Chadwick Boseman Receives Touching Tributes From Marvel Comics

By Pierre Chanliau Posted:
Chadwick Boseman on left, artwork of Boseman as T'Challa on right

After Chadwick Boseman died of colon cancer just a month ago, millions poured out support for his family, talking about what the actor meant to them and the impact he had on their lives. This included Black Panther director Ryan Coogler, who penned a beautiful tribute to the actor.

In lieu of any kind plans for the sequel, Disney has put them all on hold in order to honor and pay respect to the actor and activist. Just this week, Disney honored Chadwick Boseman by unveiling a mural done by concept artist and former Disney Imagineer Nikkolas Smith at Downtown Disney. 

Disney and Marvel continue in their promise by having Marvel Comics release a two-page tribute to the actor and activist, written by Ta-Nehisi Coates.

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Marvel Comics have included a foreword before all their comics releasing this week, giving tribute to actor Chadwick Boseman, written by Ta-Nehisi Coates who is a journalist and current writer for Marvel's Black Panther and Captain America comic series. Not only was Coates' writing for the character a major inspiration for the movie, he had also known Boseman since Howard University.

It was only appropriate then that Coates be the one to write about Chadwick Boseman for Marvel Comics, honoring his life and the impact he left.

Chadwick Boseman Eulogy Tribute Marvel Comics
From Marvel Comics

"In the Black Panther mythos, T'Challa often retreats to his City of the Dead, where all the previous kings and queens of Wakanda have been buried. There, T'Challa finds wisdom and counsel from his ancestors who have gone before. It was in such a city, almost 25 years ago, that I met Chadwick 'Chad' Boseman. Our City of the Dead was Howard University, a place where we felt our ancestors — Kwame Ture, Donny Hathaway, Zora Neale Hurston — walked with us. The word 'ancestor' is key here. It was not simply that Howard had produced 'notable' or 'accomplished' alumni; it was that it had produced warriors, men and women who'd spent their lives employing their chosen weaponry in the very same war that both Chad and myself, by virtue of color, felt ourselves drafted into. Like T'Challa in his own City of the Dead, we were so inculcated with their spirit that we felt we had a responsibility to do much the same. So it would not have been enough for Chad to become a leading man in Hollywood. His art would have to somehow advance the ancestral war for justice.

Not that Chad needed much urging. I met him leading a protest with my friend Kamilah Forbes to preserve the dignity of Howard's fine arts college. What I am saying is that before I knew Chad the artist, I knew Chad the warrior. And he was regal even then. There was something almost otherworldly about Chad — I would listen to him talk and only catch about 60 percent of what he was actually saying. It took time to realize that this was because Chad was always a few steps ahead of everyone.

I got to watch him through the years — advancing out of student theater, on to TV and film, and then finally cast as T'Challa. He was perfect. He had T'Challa's royal spirit, the sense that he did not represent merely himself, but a nation. And this is how I am understanding his death. It is personally sad to lose him at such a young age. But for those of us who so needed him right now, in these dark times, those of us who went to war with him, the loss is unthinkable. We simply cannot afford to be without Chad. My recourse is inadequate, but it's all I have to make meaning of this tragedy. It is the idea of ancestry. It is the notion that when someone like Chad wields their weapons as fiercely as he once did, they are remembered. It is the idea that Chad's wisdom and power are still with us in ancestral form. It is the thought that just as Chad once walked into the City of the Dead and harnessed the energy of those who'd gone before him, so he too may be harnessed, by all those warriors to come."

Artwork Tribute Chadewick Boseman Marvel Comics
From Marvel Comics

An illustration by Brian Stelfreeze also accompanied this tribute, depicting Chadwick Boseman as T'Challa performing the Wakandan salute made iconic in the movies.

This tribute will be found in the beginning of every Marvel Comics issue releasing this week.

- About The Author: Pierre Chanliau
Pierre Chanliau began as a news & feature writer for The Direct at the site's launch in 2020. As a longtime reader of superhero comic books, Pierre's knowledge of Marvel and DC is extensive, informing his reporting and editorial pieces regarding the MCU and DCU.