Jason Momoa wasn't the only actor who made an appearance at Black Sabbath's final show on July 5, 2025, at Villa Park in the band's hometown of Birmingham, England.
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Concert attendees captured the Aquaman star starting a mosh pit while metal legends Pantera played their opening set. But while Momoa was banging his head in the audience, Jack Black, his A Minecraft Movie costar, was performing.
It Looked Like Something Out Of A Movie
The pre-recorded scene looked straight out of Black's classic movie School of Rock. Donned in a long-sleeved blue shirt with white tassels on the sleeves and "OZZY" bedazzled across his chest, the actor launched into a performance of Black Sabbath's "Mr. Crowley" flanked by Rage Against the Machine's Tom Morello's son Roman, Revel Ian (son of Anthrax's Scott Ian), drumming prodigy Yoyoka Soma and young keyboardist Hugo Weiss.
Black and his young players were part of the nine-hour "Bl\ack To The Beginning" show, which also featured Ozzy Osbourne playing solo and performances by Guns N' Roses, Metallica, Slayer, Lamb of God and Anthrax. Proceeds from the show went toward Cure Parkinson's, Birmingham Children's and Acorn Children's Hospice.
Of course, Black is no stranger to the metal genre. In addition to his role in School of Rock, the actor is one-half of Tenacious D, the comedy metal duo that includes Kyle Gass. The band's debut record included "Dio," a tribute to Ronnie James Dio, the singer who replaced Ozzy Osbourne in Black Sabbath.
The Segment Was For Black Sabbath's Final Show
The concert was billed as Osbourne's and Black Sabbath's farewell from the stage. Founded in 1968, the group laid the foundation for the metal genre with staples like "Iron Man" and "Paranoid." However, Osbourne was recently diagnosed with Parkinson's disease. It was his wife, Sharon Osbourne, who suggested to the 76-year-old legend that he say goodbye with one last concert.
"He's very happy to be coming back and very emotional about this," Sharon told The Sun. "Parkinson's is a progressive disease. It's not something you can stabilize. It affects different parts of the body and it's affected his legs. But his voice is as good as it's ever been."
Black once told George Lopez in an interview that Osbourne's music altered his life when he visited a record store at the age of 10. "There was this kid who was 14, and he said, 'No, man. You don't want that. Get this,' and he showed me Ozzy Osbourne's 'Blizzard Of Ozz,'" Black said. "It just changed my whole brain, the passion and the darkness and the evil of the music."
