Delayed Tupac Shakur biopic gains steam - Los Angeles Times
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Delayed Tupac Shakur biopic gains steam

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Last week marked the anniversary of Tupac Shakur’s death at age 25 due to complications after a drive-by shooting in Las Vegas. Seventeen years after the prolific rapper’s slaying, a long gestating biopic is another step closer to fruition.

Morgan Creek Productions is teaming with Emmett Furla Oasis Films to co-finance and co-produce the delayed film, “Tupac,†according to Deadline.

The producers are working with a script by Eddie Gonzalez and Jeremy Haft, with a new draft expected, and aiming to begin production in February.

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In 2011, Morgan Creek was developing the film, with Antoine Fuqua (“Training Day,†“Tears of the Sun,†“Brooklyn’s Finestâ€) attached to direct, and it launched an online casting call to find a lead to fill the shoes of the polarizing, often-embattled rapper.

RELATED: ‘Tupac’ biopic launches online casting call for lead role

At the time of the casting call, a draft of the film chronicled Shakur’s prolific rise as a rapper and actor, his legal troubles, his time at Death Row Records and, of course, his 1996 killing, which came at the height of the East Coast-West Coast rap rivalry.

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His slaying, like that of peer Christopher Wallace (a.k.a. Notorious B.I.G.), remains unsolved -- although theories about who gunned down the two are among hip-hop’s eeriest mythology.

No word on casting for the film. Anthony Mackie (“The Hurt Lockerâ€) famously tackled Shakur’s persona in Wallace’s 2009 biopic, “Notorious.†That film opted for an unknown to play Biggie and landed both a look- and sound-alike in Jamal Woolard -- who ironically rapped alongside Shakur on his seventh posthumously released studio album, 2006’s “Pac’s Life.â€

Producers of the biopic have the rights to Shakur’s extensive music catalog, and his mother, Afeni Shakur, will be a producer on the film.

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