WILL SMITH earned the nickname "Prince" from his grade-school
teachers because this smooth-talking tyke from West Philadelphia was more charming than
any monarch's son. Smith completed his nom de rap by tacking on "fresh" (a
popular hip-hop adjective of the mid-eighties), and the Fresh Prince tapped his
considerable charisma to become a Grammy-winning musician, the star of a long-running
sitcom, and returning to his birth name a big-screen action hero.A born entertainer, Smith
started rapping at the age of twelve and shortly thereafter teamed up with Jeff Townes,
who, as Jazzy Jeff, became the Fresh Prince's musical partner. Eight years later, the duo
had produced two platinum albums, including the Grammy-winning He's the DJ, I'm the
Rapper. It featured the crossover hit single "Parents Just Don't Understand" and
scads of clever, gangsta-free lyrics that elicited knowing chuckles from middle-American
teenagers. With musical success achieved, Smith expressed a desire to try acting to
several business associates, including Warner Bros. executive Benny Medina. It turned out
that Medina, who was born poor in Los Angeles but lived as a teen with a rich Beverly
Hills family, had been unsuccessfully pitching a sitcom based on his demographically
diverse life. Smith would be perfect, Medina figured, as the protagonist in this fish out
of water talea modern Beverly Hillbillies. According to Hollywood legend, Smith read the
script for NBC's suits with such élan that they bought the concept on the spot. Fresh
Prince of Bel Air premiered in 1990, and with its well-timed quips and pratfalls from
Smith, the successful show stayed on the air for six years.Despite his homeboy swagger,
Smith himself grew up middle class (his father is an engineer; his mother works for the
school board) and did so well in school that M.I.T. offered him a scholarship, which he
refused in order to pursue a show-business career. A millionaire by age eighteen, Smith
was nonetheless deeply indebted to the I.R.S. when he landed the sitcom. Produced by
Quincy Jones, the series' success enabled Smith to not only remedy his I.O.U.s, but also
establish a well-connected professional family, which includes much of Hollywood's
African-American royalty: Jones, Bill Cosby, Whoopi Goldberg, Sidney Poitier and Denzel
Washington. In fact, it was Washington who counselled Smith on how to proceed with his
first starring movie role, as a young gay con man in Six Degrees of Separation (1993).
Although it was scripted that his character would kiss another man, Smith was reluctant.
He sought counsel from Washington, whose advice boiled down to, ''Don't be kissing no
man." Smith informed the furious director, Fred Schepsi, that the homosexual smooch
would have to be faked. When the movie opened, the controversy was smoothed over by
critical praise for Smith's performance.For his follow-up flick, Smith teamed with fellow
sitcom star in the action-heavy, gay-kiss-free a Bad Boys (1995). The buddy movie
was a smash, Smith's asking price rose to $5 million per film, and offers poured in. He
opted to play a heroic fighter pilot in the surefire blockbuster Independence Day
(1996). Sadly, as the actor's stardom was growing, his three-year-old marriage to Sheree
Zampino was falling apart. The couple divorced in December 1995, and Smith relinquished
primary custody of their son Willard C. "Trey" Smith III.
Smith simultaneously returned to rapping and the sci-fi genre with the 1997 summer
blockbuster Men in Black. The success of his "Men In Black" single seemed
to inspire him: after wrapping the film, Smith ducked into the studio to lay down tracks
for a new record. Big Willie Style, his first album in four years landed on record-store
shelves in November 1997. Smith and longtime love Jada Pinkett capped off the year with a
New Year's Eve wedding ceremony. The couple welcomed their first child, a son named Jaden
Christopher Syre, the following summer. As for upcoming film roles, Smith will take on
nasty, identity-besmirching government conspirators for next summer's Enemy of the State,
the project he chose over Nicolas Cage, Snake Eyes and he'll play the lead role in
the upcoming John Singleton baseball drama Brushback.
Fresh Prince
