'The Wire 'star Tray Chaney loses Atlanta home in tornado that left son seriously injured: 'Cherish life'
The Wire star Tray Chaney has one message for fans after losing his Atlanta home in a tornado that also left his teenage son seriously injured: "Cherish life as much as you can."
In a video posted to his Instagram account on Thursday, Chaney stood in front of the remains of his home and explained to fans what happened. "I just got out the hospital. I'm getting ready to go see my son in the ICU. At 3 p.m. today, a tornado came through Henry County, Locust Grove, Atlanta. I lost my house. I lost everything in it. Thank God I'm still living. I survived a tornado. My son, he survived," he continued, choking up. "I'm doing the video to let y'all know to cherish life. Cherish life as much as you can."
In a second statement, Chaney gave more details about the tornado's destruction, which left him unconscious and threw his 18-year-old son, Malachi, hundreds of feet. "I was unconscious on the ground with my face in the mud with parts of my house on top of me," Chaney wrote in the post. "I woke up in a panic, crawled from under my house screaming my son's name out. My neighbors were there to assist me and finally we found my son 300 feet away in the woods behind my house. Malachai is in the hospital fighting and me and my wife have not and will not leave his side."
The actor played Malik "Poot" Carr, a drug dealer working for Avon Barksdale (Wood Harris), for five seasons on the critically acclaimed HBO drama, The Wire. In his Instagram post, Chaney revealed that he and Malachi had appeared on an Atlanta radio program with The Wire actress Felicia Pearson, who played Snoop, the day before the devastating tornado.
A GoFundMe page for Chaney and his family has already raised more than $12,000 to help with rebuilding costs. In subsequent posts, the actor shared an update on Malachi's condition, saying, "The swelling on his face is finally starting to go down." Still, Chaney noted that his son has "a long journey to recovery ahead," adding in his latest update, "The worst pain of my entire life as a father [is] watching my son in this hospital bed in so much pain."
Read the original article on Entertainment Weekly
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