and Denzel
Washington to Kamala Harris and Samuel L. Jackson expressed their shock and
heartfelt sorrow at Boseman’s demise.
A graduate
of Howard University and Oxford’s British Academy of Dramatic Acting thanks to
his UK tuition being covered by Denzel, Boseman paid tribute to his mentor and
role model at the 2019 American Film Institute’s night honoring the Black elder
statesman of film. His humility, grace and eloquence signaled the passing of a
baton from the brilliant Denzel to the younger actor destined to embody a Black
Renaissance in American film.
Following
Oxford, Chatwick got his professional start in TV, featuring in sit-coms like
ER and Law and Order. But his big break came when he starred as the first Black
athlete to break into America’s top summer sport, baseball in ‘42’. Jackie
Robinson’s battle with white supremacists was no different from what Black
Lives Matter activists are fighting today, only that Robinson’s athleticism and
heroic resilience won him the mantle of being called ‘the greatest sportsman of
the 20th century.’
Boseman’s
stunning performance as Robinson was just the first of several iconic roles in
which he played great Black men who have already made indelible marks on
African American history.
Following ‘42’
(2013) in which he co-starred with Harrison Ford (aka ‘Indiana Jones’), Chatwick
sang and moon danced as James Brown, the R&B king of funk in ‘Get on Up’
(2014). In 2017, he starred in the bio-pic ‘Marshall’, portraying Thurgood
Marshall, the first Black Supreme Court Justice who fought with the NAACP for
Black civil rights in the 1950s. And in 2020, he starred in Spike Lee’s ‘Da 5
Bloods’ where he prophetically played a dead war vet, speaking to his Vietnam
war buddies from the grave.
But it was in
2015 that he got pegged by Marvel’s Kevin Fiege to be Wakanda King and Black
Panther. He would feature as T’Challa in several Avenger films, including
‘Captain America: Civil War’ and Marvel’s biggest box office hit, ‘Avengers:
End Game’.
But without
doubt, it is as Black Panther that Chatwick has left his deepest mark on cinema
history. His performance in the sci-fi fantasy imagining a powerful and self-sufficient
Black kingdom is a film classic marking a turning point in the Black
Renaissance. For not only does it explore issues of race, identity and
heritage. In Chatwick’s view, the film also exposed “…the conflict between
Africans and African Americans [which has] existed since colonialism and
slavery.”
Chatwick was
born in Anderson, South Carolina and passed on in Los Angeles at home with his
wife, Taylor Simone Cedward and family.
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