Chicago Sun-Times

How Snoop Dogg found faith in journey from gangbanger to biz mogul

- MAUDLYNE IHEJIRIKA,

Snoop Dogg is crazy cool. The icon, who started as a gangsta rapper but now steers an entertainm­ent empire spanning music, TV, film and digital realms, is in Chicago this week on tour with a new stage play based on his life, “Redemption of a Dogg.”

The play, premiering at the Arie Crown Theater on Saturday, is the rapper’s first foray into theater. It comes as his first book, “From Crook to Cook,” is being published later this month.

But don’t express too much surprise at his evolution from a brash, weed-smoking rapper with myriad brushes with the law — including an acquittal on murder charges in 1996 — to the mellow, still weed-smoking, but faith-filled entertainm­ent mogul he presents today.

“It’s always been there. There wasn’t like a moment that changed me. It’s just that in the early years, the focus wasn’t there,” Snoop, whose real name is Calvin Cordozar Broadus Jr., said in an interview with the Sun-Times on Wednesday.

“I wasn’t in control. I was just doing me. I was reckless, an 18-year-old, active gang member. My upbringing taught me the right way. Out there, I learned the wrong way,” he said. “That’s what usually happens with our youth. They get taught the right way, and then leave and do it the wrong way, then have to find our way back. That’s where I’m at now, finding myself back home.”

The play, written, directed and produced by noted urban theater playwright Je’Caryous Johnson, explores one man’s internal battle between preserving his fame and legacy — and potentiall­y losing the love of his life. It’s the story of Snoop and his wife of 25 years, Shante Taylor.

The high school sweetheart­s’ beautiful family life has been long admired by the public — they have three children and three grandchild­ren. But it hasn’t been without trials, and Snoop decided he wanted to tell that story. Chicago is the third stop of a 10-city tour, and Saturday is also Snoop’s 47th birthday.

“It gives you moments of trials and tribulatio­ns I went through in my relationsh­ip, where nobody knew,” said Snoop. “I wasn’t taught to be a father, because my mother raised me. It’s just doing what’s right, looking at those before me, saying, ‘Well, I don’t want that to happen. Let me make sure that I love, spend quality time, do what matters, make sure that I hold on to this.’”

The rapper has enjoyed a prolific career since being discovered by Dr. Dre in the early ’90s, with 17 studio albums since his first chart-topper, “Doggystyle.” With global fame, over 35 million records sold, and a career in movies and TV, he holds several records — including 17 Grammy nomination­s, but no wins.

His lyrics and beats are the backdrop of a hip-hop generation, with No. 1 hits like “Gin and Juice,” “Who Am I? (What’s My Name?),” “Nuthin’ but a ’G Thang” and “Next Episode.” His 2018 “Bible of Love” album, his first foray into gospel, debuted at No. 1 on Billboard.

“I was seeing so many schools being shot up, innocent kids killed by violence, and I was thinking about my grandmothe­r, who never got a chance to hear my music because it was never clean enough,” Snoop said of that album. “I wanted to make a record my mother, while she’s still here, could be proud of.”

As a DJ, he performs worldwide under the name DJ Snoopadeli­c, and was the first hip-hop performer to get a Las Vegas residency. His acting credits include roles in films including “Soul Plane,” “Starsky & Hutch,” “Half Baked” and the Oscar winner “Training Day.”

He’s done voiceover for many animated films and TV shows. And his production company, Snoopadeli­c Films, was nominated for an Emmy for his role as executive producer and co-host of VH1’s “Martha [Stewart] & Snoop’s Potluck Dinner.”

He’s still outspoken, though, with much to say about fellow rapper Kanye West’s visit to the White House last week and West’s bizarre, rambling monologue heaping praise on President Donald Trump. Snoop had earlier called West an “Uncle Tom.”

“You’re showing him telephones and airplanes and all this stuff that has nothing to do with nothing,” said Snoop. “We as black people need to send better representa­tion if we’re going to say, ‘This is someone speaking for us.’ [Trump] has power, and [West] didn’t bother to even say anything about fixing things that should be fixed.”

Conversely, Snoop had accolades for another ChiTown rapper who has used his platform to wade into politics.

“I love what Chance the Rapper is doing, by being smart and doing something that’s effective in his community,” Snoop said. “When we become successful as entertaine­rs, we have millions of people who support and follow us. We are the voice of the voiceless.”

The rapper, who runs the Snoop Youth Football League, a 13-year-old nonprofit serving inner-city youth, also had a message to gang-bangers wreaking havoc in Chicago’s inner city.

“To the leaders from these gangs that’s out here that care: Find a way to unify. Dialogue. Just get some conversati­on going, to where we can at least live for each other, because what y’all don’t understand is that you guys are related,” said Snoop. “We all ran from the South to come here. So we’re all related. Do your history. I want y’all to live, man. This is Big Snoop Dogg.”

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 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES ?? Snoop Dogg is in town with a stage play, “Redemption of a Dogg,” which explores the rapper-turned-mogul’s battle to preserve his fame and legacy. It also reveals the story of his beautiful family life.
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES Snoop Dogg is in town with a stage play, “Redemption of a Dogg,” which explores the rapper-turned-mogul’s battle to preserve his fame and legacy. It also reveals the story of his beautiful family life.
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