Heavy D
was the
frontman
of Heavy
D and
the Boyz,
which
fused
New Jack
Swing
with
reggae.
He later
became a
record
executive
and had
a
successful
acting
career.
LOS
ANGELES
- Rapper
and
actor
Heavy D,
who
played
an
influential
role in
shaping
rap
music in
the late
'80s and
early
'90s
with a
fusion
of New
Jack
Swing
and
reggae,
has
died. He
was 44.
Heavy D,
who was
born
Dwight
Arrington
Myers,
died
Tuesday
in the
emergency
room at
Cedars-Sinai
Medical
Center
in Los
Angeles
after
collapsing
on the
walkway
outside
his
Beverly
Hills
home,
according
to law
enforcement
sources.
The Los
Angeles
County
coroner's
office
is
investigating
the
cause of
death.
Myers,
who was
6 feet 3
and
weighed
more
than 300
pounds
at one
point,
anointed
himself
the
"Overweight
Lover,"
but he
had
slimmed
down in
recent
years.
He burst
on the
scene in
the late
1980s as
the
frontman
of the
hip-hop
group
Heavy D
and the
Boyz,
which he
formed
with
neighborhood
friends
Eddie F
(Edward
Ferrel),
G-Whiz
(Glen
Parrish)
and
Trouble
T-Roy
(Troy
Dixon).
The Boyz
were the
first
group
signed
to
burgeoning
Uptown
Records,
and
their
1987
debut,
"Living
Large,"
reached
the No.
10 spot
on the
Billboard
R&B/Hip-Hop
Albums
chart.
Their
1989
album
"Big
Tyme"
went
platinum
and
yielded
the hits
"We Got
Our Own
Thang,"
"Somebody
For Me"
and "Gyrlz,
They
Love
Me."
They
went on
to
release
three
more
albums
and
recorded
the
theme
songs
for the
TV shows
"In
Living
Color"
and "MADtv"
before
Myers
embarked
on a
solo
career.
Born May
24,
1967, in
Jamaica,
Myers
was the
youngest
of six
children.
His
mother
Eulah, a
nurse,
and
father,
Clifford,
a film
technician,
moved
the
family
to Mount
Vernon,
N.Y.,
when he
was
young.
He found
success
in the
music
industry
despite
having
dropped
out of
school
after
the
eighth
grade.
Myers
garnered
praise
for his
radio-friendly,
playful
flows
and was
embraced
as an
unlikely
sex
symbol
by
female
fans who
called
him a
"big
teddy
bear."
Suave
and
profane-free
in his
raps,
Myers
was
often
heralded
as the
"Barry
White of
rap" —
an image
he
played
up on
hits
such as
"Mr. Big
Stuff,"
"Big
Daddy"
and "The
Overweight
Lover's
in the
House."
But by
no means
did he
consider
himself
soft.
"I'm not
one of
those
pop
guys.
That's
for
wimps
like
Vanilla
Ice," he
told The
Times in
1991. "I
aim my
music at
the hip
black,
hip-hop
audience.
In my
kind of
rap, I
like to
make
these
statements
— like
rapping
[about]
sexism
and
paying
tribute
to black
women or
raising
consciousness
of kids
about
the
ghetto.
Making
those
statements
and
being
heard —
that's
one of
the best
things
about
being a
rapper."
It
wasn't
long
before
industry
players
wanted
to tap
into his
charm.
Heavy D
landed
on a
remix of
Janet
Jackson's
hit
single
"Alright,"
and he
went on
to lend
a verse
to
Michael
Jackson's
1992
smash
"Jam."
He also
collaborated
with Cee-Lo,
Q-Tip,
Quincy
Jones
and B.B.
King.
"I am in
total
disbelief....I
was so
blessed
to not
only
meet
him, but
to
collaborate
with
him,"
said R&B
singer
Brandy,
who
teamed
with
Myers on
a remake
of
Michael
Jackson's
"Rock
With
You" for
Jones'
1995
"Q's
Jook
Joint."
Myers
joined
Sean
"Puffy"
Combs,
Jermaine
Dupri,
Suge
Knight,
Dallas
Austin
and
Russell
Simmons
as
moguls
who were
able to
transform
street
credibility
into
boardroom
positions.
In 1997
he was
appointed
president
and
chief
executive
of the
label
that
launched
his
career
and had
gone on
to
become a
well-oiled
machine
of New
Jack
Swing —
which
placed
R&B
melodies
over
hard-knocking
hip-hop
beats —
with
artists
Jodeci,
Mary J.
Blige
and
Monifah.
Myers
was then
promoted
to
senior
vice
president
for
Universal
Music.
Later he
focused
on a
successful
acting
career
which
included
film
roles in
"The
Cider
House
Rules,"
"Life"
and the
recently
released
"Tower
Heist."
He was
also
featured
in
recent
episodes
of "Law
& Order
SVU" and
"Tyler
Perry's
House of
Payne."
Myers
received
a 2006
NAACP
Spirit
Award
for his
starring
role as
a
Vietnam
veteran
in the
play
"Medal
of Honor
Rag." He
also
earned a
Drama
Desk
Award
nomination
for his
1995
starring
role in
the
off-Broadway
play
"Riff
Raff."
In
September,
Myers
digitally
released
his
ninth
and
final
album,
"Love
Opus."