Will Smith Biography
All-Music
Guide
Will
Smith
Beginning
his career during the mid-1980s under the name the Fresh
Prince, by the following decade rapper Will Smith was one
of the biggest superstars of his time -- not only a pop
music sensation, he also conquered television and eventually
feature films, starring in a string of box-office megahits.
Born September 25, 1969 in Philadelphia, he was 16 when
he met aspiring DJ Jeff Townes; joining forces as DJ Jazzy
Jeff and the Fresh Prince, the duo immediately became local
favorites, but their continued existence was threatened
when Smith graduated high school and was offered a scholarship
to MIT. Ultimately, he chose to pursue a career in music,
and in 1987 he and Townes issued their debut record Rock
the House, scoring a hit with the single "Girls Ain't
Nothing But Trouble."
Propelled
by the smash "Parents Just Don't Understand," DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince broke into the mainstream
a year later with He's the DJ, I'm the Rapper, one of the
first hip hop LPs to achieve double-platinum status. Clean-cut,
witty and easygoing, the duo's bubblegum approach was a
stark contrast to the dominant, harder-edged rap sound of
the period; viewed as a non-threatening alternative to their
peers, they received the parental seal of approval, and
their appeal spread across racial lines as well. And In
This Corner... followed in 1989, and soon Hollywood began
taking notice of Smith's success; in 1990, he was tapped
to star in The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, a sitcom for NBC.
An immediate hit, it made Smith a household name, and continued
in production through 1996.
Smith
also continued his music career, and in 1991 DJ Jazzy Jeff
and the Fresh Prince scored their biggest chart hit to date
with the excellent "Summertime," from the album
Homebase. The year following, he made his feature film debut
in the drama Where the Day Takes You; in 1993, his supporting
turn in Six Degrees of Separation was the subject of much
critical acclaim. That same year, the final Jazzy Jeff/Fresh
Prince record, the disappointing Code Red, was released. In
1995, Smith co-starred in the action film Bad Boys, a major
box office hit; it set the stage for his leading role in 1996's
Independence Day, the summer's biggest smash. A year later,
he starred in Men in Black, again the box-office champ of
the summer season; recording for the first time under his
given name, he also scored a smash with the movie's rap theme.
Smith's debut solo LP, Big Willie Style, also appeared in
1997, notching the hit "Gettin' Jiggy Wit It."
--
Jason Ankeny
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