«John from “The Green Mile” in his last years: Duncan looked like this right before he went away.»

”However, he didn’t have a great actual life either. His mother reared him alone. Eventually, a shortage of funds prompted the future great to quit basketball and drop out of school.

He was a security guard by profession, but his height, muscular build, and extraordinary physical condition led him to become a bodyguard.

He later acted alongside Bruce Willis in the film “Armageddon.” He was able to portray his most famous role, “The Green Mile,” in this one.

Clarke has acted in two motion pictures: Planet of the Apes and Sin City. Tragically, the effects of the 2012 heart attack he suffered in the hospital turned out to be deadly.
Have you watched the popular movie?Share your opinion in the comment!

American Civil War True or False Quiz

Test your knowledge of the American Civil War with this quiz and answer whether the following 10 statements about the conflict are true or false!

1. True or False: The American Civil War began in 1860.

Confederate flag flying over Fort Sumter -- photo from 1861. Image is a detail from a stereoscopic photograph taken by Alma A. Pelot on the morning of April 15, 1861.Wikimedia CommonsTrueFalse

2. True or False: South Carolina was the first US state to secede from the Union.

The ruins of Mills House and nearby buildings, Charleston, South Carolina, at end of American Civil War. A shell-damaged carriage and the remains of a brick chimney are in the foreground - 1865Wikimedia CommonsTrueFalse

3. True or False: Abraham Lincoln was the President of the United States at the beginning and the end of the American Civil War.

Abraham Lincoln, three-quarter length portrait, seated and holding his spectacles and a pencil, 5 Feb 1865Wikimedia CommonsTrueFalse

4. True or False: About 10% of the US population served in the military during the American Civil War.

Photograph of the assembled officers of the 80th New York Infantry (20th N.Y.S.M.) at their encampment at Culpepper, Virginia. Glass collodion wet negative. The Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 1863Wikimedia CommonsTrueFalse

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