Oscar-nominated director John Singleton will be taken off life support 13 days after suffering a stroke at 51.
“It is with heavy hearts we announce that our beloved son, father and friend, John Daniel Singleton will be taken off of life support today. This was an agonizing decision, one that our family made, over a number of days, with the careful counsel of John’s doctors,” the statement began.
“In his private life, John is a loving and supporting father, son, brother, and friend who believed in higher education, black culture, old school music and the power of film,” the statement continued. “We are grateful to his fans, friends and colleagues for the outpour of love and prayers during this incredibly difficult time. We want to thank all the doctors at Cedars Sinai for the impeccable care he received.”
Frederick M. Brown/FilmMagic

There had been conflicting information about Singleton’s health status since his stroke, with one side of his family claiming he is working towards recovery while his mother, Sheila Ward, filed arequest to be named temporary conservatorwith claims that he is in a coma.
Singleton checked himself into a hospital last week after he began experiencing weakness in his legs after a trip to Costa Rica, according toTMZ. He later had the stroke while in the hospital.
(left to right) John Singleton, Samuel L. Jackson and Spike Lee.Earl Gibson III/Getty Images

The family’s statement said that Singleton had “quietly struggled with hypertension.”
Singleton made his film debut with his 1991 filmBoyz n the Hoodstarring Cuba Gooding Jr., Ice Cube, Laurence Fishburne, Morris Chestnut and Angela Bassett.
He was nominated for an Oscar for Best Director, becoming the first African American and the youngest person to have earned a nomination in that category.
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He also directed2 Fast 2 FuriousandFour Brotherswhile serving as a producer on the 2005 filmHustle & Flow. Recently, he co-created the crime dramaSnowfall.
Singleton was outspoken about issues of race in the Hollywood system, tellingThe Hollywood Reporterin 2014 that studios weren’t “letting the black people tell the stories” when it came to films depicting the African American experience.
“[Studio executives say] ‘We’re going to take your stories but, you know what? You’re going to go starve over here and we’re not going to let you get a job,’” Singleton said. “The so-called liberals that are in Hollywood now are not as good as their parents of ancestors.”
He added, “The black films now — so-called black films now — they’re great. They’re great films. But they’re just product. They’re not moving the bar forward creatively. When you try to make it homogenized, when you try to make it appeal to everybody, then you don’t have anything that’s special.”
source: people.com