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Philanthropy Colman Domingo
In this photo provided by Kim Ha, W.K. Kellogg Foundation president La June Montgomery Tabron and Oscar-nominated actor Colman Domingo stand together at the Essence Festival of Culture, July 6, 2024 in New Orleans. (Kim Ha/W.K. Kellogg Foundation via AP)

Colman Domingo is practicing racial healing on and off the screen -- and wants you to join him

Colman Domingo has implicitly invited audiences to join his journey of racial healing across a Hollywood career spent largely in supporting roles

By JAMES POLLARD
Published - Aug 29, 2024, 03:16 PM ET
Last Updated - Aug 29, 2024, 03:16 PM EDT

NEW YORK (AP) — Colman Domingo has implicitly invited audiences to take the journey of racial healing throughout his career.

The Afro-Latino actor's portrayals often complicate popular representations of Black masculinity. There's his Oscar-nominated Bayard Rustin, the unsung gay civil rights leader. Or Mister, the abusive antagonist of “The Color Purple” who sheds his misogyny in a last bid at redemption. His most recent film, “Sing Sing,” follows the wrongly incarcerated leader of a prison theater troupe.

Now enjoying the hard-earned spotlight for those leading performances and his fashion-forward looks, Domingo is thinking more intentionally about his off-screen platform. And that call for racial healing has grown more explicit through a new partnership with the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.

The children's opportunity nonprofit has long centered antiracism, according to president La June Montgomery Tabron. To help all youth thrive, she said, it’s necessary to address root causes like racial inequity.

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