Keep reading for everything we know so far about this highly anticipated final performance.ae0fcc31ae342fd3a1346ebb1f342fcb Filming was completed last summer Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, which is an adaptation of the August Wilson play of the same name. Viola Davis plays the eponymous character in the 1920s-set film—a real trailblazing blues singer who wants to control her music and her career. Boseman costars as Levee, an ambitious and volatile young trumpet player in her band. Ma Rainey’s is part of a 10-play cycle by Wilson, all set in a different decade of the 20th century and all centering Black characters and stories. During a preview event on October 19, Davis, who also worked with Boseman in Get on Up, the James Brown biopic, expressed her fondness for her late costar. “Not to compete with Chadwick’s mother, but he was my baby,” she said, according to Deadline. “Chadwick was an artist. That is just what he was… he loved it, he demanded it in every single way. For someone so young it was incredible to watch.” Critical to getting the film made was Denzel Washington, who directed and starred in (with Davis as well) a 2016 feature film adaptation of Wilson’s Fences, another play in the series. Ma Rainey’s is part of Washington’s deal with Netflix to adapt the other nine plays in the playwright’s “Pittsburgh Cycle.” Long before the younger actor played Jackie Robinson, James Brown, or the King of Wakanda, Washington covered his tuition for a prestigious acting intensive. When actress Phylicia Rashad was teaching at Howard University, Boseman and several other students were accepted into a British American Drama Academy’s Midsummer program. They were going to decline as they couldn’t pay the fee, but Rashad reached out to Washington, who agreed to foot the bill. Boseman recounted the story as part of his speech at the American Film Institute’s Lifetime Achievement tribute to Washington, saying, “imagine … that your benefactor was none other than the dopest actor on the planet.” (Boseman, it seems, was paying it forward. One of the stories that went viral as social media mourned him was from a drama bookshop employee who witnessed the star giving advice to an aspiring Black actor and then secretly purchasing a stack of books for him.) In the wake of his death, Netflix indefinitely postponed an Aug. 31 virtual preview event for Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom. According to Variety, it was to include a Q&A with Davis and director George C. Wolfe, but Boseman was not scheduled to appear. “We are heartbroken over today’s news of the passing of Chadwick Boseman, a ’true fighter’ as his family called him in their poignant tribute,” the Netflix statement reads. “This is an incredible loss … Please join us in sending your thoughts to his family and loved ones.” Wolfe, Davis, and Washington also issued statements of heartfelt condolence, along with countless colleagues and fans. As noted earlier, the virtual event took place in mid-October, the same date Netflix released the trailer and premiere date. Considering the talent and experience involved—as well as Fences’ four Oscar nominations and one win (for Davis)—this forthcoming Wilson adaptation will likely be an awards contender with possible posthumous honors for the mourned actor. For more entertainment news sent right to your inbox, sign up for our daily newsletter.

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