Jada Pinkett Smith, Tupac Shakur lip-sync and dance to a Will Smith rap as she shares retro video
Jada Pinkett Smith provided a refreshing dose of the ‘90s in a recent social media post that featured both Tupac Shakur and Will Smith, whom she would ultimately marry.
In Wednesday’s Instagram post, Pinkett Smith shared a throwback video of herself and Shakur dancing along and lip syncing to DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince’s 1988 hit “Parents Just Don’t Understand.†(Smith was the Fresh Prince half of that rap duo.)
“Here is part of the original video of Pac and I doing a terrible job at lip syncing Parents Just Don’t Understand,†Pinkett Smith captioned the ‘90s nostalgia-filled video.
Pinkett Smith and Shakur, who died in 1996, met while attending high school together at the Baltimore School for the Arts, where they forged a close friendship.
‘Let’s remember him for that which we loved most … his way with words,’ Jada Pinkett Smith wrote about rapper Tapuc Shakur, her longtime friend.
In a separate Instagram post, the “Girls Trip†actor shared an excerpt Wednesday from her upcoming memoir, “Worthy,†discussing her relationship with Shakur and to the Grammy-winning song.
“Not in a million years would I have dreamed that the Fresh Prince and I would become, um, very acquainted. Not in a million years did I imagine three lives, their fates, would be so intertwined,†she wrote. “And… I never would have imagined that this video would become a tangible memory, of the last time Pac and I, were simply kids together.
“Pac and I lip syncing Parents Just Don’t Understand by Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince during our Junior year in high school. Who would have thought?â€
Pinkett Smith’s book is scheduled for an Oct. 4 release.
In a 2018 episode of “Red Table Talk,†Pinkett Smith opened up to her daughter, Willow Smith, and mother, Adrienne Banfield-Norris, about her relationship with Shakur. Pinkett Smith said she and the rapper shared an “instant connection†upon meeting and became “pretty much inseparable.â€
Rapper Tupac Shakur was a revolutionary; a controversial, brilliant artist cut down in his prime who grew even more iconic after his death.
“[Shakur] would have been 50 this year, and of course, I went down memory lane,†she said on the show. “Over the years, Pac wrote me many letters and many poems, and I don’t think this one has ever been published, honestly ... I don’t think he would have minded that I share this with you guys.â€
Pinkett Smith also recalled the moment she learned of her longtime friend’s death — during a trip to New York to see him — and the intense grief she experienced thereafter.
“A lot of people talk about my relationship with Pac and trying to figure that out,†she mused during the episode.
“That was a huge loss in my life because he was one of those people that I expected to be here. My upset is more anger ... because I feel that he left me. And I know that’s not true, and it’s a very selfish way to think about it, but I really did believe that he was going to be here for the long run.â€
Times staff writer Christi Carras contributed to this report.
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