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| RuPaul • Movies/TV • Music | ||||||||
1960 I was born November 17th, 7:58 p.m. at Mercy Hospital in San Diego,
California. When asked what she named her baby boy, my Mother replied, "His
name is RuPaul Andre Charles and he's gonna be a star! Cause ain't
another mother f**ker alive with a name like that!"
1961 My sister Renetta decided to give me a bath at six months old. She felt that I was her baby, because she had prayed and prayed for God to send her a little baby brother. During the bath she couldn't figure out why the baby wouldn't stop crying, she didn't know that she had broken my left arm. Renetta was only seven years old. Many years later my Dad told me they knew something was wrong, cause I was such a good baby who never cried. He said, "We could sit Ru down in the corner and he wouldn't make a sound," a trait that would prove to be not so good for me as I grew older. 1962 My first memory is that of my mother giving my sister "Rozy" a bath in the kitchen sink. She didn't break her arm. Rosalind Annette Charles was born January 28,1962. I was the only boy born to Ernestine "Toni" Fontenette and Irving Andrew Charles. My older sisters are twins born twenty-six minutes apart. Renae Ann Charles and Renetta Ann Charles were born October 18, 1953. 1964 I saw "The Supremes" on the Ed Sullivan TV show. I fell in love with them, particularly, the skinny one in the middle. 1965 Renetta says I would prance around the front yard in her pink dress. I don't remember that, but I do remember lip-sinking "The Supremes" hit song "Baby Love" by the side of the garage. Neighborhood kids inform me that I am a sissy. 1966 My parents were fighting a lot by this time. Every time they would start, we kids would run into the bedroom and hold each other crouching down as though it were an air raid. 1967 The divorce was as ugly and nasty as it could have gotten.
I thought it was all my fault. I wouldn't understand how traumatized
I was by it until I was well into my twenties. My mother basically
shut down for a couple of years. Isolating in her room with Valium
and Lithium. We went on welfare and we kids became little adults,
taking care of mom and keeping secrets from social workers, daddy
and anyone else who could threaten our family. 1969 The twins ran away from home. Momma says she threw them out. They were 15 years old. 1970 Momma got a job at Planned Parenthood. Renetta married a boy from school, two months after her 17th birthday. People mistake me for a girl. 1971 I got shit-faced drunk for the first time and smoked my first joint. 1972 I fell in love with a boy at school. By then, I was already a pro at hiding my feelings so that's what I did. That summer I enrolled in the San Diego Children's Theater. 1974 I started smoking Kool filter kings. 1975 Ninth grade I won "Best Afro" and "Best Dancer" at Gompers Jr. High School. In September, I enrolled at Patrick Henry High School. By December I was kicked out of that school for "never once attending a class". 1976 My sister Renetta suggested I move in with her and my brother-in-law. She felt the change of environment would be good for me. Six months later, we all relocated to Atlanta, GA. We fell on "hard times" when we first moved to Atlanta and it was very tough. But still I felt so happy to leave San Diego, I never felt like I belonged there. In the fall I enrolled at the Northside School of the Performing Arts where I repeated the tenth grade because my grades were so bad the year before. I got my drivers license on my b-day and was off and running. I was having the time of my life! Till this day, when people ask me where I'm from, I say "Hotlanta!" I was really able to blossom there, just like the beautiful Dogwood trees do in the springtime. 1977 The new year started with me changing my curriculum from music theater to drama. I loved my two-hour acting class and I loved my acting teacher; we all did. William A. Pannell was a twenty-six year old, first time teacher who had studied with the great Lee Strasburg, in Hollywood! Mr. Pannell had also graduated from "Northside," ten years prior, under the tutelage of Billy G. Densmore, the head of the performing arts school and my instructor in music theater. We all agreed that "Billy G." was "the enemy" because he represented the establishment and we were "the cutting edge." Everyday I would catch a ride, 18 miles into town, from Barney Smith, our neighbor from across the street. Then I'd take the #23 bus up Peachtree Road to West Wesley, where I'd hitchhike the last mile to get to school. It's too bad I didn't apply that same determination when it came to doing my schoolwork! The only class I didn't "skip" was Drama, and that was the last class of the day! By March, my grades were so bad, my brother-in-law threatened to transfer me to a closer school. I was devastated. Mr. Pannell knew how upset I was, so he took me to the side and gave me the best advice I had ever gotten. He said "RuPaul, don't take life so seriously". I ended up staying at Northside that whole year! And it was the best school year of my life! Years later when I saw the movie "Fame," it was like a 'deja vu' of my year at Northside. But, of course, we were much more scandalous than the kids in the movie. 1978 I dropped out of high school and later took the G.E.D test (General Education Diploma). By this time I had already worked part-time for my brother-in-law's used luxury car business for two years. Now I could work for him full-time, and I did until 1982. I never had what it took to sell a car, but I did have what it took to buy a car. I've always loved cars, and Laurence would send me all over the U.S.A to buy them or deliver them to his clients. Our motto was "buy low, sell high." I must have traveled cross-country over 50 times in the five years I spent in the car biz. I used to love breezing down some country highway in the middle of the night. I'd switch on the cruise control, light up a joint and blast Donna Summer's "Live and More" album. 1978 was absolutely the best year for music ever! Laurence did a
lot of business with another broker in San Diego, so I got to visit
my mother quite frequently. On one such visit, one week after my
18th b-day, I lost my virginity to a 36 year-old man named Richard.
I had never even kissed a man before. I remember when he kissed me
that first time I was so swept away, my knees buckled. 1980 In all the years I worked for Laurence, I never really made
any money to speak of, a couple of hundred bucks here and there,
and all the weed I could smoke. But I wasn't there for the money
or the weed; I was there for the experience. He taught me how to
go out into the world and get what I wanted. He taught me how to
listen and how to articulate my thoughts. I learned how to negotiate
with people in business and above all, I learned that I had as much
right to fulfill my dreams as any white person had. Laurence was
a go-getter. He was exciting, charming and up until then he was the
most adventurous person I had ever met. 1982 January marked my official start in show business, with the appearance of "RuPaul and the U-hauls" on "The American Music Show." "The U-hauls" consisted of my two girlfriends, Robin Prows and Josette Glasper-el. I made some costumes for us to wear and then we worked out a dance routine to "Shotgun" by "Junior Walker and the All Stars." We were a smash hit!!! Everyone loved us, but none more than "Now Explosion." They were a popular local band in the vein of the "B52's" and part of "T.A.M.S." ensemble. We became their opening act, but by the time we opened for them at NYC's famed "Pyramid Club," the original" "U-Hauls" were replaced by Gina Smith and Chrissie Thorpe, two full figure colored gals with lots of attitude and an appetite for fun. They both worked at a department store restaurant, where they got me a job as the short order cook. I worked there for almost three months before I was fired. I had also moved to midtown that summer and lived with my first boyfriend, Todd. We had a rocky relationship which proved to me that I had learned more from my parents than I thought or cared to. It's no wonder why it had taken me so long to hook up. 1983 After visiting NYC, I got the idea to "snipe" midtown Atlanta with Xerox copies of posters I made, usually with a photo of me that I had "doctored" to flawless perfection, announcing my appearances or just that "RuPaul is red hot." I would use wallpaper wheat paste, which made them virtually impossible to tear down. Needless to say, I got a lot of attention and it made me famous in the area. Soon all the local bands were doing it. In January '83, Robert Warren and Todd Butler, two guys who were currently attending my old high school, Northside, asked me to join the band they were forming, "Wee Wee Pole." "Wee Wee Pole featuring RuPaul and the U-Hauls..." played
the local new wave/punk club circuit and became very popular. I had
also been evicted from my apartment and was homeless all of that
year. Soon after, I was asked by Atlanta's "theatrical outfit" to play the role of "Riffraff" in the company's production of "The Rocky Horror Show". "Rocky" was a huge hit and ran 4 months! The show legitimized me in the eyes of the city's mainstream audiences. The theatre was next door to my old hangout, a disco called "Weekends." The owner asked me to "go-go" dance there 4 nights a week, for 50 bucks a night plus tips. I was the only "go-go" dancer at "Weekends" the whole two and a half years I worked there. I loved it; it was like a work-study college scholarship. I'd party all night and sleep all day. 1986 Re-teaming with LaHoma (Jon Witherspoon) brought the now classic movie "Starbooty" (later spelled with two "r"'s). In the home video camera lensed saga, I play the title character, an ex-model turned government agent, kicking ass for Uncle Sam. "Starbooty" was an instant cult hit. The soundtrack album soon followed, released by "Funtone U.S.A." and produced by two guys I met the year before, at the "New Music Seminar" in New York, who went by the name "The Pop Tarts". The success of "Starbooty" got the attention of a young filmmaker named Wayne Hollowell. Over the next couple of years I starred in a countless string of movies that Wayne wrote and directed with one common theme, sex, nudity, trashy dialogue and fake blood. Titles like "American Porn Star," "Mahogany 2" and the sex-drenched gore-fest "Voyeur." 1987 In November, just days before my 27th b-day, Larry Tee, LaHoma
and I packed up the "Now Explosion van" and moved to New
York City. I had been feeling like a "big fish in a little pond" in
Atlanta, but that was not the case in Manhattan. I started from the
bottom up, all over again, once I hit the city limits. This was the
beginning of my "Saturn Returns" period and it was f**king
hard as HELL!!!!!!! I did a show at a bar called "Chameleon" one
night and my pay was $18!!! 1990 As "Queen of Manhattan," my job was to keep the party going and that's exactly what I did. Booze, pills, acid, coke, pot, poppers, shrooms, special k and sometimes a little ethel inhalation to keep me from getting bored. Eight years of going out clubbing every night got real tiring by the time I reached my 30th b-day. The patrons kept getting younger and younger and I knew it was time for me to make a move, plus on top of that, some friends of mine (Deee-lite) had just hit it big on the billboard charts and I was more than a little bit envious. By year's end I quit drinking and doing chemicals and doing nightclubs to focus on making music again and shining above ground. 1991 The Pop Tarts agreed to manage me and Jimmy Harry and I set
out to write material for my demo. I used to generate gigs by going
out every night, but since I wasn't hanging in clubs, bookings were
few and far between. All my drinking buddies acted as if my abstaining
from the sauce was a judgment against them. The only friends who
supported my awakening were PJ and Flloyd, so I stuck to them like
white on rice. Flloyd was working at the Film Forum so I would hang
out there constantly, watching movies like "Paris is Burning" and "Funny
Face," while sustaining myself on free popcorn and seltzer water. 1993 By February, the cancer in Mama's body was eating her alive.
She could no longer walk or hear in one ear. As the two of us sat
watching TV, Kurt Loder popped up on the tube, teasing an MTV News
story with footage me frolicking around a shopping mall in Jersey
City. He said "Coming up next, she's er ah he's 6'4" and
supermodel of the world." Me and Mama both looked at each other,
and in that moment we simultaneously realized that her prediction,
made 32 years prior, had finally come true. I was a star. That was
the last time I saw Mama. It was the same scenario when Arsenio, Spike Lee and a Canadian named "Mac" called. 1995 I had been using M.A.C cosmetics since 1992 and I knew it was a great product. So when Frank Toskin and Frank Angelo asked me to join the company and become the "First Face of M.A.C," we all knew we were going to make history together but no one could have known how much of a dream come true this was for me. Over the course of six years, I launched store openings in ten countries and helped raise over $22 million dollars for the M.A.C AIDS fund. 1996 When I found out that there was a radio station featuring dance music in New York City, I was very excited and I wanted to support it by doing whatever I could. They asked if I could drop in and be a guest on their morning show. Little did I know that my old friend Michelle Visage was part of the morning show team. But it didn't surprise me because as long as I had known Michelle, she had always reinvented herself; first as one of the popping, dipping and spinning legendary children of the vogue balls, then as a member of the chart topping girl group Seduction, then as a white female rapper with writing credits on "The Bodyguard" soundtrack. The chemistry that Michelle and I shared that morning made it evident to the station's Program Director that he was listening to his new morning show team. Long story short; Michelle and I ended up hosting the WKTU morning show together for almost two years. 1997 When the Arbitron ratings revealed that Michelle and I were
#3 in the tri-state area, following Howard and News Radio, it was
clear who should be my co-host on the re-vamped RuPaul TV show on
VH1. In all of my career so far, doing "The RuPaul Show" was
the most creatively satisfying, fun-filled working experience I've
ever had. 1999 In acting class, I realized that I wasn't able to pull up certain
emotions that the script called for so I had to examine why. That
lead me to therapy which forced me to examine my addictive personality,
my marriage and the little boy who lives inside of me. Now I'm free to move on to act three of my life. |
Bif Naked Jack Palance Sarah Jessica Parker Matthew Perry Robert Picardo David Prowse Anthony Quinn Lou Reed Tim Robbins Fred Rogers Al Roker Isabella Rossellini Alan Ruck Darius Rucker RuPaul |
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| 10" x 16" | Signed August 1996 at B. Dalton, Freehold, NJ | |||||||
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