The Humor Mill

Rocky Carroll Lands In New HBO Film ‘Henrietta Lacks‘!

Posted Jul 28, 2016

“NCIS” star Rocky Carroll joined the growing cast of HBO’s film adaptation of “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks,” which Oprah Winfrey and Renee Elise Goldsberry are also attached to star in. This news comes on the heels of the announcement of Goldsberry’s casting (in the title role) earlier this week.

Carroll has signed up to play Sonny Lacks, Henrietta Lacks’ third child.

If you missed all the previous casting news on the project, catch up below, after the jump. There’s also a documentary to watch on Lacks, at the bottom of this post.


Renée Elise Goldsberry, also exiting the smash Broadway musical “Hamilton” cast this year (for which she won a Tony Award), has added another project to her growing post-“Hamilton” slate.

Following the announcement made 2 weeks ago that the actress will leap into the future for a role in Netflix’s upcoming sci-fi drama series “Altered Carbon,” Goldsberry has now been cast in the title role opposite Oprah Winfrey in HBO’s adaptation of “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks,” the non-fiction book by Rebecca Skloot, which Oprah Winfrey’s Harpo Films optioned in 2010.

Our last update on the project was earlier this year, when it was announced that Rose Byrne (“Damages” and much more) had been cast in the HBO Films project to play the author of the book that the film is based on, Skloot.

Goldsberry has signed up to play Henrietta Lacks in the film, likely in flashbacks, as the adaptation will chronicle her daughter’s search to learn about her mother and to understand how the unauthorized harvesting of Lacks’ cells in 1951 led to unprecedented medical breakthroughs. We previously reported that Oprah would play Lacks’ daughter, Deborah Lacks, in the present-day.

“The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks” tells the story of Lacks, a poor African America Baltimore mother of five who died of cervical cancer in 1951 at age 31, and whose cancerous cells, removed and cultured from her body for medical research by doctors at Johns Hopkins (without her family’s knowledge), led to significant breakthroughs in medical research, ranging from aiding the development of the cure for polio, to AIDS-related treatments, and much more.

But that doesn’t even begin to really uncover the story of this mostly-unknown black woman, her family, and the significant contributions she unknowingly made to science. There’s a lot of meat to chew on here, and I can see why Oprah would be interested in making a film based on Lacks’ story, and aftermath.

The book was published in February of 2010, and I encourage you to pick up a copy if you haven’t. You can buy it here.

Oprah reportedly loved the book so much that she “couldn’t put it down,” she said 5 years ago, and read all 384 pages in one sitting. The adaptation was said to be high on HBO’s priority list at the time, thanks to her encouragement. But it’s taken 6 years to finally push it into production.

George C. Wolfe will direct the film adaptation from a screenplay that he also wrote/adapted, so Winfrey and now Byrne should be in very good hands here (I smell potential Emmy nominations down the road).

Source: Shadow & Act

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