Celebrity deaths start to hit a little harder in and around your 40s. They start to include more people closer to your age, entertainers who shaped your life from afar. It feels closer to home, and ...
To the editor: When I watched TV shows like "The Cosby Show,” "Leave It to Beaver" and "Family Matters," I always enjoyed the "regular boy" characters in them. For me, Theo has always represented the ...
For Black youths and teens growing up in the mid-1980s, “The Cosby Show” offered something rarely seen on television till then: a sitcom that placed characters who looked like them in a positive light ...
I had very little in common with Theo Huxtable. The only son of Cliff and Clair Huxtable on “The Cosby Show” lived in the big, diverse city of New York, while I languished in a small, racist Ohio town ...
When audiences met Theo Huxtable, playing a high school freshman in 1984’s pilot episode of The Cosby Show, his voice was squeaky, his room was a mess, and he was pleading with his dad, Heathcliff, to ...
Listen to more stories on the Noa app. In the first episode of The Cosby Show, Cliff Huxtable (played by Bill Cosby) walks into his only son’s messy room with a mission: getting him to care about ...
Malcolm-Jamal Warner, the actor perhaps best known for starring in the TV sitcom "The Cosby Show" as son Theodore "Theo" Huxtable, has died at 54. Warner drowned off the coast of Costa Rica on Sunday, ...
The memory of Malcolm-Jamal Warner, who died this week at age 54, will live on amongst his loved ones and fans of his iconic performance as Theodore "Theo" Huxtable on "The Cosby Show." Warner ...
LOS ANGELES — When Bill Cosby revolutionized television during the mid-1980s with "The Cosby Show," the fictional Huxtables, the wealthy Black family at the center of the sitcom, were often referred ...
Malcolm-Jamal Warner’s passing hit me harder than I could have anticipated it would. I had to dig through my own feelings to figure out why. When “The Cosby Show” — and Warner’s character, Theo ...
For Black youth and teens growing up in the mid-1980s, "The Cosby Show" offered something rarely seen on television up until that time: a sitcom that placed characters who looked like them in a ...