ELEVEN YEARS AGO, AGED JUST 10 AND A HALF, WILLOW SMITH was done with being famous. Off the back of her breakout hit, Whip My Hair, a Rihanna-esque banger that played on repeat across playgrounds and dancefloors for weeks, she had landed a prestigious slot supporting Justin Bieber on tour. The whole family flew out for her UK opening night in Birmingham on 4 March 2011. She slayed that night, and the next, and the next. But when the lights went up at the end of the last European gig, she came off stage and declared: "I'm finished, Daddy. I'm ready to go home."
Daddy - also known as Will Smith - told her that, no, she wasn't done, because she had signed on for a slew of dates in Australia. End of discussion - or so he thought, he wrote in his 2021 memoir, until a few mornings later, when "Willow came skipping into the kitchen for breakfast. 'Good morning, Daddy,' she said joyfully, as she bounced to the refrigerator. My jaw nearly dislocated, dislodged and shattered on the kitchen floor: my world-dominating, hair-whipping, future global superstar was totally bald. During the night, Willow had shaved her entire head. My mind raced - how was she going to whip her hair if she didn't have any? Who the hell wants to pay to watch some kid whip their head back and forth?"
"I felt like I had no control," is how Willow remembers the incident today. "That was the part that wasn't cool for me. I felt so powerless. But because I was so young, I didn't have enough experience for people to trust my opinions. So I just said, 'I can't do this." After that came "maybe two or three years when I wasn't in the studio. I was just going to school and doing my thing, and that was really nice." But she missed music, which "is a huge joy in my life. And I came to realise I love performing and recording. I just wanted to be steering my own ship."
This story is from the September 23, 2022 edition of The Guardian Weekly.
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This story is from the September 23, 2022 edition of The Guardian Weekly.
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