Black Panther dies at 43.

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  • liftsiron
    Administrator
    • Nov 2003
    • 18439

    Black Panther dies at 43.

    CNN
    Boseman starred as the African king and super hero in the 2018 blockbuster Marvel film "Black Panther" and the casting could not have been more on point.
    The actor, who died at the age of 43 after a four year battle with colon cancer, carried the mantle of royalty in the role of Black Panther as if he had been born to it.
    Now he is gone and our collective hearts are broken.
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    Celebrity deaths are often mourned as if we knew the person, but that sense of loss seems especially intense during a pandemic.
    With the passing of Boseman there is an added layer of grief for Black America.
    It feels like one more blow in the midst of protests over the shooting of Black people by police -- a fight that has been politicized, but for Black people feels as simple as a recognition of humanity.
    Humanity is what Boseman specialized in.
    He made a career of playing real life Black historical figures including Jackie Robinson, James Brown and Thurgood Marshall. He disappeared into those roles.
    But as T'Challa/Black Panther, whom he first played in the 2016 film "Captain America: Civil War," it felt as if Boseman had found his destiny.
    He was grace personified as the leader of Wakanda -- a fictitious African nation which became a celluloid Black utopia.
    "Black Panther" was a portrayal of people of the African diaspora that we don't often see.
    For in Wakanda, technology and science are developed by Africans, for African people's battles were won and lost using not just brawn, but also brains.
    Boseman was aware of the cultural impact of such a film coming at a time when Black people felt mired in the seemingly never ending fight for equality.
    "I think there's a thirst for these images," he told "Today" when "Black Panther" was released. "There's a thirst for a Black superhero."
    He also knew the pride that African Americans could and should take in being descendents from the continent.
    "Having studied at Howard [a historically black university in Washington, DC] and having various different experiences within our culture, I knew it was an opportunity to pull from real things, real achievements, real African culture and place it in this movie to make it real." Boseman told CNN at the time. "If anybody believes that Africa didn't have an empire, didn't have architecture, didn't have art, didn't have science, you see it in this movie."
    As T'Challa, Boseman embodied that pride, both on and off screen. He showed up for us and we in turn showed up for him.
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