Ryan Coogler recently opened up about Chadwick Boseman, and how he worked. On a recent appearance on The Breakfast Club, Coogler shared a behind-the-scenes memory from Black Panther that caught even Disney’s executives off guard, and it says a lot about who Boseman was as a performer.
Coogler recalled: “He was talking in an African accent. Disney execs came to see us on ‘Panther.’ It was week two and they pulled up and it was the T’Challa accent and they were freaked out. I was like, ‘Don’t be freaked out. He’s working, man. He don’t turn it off until we wrap.’”
It was every moment, from call time to wrap, day in and day out, and for Coogler, who directed Black Panther and had been developing the sequel before Boseman’s passing in 2020, the impact was strong.
“Chad changed my life,” Coogler said. “He was the kind of teacher who you never knew you was getting a lesson when he taught. It was all by example and what he gave me and Michael was patience. He moved at an old-school pace and he took his time. He was always early. He was that type of dude.”
Coogler said it shaped how he approached Sinners, his latest project starring Michael B. Jordan. Boseman’s work ethic still lingers.
“Out of all of my actors, Chad’s death actually hit [Michael B. Jordan] the hardest. Chad was older than us, he was quite a bit older than us, even though he looked like he was the same age.
“He was a fully baked man from the South. He was an old school man’s man and compared to that dude when we worked together bro, me and Mike was kids.”
Coogler said Jordan even used Boseman’s example to ground his dual performance in Sinners: “Mike will tell you this, I told him man, I said, ‘Hey bro, what would Chad do in this [‘Sinners’] role? If he had this role what would he do?’ Because Chad never broke action.”
It’s awesome that Boseman clearly left a mark on the people he worked with.
Source: People