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Will Smith |
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Actor, rap musician. Born Willard Smith, on September 25, 1968,
in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the second of four children. He
started rapping at the age of 12, and he is reported to have
given up a scholarship at the prestigious Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT) in order to pursue his
entertainment career. That was apparently a smart move, as by
the age of 18, Smith was a millionaire.
Smith formed the group DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince with
his childhood friend Jeff Townes (his nickname, "Prince",
supposedly came from his high school teachers commenting on his
smooth manner and ability to talk his way out of difficult
situations). Their Grammy-winning album He's the DJ, I'm the
Rapper featured the crossover hit "Parents Just Don't
Understand." From 1990 to 1996, Smith starred in the popular
sitcom Fresh Prince of Bel Air, playing a teen who was born poor
but goes to live with a rich Beverly Hills family.
Early in his acting career, Smith surrounded himself with some
of Hollywood’s best, including Sidney Poitier, Denzel
Washington, Whoopi Goldberg, as well as Bill Cosby and Quincy
Jones, whom he has called his mentor. He has said that he
consults this notable group when confronted with tough career
decisions. In terms of his own influence on other artists, Smith
has been credited with paving the way for other musical
artists-turned-sitcom stars, including Queen Latifah, LL Cool J,
and Brandy.
His first starring movie role was in 1993's Six Degrees of
Separation, in which he played a young gay con man.
In 1995, he teamed up with fellow sitcom star Martin Lawrence
in the film Bad Boys, and in 1996, he played a fighter pilot in
the blockbuster Independence Day. Smith scored another huge hit
with his starring role in 1997's Men in Black, co-starring Tommy
Lee Jones. That same year he released the successful solo album
Big Willie Style.
In 1998, Smith held his own opposite another acting heavyweight,
Gene Hackman, in the hit action-drama Enemy of the State. His
attempt to score another Fourth of July box office hit with Wild
Wild West (1999) was a resounding disappointment, however; the
film met with little critical or public acclaim.
Smith released another successful solo album, Willennium, in
early 2000. He costarred, opposite Matt Damon, as a golf caddy
instilled with mystical powers in The Legend of Bagger Vance
(2000), directed by Robert Redford. In late 2001, Smith
headlined the long-awaited biopic Ali, turning in a
transformative performance as the legendary boxer Cassius Clay,
or Muhammad Ali. His impressive portrayal of the notoriously
outspoken boxer earned him both a Golden Globe and an Academy
Award nod for Best Actor. In November 2002, Smith signed on to
star in I, Robot, an adaptation of the Isaac Asimov short story
collection about a detective who investigates a crime that might
have been perpetrated by a robot.
Smith divorced his first wife, Sheree Zampino, in 1995, after
three years. They have one son, Willard C. "Trey" Smith III.
Smith's hit song "Just the Two of Us" is a tribute to Trey
(when Smith won the 1998 MTV Music Video Award for "Best Male
Video" for that song, he brought Trey up on stage to accept the
award with him).
Smith met the actress Jada Pinkett when she auditioned to play
his girlfriend on "Fresh Prince of Bel Air" in 1990 (she was
deemed too short for the role). They married at the Cloisters
Mansion on New Year's Eve 1997. Their son, Jaden Christopher
Syre, was born the following summer. Their daughter, Willow
Camille Reign, was born in October 2000.
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