The Cosby Show actor dies in drowning accident
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Malcolm-Jamal Warner, an actor and artist who rose to fame as a child as Theodore Huxtable on The Cosby Show, has died, according to a source close to the actor.

Warner died in a drowning accident in Costa Rica, where he was on vacation with his family, the source said.

Malcolm-Jamal Warner, an actor and artist who rose to fame as a child as Theodore Huxtable on “The Cosby Show,” has died (Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP via CNN)

Warner was swimming at Playa Grande in the town of Cocles in the province of Limón on the Caribbean coast of Costa Rica around 2.30pm local time Sunday (6.30am Monday AEST), when a current pulled him deeper into the ocean, according to the Associated Press.

Costa Rica’s Judicial Investigation Police told CNN people who were on the beach tried to help Warner, but he was declared dead by the Red Cross.

CNN has reached out to representatives for Warner for further information.

Warner appeared on The Cosby Show. (Supplied)

A native of New Jersey, Warner started acting at age nine, making appearances in shows like Fame. He was a young teen when he was cast as the only son of Bill Cosby and Phylicia Rashad’s characters, Heathcliff and Claire Huxtable, in The Cosby Show, which ran from 1984 to 1992.

Warner later reflected on the legacy of the popular, Emmy-winning sitcom.

“The fact that the Cosby Show for Black America and white America alike finally legitimised the Black middle class, which has always been around since the inception of this country but, as with everything, is not legitimate ’til it’s on television,” Warner said.

“When the show first came out, there were white people and Black people talking about (how) the Huxtables don’t really exist, Black people don’t really live like that. Meanwhile, we were getting tens of thousands of fan letters from people saying, thank you so much for this show.”

Bill Cosby
Warner later spoke about the sexual assault allegations against Bill Cosby. (AP)

Warner was nominated for a Primetime Emmy in 1986 for his supporting work on The Cosby Show.

By the time the series was over, Warner said in a 2013 interview, “we were still on top enough to go out on top, but we were ready to live our own lives.”

“We were all ready to move on and as Mr Cosby said, by that point, we had pretty much said all that we could say,” Warner added.

Warner’s comments on Cosby’s misconduct allegations

When dozens of sexual misconduct allegations against Cosby came to light years later, Warner acknowledged his sadness, saying he felt the sitcom’s legacy had been “tarnished.”

“My biggest concern is when it comes to images of people of color on television and film, no matter what … negative stereotypes of people of color, we’ve always had The Cosby Show to hold up against that,” Warner told The Associated Press in a 2015 interview.

“And the fact that we no longer have that, that’s the thing that saddens me the most because in a few generations the Huxtables will have been just a fairy tale.”

Cosby denied all the allegations. A 2018 sexual assault conviction against him was later overturned.

As much as he honoured playing Theo, Warner also worked hard to show how multifaceted he was, including being a Grammy-winning musician.

He won best traditional RnB performance in 2015 for the song “Jesus Children.” He was also nominated for a Grammy in 2023 for best spoken word poetry album.

Warner spoke with CNN in 2017 about his music and becoming a father.

“Being a new parent, I have a lot of new material for the music,” he said at the time. “It’s really awesome and right now, my daughter’s four months so I don’t have to tell her ‘no.'”

Warner continued working steadily in television throughout his career, with credits including Touched by an Angel, Community, Key and Peele, Suits, Sons of Anarchy and American Horror Story.

Warner also starred opposite Eddie Griffin in the series Malcolm & Eddie for four seasons between 1996 and 2000.

His more recent acting credits include The Resident, The Wonder Years reboot, Grownish and 9-1-1.

Last year, Warner launched his podcast “Not All Hood” with the goal of continuing to be a voice that explores the diverse experiences of the Black community and touch on themes of representation in media.

“When we talk about the Black community, we tend to speak of it as a monolith when the reality is there are so many different facets of the Black community, and we wanted to have a space where we can really explore, discuss, and acknowledge all of those different aspects,” he told People magazine in an interview last year.

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