Los Angeles Times

Telling his own personal L.A. story

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“John didn’t just make his feature film debut in 1991 with ‘Boyz n the Hood,’ he exploded into Hollywood, our culture and our consciousn­ess with such a powerful cinematic depiction of life in the inner city,” said director and producer Thomas Schlamme.

Singleton’s family described him as a “supernova” as a child, a bundle of curiosity who found inspiratio­n and role models in one of L.A.’s toughest neighborho­ods.

With “Boyz n the Hood,” he became the youngest person to be nominated for an Academy Award in the director category.

The film, a harrowing tale of childhood, friendship and peril in South L.A., was based on Singleton’s own experience­s and was also nominated in the original screenplay category.

The son of a mortgage broker father and a pharmaceut­ical company sales executive mother, Singleton was raised in separate households by his unmarried parents.

“My life changed when I went to school in the Valley, when I was in eighth grade,” he told The Times in 2017. “It was the first time I went on the 405 Freeway. They were rich in Encino, Tarzana. You see a different life. Everyone was changed by the crack problem in my neighborho­od. I remember ice cream trucks and you realize the ice cream truck isn’t selling ice cream, they’re selling crack.”

Born Jan. 6, 1968, John Daniel Singleton grew up in South L.A. Though only miles from Hollywood, his neighborho­od might as well have been a world away from the studios and back lots.

His modest upbringing shaped his work. After graduating from Pasadena’s Blair High School in 1986, he attended USC’s film school where he landed an internship at Paramount and won three awards, leading to a contract with Creative Artists Agency during his sophomore year.

Elizabeth Daley, dean of USC’s School of Cinematic Arts, said Singleton was known to the professors there before he was even a student, roaming the hallways, sitting in on classes and engaging professors about their favorite films.

“He bulldozed his way into an industry that was not always welcoming, and did so with projects that reflected his community, his culture and his passions.” Daley said. “He is a giant in our hearts.”

Though Singleton’s only student film experience was directing a pair of silent 8millimete­r movies, his film school scripts were impressive, earning him the Jack Nicholson writing award two years in a row.

He wrote the script for “Boyz n the Hood” in just 31⁄2 weeks and presented it as his senior thesis, and it was quickly snatched up by Columbia Pictures.

Despite his inexperien­ce, Singleton insisted that the only person who could possibly do justice to the film was himself. After a lengthy meeting on the studio’s lot, he earned a powerful ally in the studio’s chief, Frank Price.

“I thought John’s script had a distinctiv­e voice and great insight,” Price told The Times in 1991. “But when we met, I was really impressed. He’s not just a good writer, but he has enormous selfconfid­ence and assurance. In fact, the last time I’d met someone that young with so much self-assurance was Steven Spielberg.”

The movie, filmed for a mere $5.7 million, became the first all-black movie about L.A.’s inner city struggles to be produced by a major studio and was inducted into the National Film Registry of the Library of Congress in 2001. When it screened at the Cannes Film Festival, the audience gave it a 20-minute standing ovation.

“Boyz n the Hood” arrived at the theaters as the L.A. gang wars were escalating and just nine months before the Rodney King beating and the deadly street riots that engulfed the city.

“When ‘Boyz n the Hood’ came out, it became part of this small uprising” in black cinema, USC professor and student of African American cinema Christine Acham said in 2011. “It had really been squashed since the early ’70s. To see these black films come to the forefront was something that was pretty significan­t. Instead of being represente­d, you have a case of people trying to represent themselves.”

The film garnered two Oscar nomination­s — screenplay and director — and earned more than $60 million at the box office.

After “Boyz n the Hood,” Singleton went on to direct “Poetic Justice” (1993) starring Tupac Shakur and Janet Jackson, “Higher Learning” (1995) and “Baby Boy” (2001), which featured Taraji P. Henson at the start of her career.

“This movie is like watching the soul of a black man on screen,” Singleton said of “Baby Boy” in a 2001 interview with The Times. “It may be dysfunctio­nal, but it’s real.”

In those films and in later works, Singleton continued to explore the implicatio­ns of inner city violence.

He directed, produced and wrote the screenplay for the remake of “Shaft” (2000), directed “2 Fast 2 Furious” (2003) and “Four Brothers” (2005), and produced “Hustle & Flow” (2005) and “Black Snake Moan” (2006).

In a departure from his film credits, Singleton directed the visual effectshea­vy music video for Michael Jackson’s “Remember the Time,” which featured Eddie Murphy, Iman and Magic Johnson. His 1997 historical drama “Rosewood,” which explored racial violence, was entered into the 47th Berlin Internatio­nal Film Festival.

Singleton was passionate about increasing diversity in the film industry, embracing and working alongside Regina King, Tupac Shakur and Ice Cube.

“I want to do for the movie business what Jay-Z did in the music business,” he told The Times in 2006. “He’s the guy everyone goes to for guidance, which is a role I want to embrace, being a godfather to a new generation of filmmakers. I want to nurture the next generation, which is where our future will come from. I’m hoping I can give them what I always wanted, which is some reallife advice.”

In 2007, Singleton was involved in a car crash in Los Angeles in which he struck and killed a pedestrian who was jaywalking. He was detained for questionin­g, but no charges were filed.

In 2017, Singleton produced the A&E documentar­y “L.A. Burning: The Riots 25 Years Later.” Most recently, he co-created and produced the FX series “Snowfall,” about the rise of the crack epidemic in 1980s Los Angeles.

“I don’t think I could ever have accomplish­ed what I have if I started now,” he told The Times in 2017. “How do you break through the clutter, man? What everyone wants is to get their voice heard and by as many people as possible. But how do you quantify that in this world? I don’t know, I don’t know. It’s not for me.”

He also directed episodes of “Empire,” “Billions” and “The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story” and launched the BET police drama “Rebel,” which he wrote, directed and produced.

“I have a whole lot of stories to tell,” he explained in 2017. “With television, I’m like making a movie every week. What filmmaker doesn’t want to have the opportunit­y to do that?”

Singleton is survived by his mother, Sheila Ward; his father, Danny; and children Justice, Maasai, Hadar, Cleopatra, Selenesol, Isis and Seven.

 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? ‘GODFATHER TO A NEW GENERATION’ John Singleton, left, reunites with Taraji P. Henson and Tyrese Gibson, co-stars of his 2001 film “Baby Boy,” at the Sundance festival in 2005.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ‘GODFATHER TO A NEW GENERATION’ John Singleton, left, reunites with Taraji P. Henson and Tyrese Gibson, co-stars of his 2001 film “Baby Boy,” at the Sundance festival in 2005.

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