Will (I) Smith filmography and biography
Date of birth: 25 September 1968, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Will (I) Smith biography
Will Smith was the second of four children of Caroline (school board
employee) and Willard C Smith Sr. (owner of a refrigeration company).
Smith is of both African American and Native American heritage. He grew
up in middle class area in West Philadelphia called Wynnefield. Will
attended the Overbrook High School located in the Overbrook section of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He got the nickname "Prince" because of the
way he could charm his way out of trouble. Bright student Will also
signed up with the high-status Julia Reynolds Masterman Laboratory and
Demonstration School in Philadelphia.
Pursuing music, he met Jeffrey A. Townes at a party and they soon
began performing together as "DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince". When
the duo took off in popularity, Smith made and spent a lot of money on
a house, cars and jewelry; leading to his near bankruptcy in his early
twenties.
Luckily, in 1989, he met Benny Medina (I), who had an idea for a
sitcom based on his life in Beverly Hills. Smith loved the idea as did
NBC which put on the The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. The
plot was simple - Will basically played himself; a street-smart West
Philly kid transplanted to Beverly Hills. The series lasted 6 years.
During that time, he ventured into movies where the critics took note
of him in Six Degrees of Separation. With the success
that came with the action picture Bad Boys, Will's movie
career was set. He had a huge Blockbuster hit with
Independence Day, where he plays the alien-battling
Marine Corps Captain Steven Hiller.
Will (I) Smith trivia
- Met wife Jada Pinkett Smith when she tried out for the role of
his girlfriend on The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. The role
eventually went to Nia Long.
- Has three children. Son, Willard Smith III (Trey Smith (II)) born
in November 11, 1992, with Sheree Smith (I). Son, Jaden
Christopher Syre Smith (Jaden Smith) born July 8, 1998 and
daughter, Willow Camille Reign Smith (Willow Smith) born October
31, 2000 with Jada Pinkett Smith.
- Has said he based his character Captain Steven Hiller in
Independence Day on his favorite big screen hero,
Harrison Ford (I), most notably his performances of Han Solo in
Star Wars and its sequels.
- Also known as rap artist "The Fresh Prince.".
- Will's siblings are: Pam Smith (born in 1964), and twins Ellen and Harry
Smith (born in 1971).
- Won a Grammy Award for the song "Summertime" during his rap career.
- Received the first ever Grammy Award for Best Rap Performance, for the
song "Parents Just Don't Understand" in 1989 with his partner
Jeffrey A. Townes (aka Jazzy Jeff).
- Enjoys playing chess.
- (1998) Chosen by People magazine as one of the 50 Most Beautiful People
in the World.
- Smith's pilot test show for The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air
was directed by Debbie Allen.
- Met first wife, Sheree Smith (I), at a taping of
A Different World in 1991.
- (January 1993) As a public role model, hosted the Presidential Inaugural
Celebration for Youth, as part of the Gala for President
Bill Clinton (I).
- Graduate of Philly's legendary Overbrook High School, whose alumni
include Wilt Chamberlain, Hal Lear, 'Wali
'Wonder Jones, Walt Hazzard, The Dovells,
The Orlons, DeeDee Sharp, etc. and, in tribute to his
student years there, his production company is called Overbrook
Entertainment.
- Attended the prestigious Julia Reynolds Masterman Laboratory and
Demonstration School in Philadelphia.
- Turned down the role of Neo in The Matrix.
- First hip-hop artist to be nominated for an Academy Award.
- Speaks fluent Spanish.
- Ranked #2 on Star TV's Top Ten Box Office stars of the 1990s (2003).
- Had a chart-hit together with DJ Jazzy Jeff (aka
Jeffrey A. Townes.
- Dropped from Columbia Records as an artist after lackluster sales of his
third solo album, which was self-titled, and greatest hits compilation.
[Summer 2003]
- Incorporates the line "Aw, hell no!" into all his movies as a running
catch phrase like Arnold Schwarzenegger's "I'll be back!".
- Ranked #15 in TV Guide's list of "TV's 25 Greatest Teen Idols" (23
January 2005 issue).
- Gained a place in the Guinness World Records book for most public
appearances in 12 hours, by attending three red carpet "premieres" for
Hitch (2005/I) on 22nd February 2005. He walked the red carpet
and introduced the film at Manchester, Birmingham, and finally for the
premiere in London, England.
- Once stated that in his whole career, he most regrets turning down the
part of Neo in The Matrix and the film that he most
regrets making was Wild Wild West.
- He has been at his adult height of 6' 2" since he was 13, although he is
now about 60 pounds heavier than he first was when he reached this
height.
- Premiere Magazine ranked him as #44 on a list of the Greatest Movie
Stars of All Time in their Stars in Our Constellation feature (2005).
- He sang a few lines "Wild Wild West" to his on screen cousin Carleton, a
movie in which he starred 6 years later.
- Hosted the MTV Movie Awards in 1994.
- Was considered for the role of "Mr. Smith" in
Mr. amp; Mrs. Smith before Brad Pitt was cast.
- Is supposedly a huge fan of the Swedish well-known (but barely known in
the U.S.) melodic heavy metal band Soilwork.
- Raked #66 in VH1's 100 greatest Teen Stars.
- Holds the record for most Kids Choice Awards with a whopping six wins.
- Ranked #14 on Premiere's 2006 "Power 50" list. Had ranked #18 in 2005.
He is the second-highest ranked actor, behind only Tom Cruise.
- (October 2005) He and Jada Pinkett Smith were forced to leave
their home in California because a bush fire threatened to destroy it
and several other houses in the same area.
- His 1995 divorce from ex-wife Sheree Smith (I) led to a $900,000
lump sum divorce settlement for Zampino plus $24,000 per month in
alimony and child support; this equals $288,000 a year.
- Lost his place in the Guiness World Records book for most public
appearances in 12 hours to German actors Jürgen Vogel and
Daniel Brühl, who attended four red carpet premieres of their
movie Ein Freund von mir, one more than Will (22 October
2006).
- In the 1998 rap lyrics of "Gettin' Jiggy", Will Smith (I) says
that Muhammad Ali (I) would call him "The Greatest." Two and a
half years later, he played the title role in Ali.
- Along with early partner DJ Jazzy Jeff (aka Jeffrey A. Townes),
was the first to start scratching records and started the trend in the
early '80s.
- An animated caricature of him appeared in
Men in Black: The Series (the animated series
adaptation of Men in Black), alongside a caricature of
his MIB co-star Tommy Lee Jones, set against a shot that
parodied one of the famous low angle shots of a building being
threatened by a flying saucer, an in-joke reference to Smith's 1996 hit
Men in Black: The Series, which preceded
Men in Black.
- His character from Men in Black, Agent Jay, was not
originally written to specifically be a black man. In fact, the role
was offered to Caucasian actors 'Chris ODonnell (I) and
David Schwimmer (I) before Smith accepted the part.
- (March 2007) Had to undergo treatment on his shoulder in a New York
hospital after he suffered a strain.
- Was among the guests at Tom Cruise's and Katie Holmes's
wedding ceremony in Italy.
- Ranked #30 on VH1's 50 Greatest Hip Hop Artists along with DJ Jazzy Jeff
& The Fresh Prince.
- Ranked #29 on VH1's 100 Sexiest Artists.
- 2007 - Ranked #5 on EW's The 50 Smartest People in Hollywood.
- December 2007 - According to Forbes, for each dollar he got paid,
Smith's movies averaged $10 of gross income.
- Was a millionaire before the age of 20.
- In 2004, his net worth was estimated to be $188 million.
- In 2007, Forbes Magazine estimated his earnings for the year at $31
million.
- Good friends with Ken Foree.
- Huge fan of Professional Wrestling.
- Is often called "Mr. July" by the media due to the fact that most of his
summer blockbusters open in July.
- As of Hancock, he holds the record for the actor to star
in the most consecutive $100 million-grossing movies (8).
- He and his daughter Willow Smith both had movies opening 2 July,
2008. His was Hancock, hers was
Kit Kittredge: An American Girl.
- Has appeared in two films starting with the word "I",
I, Robot and I Am Legend.
- Wrote and performed the song Just the Two of Us about his first son
Trey.
- Was considered for the role of Detective James Carter in
Rush Hour.
- Holds the record of appearing in the most consecutive $100
million-grossing movies (8).
- Was in consideration for the part of Curtis Taylor Jr in
Dreamgirls. However Jamie Foxx was cast instead.
- Birth Card is the Queen of Hearts.
Will (I) Smith quotes
- [On his first season of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air] "I
was trying so hard. I would memorize the entire script, then I'd be
lipping everybody's lines while they were talking. When I watch those
episodes, it's disgusting. My performances were horrible."
- On the change in his body that Ali's intense physical training required:
"I'm human viagra. I'm Willagra. I'm a sex machine now. I'm raring to
go every second of the day. My wife's loving it."
- My biggest emotional defeat and the greatest emotional pain I've had as
an actor was when 'Wild Wild West' opened up to $52 million. The movie
wasn't good. And it hurt so bad to be the No. 1 movie, to open at $52
million and to know the movie wasn't good.
- I want to stop at five - when asked by Jules Asner about having
more children.
- When I turned 28, everything clicked. I even got way better in bed.
- It's a whole different thing being an actor. A rapper is about being
completely true to yourself. Being an actor is about changing who you
are. You make yourself a different person. You become a different
person.
- You're so much stronger when your partner is strong. I honestly believe
there is no woman for me but Jada. Of all the women I've met - and
there've been a few - no one can handle me the way Jada does. Once you
feel someone locked in on you, it's no contest. As fine as other women
can be, as tempting sexually, I'm not going anywhere. This is it. I
can't imagine what anyone else could offer.
- I love being black in America, and especially being black in Hollywood.
- I really believe that a man and a woman together, raising a family, is
the purest form of happiness we can experience.
- If you're not willing to work hard, let someone else do it. I'd rather
be with someone who does a horrible job, but gives 110% than with
someone who does a good job and gives 60%.
- People laugh, but if I set my mind to it, within the next 15 years I
would be president.
- My grandmother once told me, 'Don't let failure go to your heart and
don't let success go to your head.'
- [on Star Wars] "I might have been eight or nine. That was the movie that
put me into a space where the science fiction element was almost a
spiritual connection for me. I thought, if someone could imagine that
and then put it on a screen and make me feel like that... and my entire
career I've been trying to make people feel like Star Wars made me
feel."
- Too many people spend money they haven't earned to buy things they don't
want to impress people they don't like.
- About Aishwarya Rai: "I really wanted to work with her in
Hitch (2005/I) but she was shooting
Bride amp; Prejudice at the time and she couldn't do it. She
has this powerful energy where she doesn't have to say anything, do
anything, she can just stand there. Anything she's making, I'll be
there" (February 2006).
- If I weren't a musician/actor, I'd be a computer engineer. I was always
good at math. I probably would have been the guy who invented the
remote control if I'd been around then.
- When I started in movies, I said, 'I want to be the biggest movie star
in the world.' The biggest movie stars make the biggest movies, so [my
producing partner James Lassiter and I] looked at the top 10 movies of
all time. At that point, they were all special-effects movies. So
Independence Day, no-brainer. Men in Black, no-brainer. I, Robot,
no-brainer.
- [on refusing to kiss Anthony Michael Hall in
Six Degrees of Separation] It was very immature on my
part. I was thinking, 'How are my friends in Philly going to think
about this?' I wasn't emotionally stable enough to artistically commit
to that aspect of the film. In a movie with actors and a director and
writer of this caliber, for me to be the one bringing something cheesy
to it... This was a valuable lesson for me. Either you do it or you
don't.
- Give me a problem, I'll give you a solution. I just love living. That's
a feeling you can't fake. I'm glad every single day. I think that even
the camera can feel that I'm a happy man.
- (1996) I was nine and my older sister must have been 15. Some guys
pulled a knife on me and took my money when I was coming home from
school. I came in crying and my sister asked me why. I told her and she
right away grabbed a baseball bat. We walked around for four hours
looking for this guy. She had no concern for her own safety. Somebody
had done something to her brother and she was going to do everything in
her power to make sure they never did it again. We never found the
guys, but that type of love and commitment is what I search for. My
mother and my grandmother. That same kind of unconditional love. All
women have the organs. But that's not what excites me about being in a
relationship with women, that's not what makes me feel good. What I
want to know is, 'Are you gonna grab a bat when someone steals my
money?' Now, Miss Jada's so little, she might need two bats, but she's
more than happy to go grab 'em. Outside of our love relationship, she's
my best friend, too.
- (1996, Movieline Magazine) There's probably only four women in Los
Angeles that have intimate knowledge of Will Smith. You know, I had my
brief period, a short time in my life, but that got real old real
quick. I want to love somebody. I just always prefer one woman. The
intimacy is so much more enjoyable when it's with someone you love.
Because I know I can pretty much have sex with anyone I choose, it
becomes less appealing. It's no challenge. A successful relationship is
much harder than sleeping with as many women as you can sleep with.
- (1996, on fame) There are members of the press who make their living
infringing on people's private moments. You never know where these
people are going to be. They stay outside your house and climb the
gates and walk around looking in your windows. Now I've got a bunch of
140-pound Rottweilers. It's just a shame to have to live like that,
because I like people so much. Still, you don't know what people will
do. You can never feel completely safe. You've got to look around all
the time. I'm kind of used to that, being black, watching out for white
people coming to get you. Now it's tenfold...I'm having trouble dealing
with the concept that you sacrifice your right to courtesy by being a
celebrity. Because I'm a celebrity, someone is allowed to block my way
from getting into my car. If I'm in the middle of a conversation,
because I'm a celebrity, someone can come up to me and go, 'Can you
sign this?' You're supposed to do the nice thing and sign, because if
you don't, it's like, 'He's such an asshole. He doesn't sign
autographs.' You're in mid-gulp at a restaurant and people ask you to
put down your fork, take some dirty pen that you have no idea of where
it's been, sign some filthy piece of paper ripped off a paper bag they
found outside, then go back and put your hands in your food.
- (1996, on fame) I'm pretty good at diffusing potential situations, but I
find myself having to diffuse them a lot more often than before. I
heard Sylvester Stallone say once that after he made Rocky, everybody
wanted to fight him. Well, every big guy wants to fight me now. They
go. 'Yo. I ain't no alien-hit me,' and I'm like, 'I don't want to hit
you. I just want to get some cheese from the supermarket to make
grilled cheese sandwiches for my son.' Why do people want to fight me?
What did I do? I think of myself as a pretty calm, likable guy. It's
really weird. I was nonthreatening on 'The Fresh Prince,' so nobody
wanted to fight me, but then I buffed up for Independence Day, came on
a little cocky, and suddenly people want to knock me down. People who
know me from TV think I've seen them in their underwear drinking on
their couch, so the response is more familiar, more friendly. Film
gives you almost God status, you know? It makes people crazy.
- (1996, on fame) I was in Manhattan making Men In Black and this girl was
driving along, saw me and started mouthing over and over, 'Oh, my God.
Oh, my God,' then crashed into another car." Smith shakes his head in
amazement. "Now, she gets out of her car, but she doesn't say, "Oh. I
crashed into the back of a car!' She runs over to me and asks for my
autograph. That's when I thought: This is real different. Then, I was
at the Virgin Megastore in Manhattan and this girl came up to me,
pulled her shirt up and asked me to sign her breasts with a Sharpie. I
mean, she's standing there in the middle of the store with her titties
hanging out and I'm like, 'Listen, those are really nice breasts, but
this is really an inappropriate time and place.' In another store, this
toothless 80-year-old lady came up to me, grabbed my face and tried to
kiss me right on the lips. I said, 'Now, ma'am, if I walked up to you,
grabbed your face and tried to kiss you on the mouth, the cops would
give me a Rodney King and take me right to jail.' And she was like,
'Oh, slop being mean. Just give me a kiss.'
- (1996) As for my life right now, the picture I always see in my mind is
of that incredible game Michael Jordan had where he had 63 points. He
just turned to the TV cameras and shrugged, like, 'Hey, I'm just
throwing 'em up there and they're going in.' That's how I feel. I'd
love to say that I'm brilliant, that I'm the second coming. The real
answer is that I'm blessed. I throw 'em up from wherever I am and they
just keep going in. How cool is that?
- (1996) I'm above average in talent, but where I think I excel is
psychotic drive. All I need is for somebody to say I can't do something
and this crazy switch inside me makes me attack whatever I'm doing.
Psychotic drive is where I excel over people that are probably more
naturally gifted.
- (1996) In film and TV, there's a natural, gradual decline to your
career. In the music business, it's literally one day. The day your
record hits the radio, you explode to number one on the countdown.
You're the man, you're large, you're doing show after show. Then you're
over just that fast. I had the ups of people telling me, 'You're the
man, Will.' then the downs of selling your house because you can't
afford all this stuff you bought because everybody told you were the
man. The money disappeared. But, my God, I learned about myself because
I had the ups and all the downs...I've been in really ugly situations,
hostage situations, on the road with my music. You know, you get out to
Albany, Georgia and the promoter didn't make his money, so he doesn't
want to pay you. I mean, during the first part of my music career, we
signed our first deal with a gangster who later tried to shoot us. He
was a penny-ante gangster, but the bullets were for real. As we were
driving away, he shot at the car five or six times. It was pretty
scary, but you don't think about that while it's happening, you're just
trying to get away. He would have killed us if he could actually shoot.