TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「After a four-year battle with cancer, actor Chadwick Boseman died at home with his family by his side on Aug. 28. He was 43, his publicist told @apnews. A statement sent from the actor's Twitter account said Boseman—"a true fighter"—was diagnosed with stage III colon cancer in 2016. It later progressed to stage IV. He "persevered through it all," the statement continued, noting that he filmed "during and between countless surgeries and chemotherapy." Every time Boseman appears onscreen, Sean @diddy Combs wrote in a 2018 recognition of the actor, "he's finding a new way to inspire. His portrayals of African-American heroes have shown how Black America has always been able to transform pain into something powerful. From turning James Brown’s tortured soul into music, Jackie Robinson’s pride into barriers broken and records set, and Thurgood Marshall's sense of racial injustice into equality, Chadwick depicts these figures with a coolness, power and grace that remind us that we too can be great ourselves." As the Black Panther, Combs added, he inspired "everyone, but especially Black youth, who deserve to see superheroes like them, to show them that truly anyone can be a superhero." Photograph by @magdawosinskastudio—@nytimes/@reduxpictures」8月29日 12時04分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 8月29日 12時04分


After a four-year battle with cancer, actor Chadwick Boseman died at home with his family by his side on Aug. 28. He was 43, his publicist told @apnews. A statement sent from the actor's Twitter account said Boseman—"a true fighter"—was diagnosed with stage III colon cancer in 2016. It later progressed to stage IV. He "persevered through it all," the statement continued, noting that he filmed "during and between countless surgeries and chemotherapy." Every time Boseman appears onscreen, Sean @ディディ Combs wrote in a 2018 recognition of the actor, "he's finding a new way to inspire. His portrayals of African-American heroes have shown how Black America has always been able to transform pain into something powerful. From turning James Brown’s tortured soul into music, Jackie Robinson’s pride into barriers broken and records set, and Thurgood Marshall's sense of racial injustice into equality, Chadwick depicts these figures with a coolness, power and grace that remind us that we too can be great ourselves." As the Black Panther, Combs added, he inspired "everyone, but especially Black youth, who deserve to see superheroes like them, to show them that truly anyone can be a superhero." Photograph by @magdawosinskastudio@ニューヨーク・タイムズ/@reduxpictures


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