The New York Times
NAME: Tupac Shakur
SECTION: Section 1; Page 1; Column 1; Cultural Desk
LENGTH: 1128 words
HEADLINE:
Tupac Shakur, 25, Rap Performer Who Personified Violence, Dies
BYLINE:
By JON PARELES
BODY:
Tupac Shakur, a rapper and actor who built a career on controversy, died of
wounds yesterday from a drive-by shooting last Saturday. He was 25 years old.
Mr. Shakur, who lived in Los Angeles, had been in critical condition at
University Medical Center in Las Vegas since Saturday. That night as he was
leaving the Mike Tyson-Bruce Seldon prizefight, a Cadillac pulled up alongside
the BMW in which he was riding and he was shot four times. His right lung was
removed on Sunday. No arrests have been made.
Mr. Shakur was a complex and sometimes contradictory figure, with a career
featuring million-selling albums, gunshot wounds and run-ins with the police.
He was an intelligent, vivid writer who had studied acting at the High School
of Performing Arts in Baltimore; he was an accomplished rapper with a husky
baritone and crisp enunciation. He was also a convicted sex offender, and the
words
"Thug Life" and
"Outlaw" were tattooed on his body.
"It's really unfortunate that the violent perception that the world has of that
young man may be exacerbated by the way he died: art is being confused with
real life," Mr. Shakur's lawyer, Shawn S. Chapman, said yesterday in Los Angeles.
"There was this wonderful, charming, bright, talented, funny person that no one
is going to get to know; they are just going to know this other side.
Hopefully, this will have some positive effect on people -- the gang members --
who are shooting each other."
In some raps, Mr. Shakur glamorized the life of the
"player," a high-living, macho gangster flaunting ill-gotten gains. But in many others,
sometimes on the same albums, he portrayed the gangster life as a desperate,
self-destructive existence of fear and sudden death. He described gangsterism
as a vicious cycle, a grimly inevitable response to racism, ghetto poverty and
police brutality.
"All we know is violence," he declared in
"Trapped." In an interview with Vibe magazine this year, he said children should be told
that
"because I'm talking about it doesn't mean that it's O.K." But he also reveled in his notoriety, particularly after he was released from
jail.
With many raps about killing policemen (usually in self-defense), Mr. Shakur
offered prime examples for groups that wanted to clean up rap lyrics; he also
considered himself a target of police harassment. At the same time, he sold
millions of albums and reached No. 1 on Billboard's pop-albums chart. Long
before his death, his career raised questions about hip-hop's devotion to
"realness," the notion that a performer has to live (or have lived) the life he raps
about.
"Although some may say that Tupac laid down in the bed he made, it is always
unfortunate when someone with talent dies at such a young age, regardless of
circumstances," said Geoff Mayfield, director for charts at Billboard, the music's industry
trade magazine.
"Hopefully, the reaction to what has happened will dampen enthusiasm for
violence among those who looked up to him, rather than promote it."
Tupac Amaru Shakur was born in New York City, the son of Afeni Shakur, a member
of the Black Panthers who was in jail on bombing charges while she was pregnant
with him; she was acquitted. He grew up in the Bronx, then moved with his
mother to Baltimore, where he studied acting at the High School of the
Performing Arts. There, after a friend was shot while playing with guns, he
wrote his first rap, about gun control, and began performing it. He dropped out
of high school (although he later earned a general equivalency diploma) and
moved to northern California.
He returned to performing, and auditioned for Shock G of the group Digital
Underground. He was hired for the road crew and eventually performed and
recorded with Digital Underground, appearing on the group's
"This Is an EP Release" (Tommy Boy) and
"Sons of the P" (Tommy Boy), which was nominated for a Grammy Award. In 1991, he started a
solo recording career with the album
"2Pacalypse Now" (Interscope), which sold half a million copies. It included two modest hits,
"Trapped" and
"Brenda's Got a Baby," a song about an unwed teen-age mother's plight. Before the album was released,
he also started a career as a movie actor, playing the violent, unpredictable
Bishop in the Ernest Dickerson film
"Juice."
In October 1991, Mr. Shakur said, police officers in Oakland, Calif., assaulted
him because he was jaywalking; he filed a $10 million lawsuit. In the spring of
1992, a Texas state trooper was killed by a teen-ager who was listening to
"2Pacalypse Now," which includes songs about killing policemen. Vice President Dan Quayle
demanded that the album be withdrawn; Interscope refused.
In 1993, Mr. Shakur played the male lead in John Singleton's film
"Poetic Justice," opposite Janet Jackson, and released
"Strictly 4 My N.I.G.G.A.Z.," which sold a million copies, mixing tales of violence with positive messages
about women and the responsibility of fatherhood. It was followed in 1994 by
"Thug Life, Vol. 1," made by a group of rappers featuring Mr. Shakur. The group's hit single,
"Pour a Little Liquor," was an elegy for victims of gangster life; it was used in the soundtrack of
"Above the Rim," a movie in which Mr. Shakur had a supporting role.
In November 1993, Mr. Shakur was indicted on charges that he and some
associates sodomized a 20-year-old woman in a Manhattan hotel suite. During the
trial, he was shot twice as he entered a Manhattan recording studio and robbed
of $40,000 worth of jewelry. He was sentenced to 1 1/2 to 4 1/2 years in prison
for sexual assault. While in prison, he married his longtime girlfriend, Keisha
Morris, but the marriage was annulled. In October 1995, pending appeal, he was
released on $1.4 million bail, which was put up by his new recording label,
Death Row Records.
His 1995 album,
"Me Against the World" (Out Da Gutta/Interscope), apparently recorded before his prison term, was a
more somber reflection on ghetto violence; it entered the Billboard album chart
at No. 1, and sold two million copies. Upon his release, Mr. Shakur immediately
began recording songs for
"All Eyez on Me" (Death Row/Interscope), which has sold 2.5 million copies since its release
this year. It was the first double album in hip-hop, and it also reached No. 1.
The cautionary tone was gone; on the album, Mr. Shakur flaunted his success,
reveling in fame and wealth.
"His latest album was his best-selling album, and one expects that he would have
built on it from there," said Mr. Mayfield of Billboard.
Mr. Shakur had planned a tour this fall with other Death Row performers,
including Snoop Doggy Dogg.
He is survived by his mother and a half-sister, Sekyiwah Shakur, who live in
Decatur, Ga., and a half-brother, Maurice Harding.
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