- Ahmad Chadway
Infobox character
bgcolour = brown
name = Ahmad Chadway
caption =
real_name = Ahmad Chadway
portrayer =Brandon Hammond (film)
Aaron Meeks (TV series)
creator =George Tillman, Jr.
species =
gender = Male
first = "Soul Food" (film)
last = "Don't Think This Hasn't Been Fabulous" (TV series, Season 5, Episode 14)
cause =
age =
occupation = Student, Lakeside Preparatory Academy, Chicago
alias =
family =
spouse =
children =
relatives =Kenny Chadway (father)Maxine Chadway (mother)
Kelly Chadway (sister)
Brooke Chadway (sister)Teri Joseph (aunt)
Tracy Van Adams (aunt)
Josephine Joseph (grandmother)
footnotes =Ahmad Chadway is a fictional character from the
Showtime television series "Soul Food". He first appeared as the narrator and central character of the 1997 film "Soul Food". Originally, he was named Ahmad Simmons, and was portrayed byBrandon Hammond . In the television series, the surname was changed to Chadway, and the role was assumed byAaron Meeks .Character Background
A lifelong resident of
Chicago , Ahmad is the oldest child ofKenny Chadway and the former Maxine Joseph. At the time of Ahmad's birth, Kenny and Maxine were not married to each other, and had barely finished high school. The couple soon married and eventually had a total of five children: Ahmad, Kelly (Taylor Love), Brooke, and a set of twins.Even as a pre-teen, Ahmad demonstrated a level of maturity beyond his years. He shared a special relationship with his widowed grandmother Josephine Joseph (
Irma P. Hall ), whom he referred to as "Big Mama". Her illness and subsequent death (due todiabetes ) led to a rift between Ahmad's mother Maxine and her sister Teri, disrupting the decades-long tradition of Sunday dinner being held at Big Mama's house. When the family seemed on the verge of drifting apart permanently, Ahmad manipulated his adult relatives into arriving for dinner one Sunday at Big Mama's home (now occupied by his aunt "Bird" and her husband Lem), which resulted in reconciliation and forgiveness.Ahmad is an intellectually gifted student. To accommodate his needs, his parents used
school vouchers to enroll him in one of Chicago's most exclusive private schools, Lakeside Preparatory Academy. [This would have been impossible in the "real world", as the state ofIllinois does not have a school voucher program.] He continued to do well at Lakeside Prep, consistently earning decent grades. He made many friends, despite being one of the fewAfrican American students there, and perhaps the only one from a working class background.Ahmad aspires to become a filmmaker, and speculates that he may one day write a screenplay about his experiences as a member of the Joseph family.
References
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