Mamas Uncut

Ryan Reynolds shares heartbreaking reason why Deadpool & Wolverine is dedicated to a boy named Henry Delaney

Screenshot from Ryan Reynolds' Instagram page

As Deadpool continues to dominate the box office, the star of the movie Ryan Reynolds has taken the last several days to share his gratitude for the other people who have made the movie possible.

On Aug. 19, Reynolds shared kind words about Rob Delaney, the actor who plays PeterPool. Delaney is known for his comedy, even Reynolds calls him “one of the most subversively funny people” he knows.

Ryan Reynolds shares heartbreaking reason why Deadpool & Wolverine is dedicated to a boy named Henry Delaney | As Deadpool continues continues to dominate the box offices, the star of the movie Ryan Reynolds has taken the last several days to share his gratitude for the other people who have made the movie possible.

But as Reynolds explained on Instagram, Delaney is also “a beautiful, acerbic and vulnerable writer.”

“If you stayed through the credits of ‘Deadpool & Wolverine,’ you might notice a credit saying, ‘For Henry Delaney,’” Reynolds explained. “Henry is Rob’s son.”

As Reynolds explained Delaney “lost his little boy to a brain tumor in 2018. Right as we finished ‘Deadpool 2’.” Henry was just 2-and-a-half years old.

“I’ve always kicked my own [butt] because I didn’t place a tribute to Henry over the end credits of Deadpool 2,” Reynolds continued. Now, he’s rectifying that.

“If there’s a bright side, even more people are seeing Henry’s name in the credits of ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’. And at long last, father and son are sharing the same screen.”

In a 2020 interview with BBC Radio, Delaney opened up about his son’s passing, saying, “I don’t know where Henry went or what happened to him when he died — do you? But I know I’ll get to find out when I die. At the very least, I’ll get to experience something Henry experienced, and that’s wonderful.”

“That knowledge brings me peace,” Delaney continued. “I won’t say ‘I can’t wait,’ because I can.”

Delaney added, at the time, that while he doesn’t know if Henry’s death helped him love his other children more, it’s help him “love them better.”

“They won’t be here forever,” he continued. “They’re here now, and it is my staggering privilege to get to hold them and smell them and stare at them.”

As Reynolds continued in his post, he praised the book Delaney wrote about his “vivid perspective on unimaginable grief.”

“He takes an unfiltered, rage-ful, loving, sad and hilarious (yes, HILARIOUS) look at grief through his book, ‘A HEART THAT WORKS,’” Reynolds writes.

“It’s an incredible piece of writing which explores the kaleidoscopic colors of emotion Henry’s passing revealed. I’m lucky to know Rob. And I’m lucky to have friends willing to put themselves on the line to make others feel less alone.”

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