Will Smith talks suicide, Tupac Shaukr and his marriage in book titled ‘Will’

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Will Smith talks suicide, Tupac Shaukr and his marriage in book titled ‘Will’

Excerpts of Will Smith’s new autobiography “Will” continue to leave fans shook.

The book’s jaw-dropping and head tilting revelations have left fans side eying the Oscar-nominated actor and his wife of nearly 25, actress Jada Pinkett Smith.

“In the beginning of our relationship, my mind was tortured by their connection. He was ‘PAC! I was me,” he writes. “He triggered the perception of myself as a coward. I hated that I wasn’t what he was in the world, and I suffered a raging jealousy. I wanted Jada to look at me like that.”

In his deeply personal and vulnerable book “Will” the Academy Award-nominated actor details his life both in and out of the spotlight, from his early rap career in Philadelphia to his troubled relationship with his abusive father.With the help of author Mark Manson (“The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck”), Smith reflects on the pivotal highlights of his impressive career (such as meeting Nelson Mandela and being selected by executive producer Steven Spielberg to star in 1997’s “Men in Black”) without failing to share his lowest moments as a celebrity, father, son and husband.

“My father gave me my name, he gave me his name, and he gave me my greatest advantage in life: my ability to weather adversity,” Smith writes in the introduction. “He gave me will.”

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