Friday 28 February 2014

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRICAN AMERICAN " CHADWICK BOSEMAN " IS A VERY SUCCESSFUL STAGE ACTOR, WRITER AND DIRECTOR : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

                                             BLACK                  SOCIAL               HISTORY                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       Born in South Carolina in 1982, Chadwick Boseman would go on to have a successful stage career as an actor, writer and director. In the mid-2000's, Boseman appeared on TV in various guest spots and landed reoccurring roles on the shows Lincoln Heights and Persons Unknown. He was the lead in the indie film The Kill Hole, and was later cast as Jackie Robinson in the 2013 biopic 42.


QUOTES


"I'm overwhelmed by it. It's just a huge responsibility. I wake up every morning, been working and prepping on it, and I'm having the time of my life, playing baseball ... studying footage. It's the opportunity of a lifetime to just do what I love." (On his role as baseball legend Jackie Robinson.)
– Chadwick Bosema

Training and Stage Work

Actor Chadwick Boseman was born in 1982 in South Carolina, and went on to attend Howard University in Washington, D.C., graduating with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in directing. He then attended the British American Drama Academy in Oxford, England.
Boseman has performed in a number of stage productions, including BreatheRomeo and JulietBootleg BluesZooman, and Willie's Cut and Shine. He won an AUDELCO award for his role as the teen E.J. in 2002'sUrban Transitions: Loose Blossoms, a play by Ron Milner about a struggling African-American family pulled in by the temptation of fast cash. He's also worked as part of the Hip Hop Theatre Festival and has written the plays Hieroglyphic Graffiti,Deep Azure and Rhyme Deferred. Additionally, he has directed a number of stage productions, as well as the short film Blood Over a Broken Pawn.

Starring Roles on TV

Boseman started to make a name for himself on TV in the mid-2000s, with guest spots on crime dramas like Third Watch andCSI:NY, and on the soap opera All My Children. Additionally, he was one of the performers for the award-winning audio version of the 2005 novel Upstate, by Kalisha Buckhanon.
In 2008, Boseman landed a reoccurring role as Nathaniel Ray on the ABC Family drama Lincoln Heights, which focused on a suburban family who relocates to the urban community where the police officer patriarch was raised. The series ran for four seasons, with Boseman featured during the last two. During this period, he also had guest-starring roles on ERLie to MeThe Glades and Cold Case.

A Football Player and Sergeant

The year 2008 also saw Boseman appearing in Gary Fleder's The Express, a sports biopic about renowned running back Ernie Davis, who played for Syracuse University during the Civil Rights Movement. The film co-starred Rob Brown and Dennis Quaid, with Boseman featured as fellow running back Floyd Little.
Boseman would land his next prominent role as Graham McNair, a Muslim sergeant, on the 2010 NBC summer thriller Persons Unknown. On the series, seven people are kidnapped and trapped in a town by an unknown entity. The following year (2011), Boseman landed additional guest spots on the shows JustifiedDetroit 1-8-7,Fringe and Castle.

Playing Jackie Robinson

In 2012, Boseman played the lead role in the film The Kill Hole, directed by Mischa Webley. The indie production revolves around the life of a Portland, Oregon taxi driver who's also an Iraq War veteran, haunted by memories of his past and drafted for a new mission by a private firm.

Around the same time, Boseman won the lead role in the Jackie Robinson biopic 42, which tells the story of the legendary baseball player, who broke racist barriers by becoming the first African American to play major league baseball. The film, written and directed by Brian Helge land, and co-starring Harrison Ford as Brooklyn Dodgers executive Branch Rickey,

"I'm overwhelmed by it," Boseman told online publication 
Madame Noire about his role as the baseball legend. "It's just a huge responsibility. I wake up every morning, been working and prepping on it, and I'm having the time of my life, playing baseball ... studying footage. It's the opportunity of a lifetime to just do what I love."is slated to be released in the spring of 2013.























































































































































































































































































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