The Southland Times

Actor struck a blow for racial equality with starring role in superhero movies

- Chadwick Boseman actor b November 29, 1976 d August 28, 2020

C‘‘Audiences want to see difference. They want to see variety and a world that reflects them.’’ Chadwick Boseman

hadwick Boseman, who has died of cancer aged 43, was a gifted American actor who struck a blow for racial equality by starring in Hollywood blockbuste­rs as Marvel Comics’ groundbrea­king black superhero, Black Panther.

‘‘It’s a sea-change moment,’’ Boseman said when Black Panther was released in 2018. ‘‘I still remember the excitement people had seeing Malcolm X – and this is greater, because it includes other people, too. Everybody comes to see the Marvel movie.

‘‘I truly believe there’s a truth that needs to enter the world at a particular time – and that’s why people are excited about

Panther. This is the time.’’

Black Panther

was culturally

remarkable in a

number of ways.

Featuring a predominan­tly black cast, it brought into the mainstream the ‘‘Afrofuturi­st’’ aesthetic of science fiction and fantasy grounded in the cultures of African countries; and it earned more at the box office than any other film from an African-American director (Ryan Coogler). It was also the first superhero film to be nominated for a Best Picture Oscar.

Daily Telegraph critic Robbie Collin hailed the film as a ‘‘fresh perspectiv­e on a well-worn format . . . [It] walks into the multiplex like it’s insane that it hasn’t been allowed in there all along . . . An entire subset of younger cinemagoer­s are only just about to experience the dizzy uplift of watching a title character in a superhero movie who looks like them under the costume.’’

Boseman had first played T’Challa, the benevolent young king of the fictional African nation of Wakanda, and his alter-ego, Black Panther, a superhuman warrior protecting his people’s future, in Captain America: Civil War. His role was one of a dozen superheroe­s in that film, from Captain America himself (Chris Evans) and Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr) to Spider-Man (Tom Holland) and Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson).

More significan­tly, it was the first movie to feature Black Panther, 50 years after the superhero was created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, and Boseman depicted with conviction his character’s anger over injustices to his family and country.

He returned to the role for two more Marvel Avengers movies, Infinity War (2018) and Endgame (2019), but believed that Black Panther particular­ly had had a positive effect for black actors. ‘‘I’ve noticed change,’’ he said last year. ‘‘I’ve seen a willingnes­s of production companies and studios to [do black] castings in a way that they wouldn’t normally do. Audiences want to see difference. They want to see variety and a world that reflects them.’’

Boseman had earlier built a reputation for convincing portrayals of real-life black heroes. In the 2013 film 42 ,he starred as Jackie Robinson, the first black American to play Major League Baseball (42 was his jersey number), facing prejudice after being signed by the Brooklyn Dodgers.

Then came the explosive biopic Get on Up (2014), Boseman’s brutally honest, electrifyi­ng rendering of the funksoul singer James Brown’s frenzied life: he is seen bullying his backing musicians, having relationsh­ips with a string of women, and flashbacks to a traumatic childhood; Boseman brilliantl­y lip-synchs to the original records and recreates his distinctiv­e dance moves.

Trade magazine Variety observed that the film showcased the actor ‘‘in full bloom . . . burrowing deep into the performer’s tortured, little-boy-lost soul’’.

Boseman was a riveting, quietly powerful presence in the role of the crusading lawyer Thurgood Marshall in the courtroom drama Marshall (2017), focusing on the character as a young man, defending a black chauffeur accused of the rape and attempted murder of his employer, a white society woman.

He was born Chadwick Aaron Boseman, in Anderson, South Carolina, to parents who had roots in Sierra Leone and Nigeria.

Before graduating in 2000, he was one of nine students funded by Denzel Washington to attend a summer acting programme at Balliol College, Oxford. He spent time writing and directing plays for theatre companies until switching to acting.

He took one-off parts on television in series such as Law & Order, CSI: NY and ER, then landed the regular roles of Nate Ray in

Lincoln Heights and Graham McNair in Persons Unknown.

Playing the Black Panther in four Marvel movies brought him a more mainstream role in 21 Bridges last year as Andre Davis, a detective on the trail of two police-killers, and a credit as co-producer. This summer he received critical plaudits as the leader of the Bloods, a group of black American soldiers in the Vietnam War, in Spike Lee’s film released through Netflix, Da 5 Bloods.

He was given a diagnosis of colon cancer in 2016, but he did not reveal this publicly while continuing to work. He married, in 2019, the singer Taylor Simone Ledward, who survives him. – Telegraph Group

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