A kid who was taking public transit alone at five years old somehow ended up being told by Roger Ebert he deserved an Oscar nomination, and that is barely the half of it.
His mother was a teenager when he was born, his father was mostly absent, and the neighborhood he grew up in had claimed plenty of people who started out just like him. What he built from all of that, and who he built it with, is the part most people never knew.
Keep reading, because the reveal is worth it and the photos of his kids will shock you!
Growing Up Fast in South-Central
The house was small, on 51st Street and Hoover in Los Angeles, and it was rarely just the immediate family inside. His mother, who had him at 15, was out the door before 7 a.m. most mornings for her post office job, which meant he was largely fending for himself from a very young age.
Older neighborhood kids gravitated toward him naturally, and the dice games were never far away. But he never joined a gang, as his family instilled the right values in him.
He got caught shoplifting a pair of Vans once, and his mother, Delores Richmond, made sure it was the last time. "After I gave him that one whupping, I didn't have any problems with him," she said. "He didn't hang out with no one but family and turned out to be a very good kid."
His uncle, former USFL defensive back Rock Richmond, steered him further in the right direction, telling him to stay away from drinking and smoking. He found his footing in baseball, befriending a kid named Garret Anderson who would later make it to the major leagues.
But performing was always the real pull, even when a drama teacher handed him a D.
The Talent Nobody Could Ignore
His first agent, Shirley Wilson, recognized something in him immediately. "There was a big desire and a strong determination that that's what he wanted to do," she said. "He wanted it, and he was a natural."
The industry noticed quickly. Before he turned 23, he had headlined one of the decade's most talked-about films, earned major award nominations, and collected compliments from people at the very top of the business.
Janet Jackson told him he had "some of the sexiest lips [she] ever saw." Then, with all of that momentum in place, he largely vanished from public view. To understand why, you first have to understand how high the peak actually was.
The Role That Defined a Generation
The performance that put him on the map was as Caine in "Menace II Society," a character who was simultaneously a crack dealer, a killer, and a confused teenager trying to make sense of the world around him.
The role required him to carry an enormous emotional range, and he delivered in a way that left critics scrambling for the right words.
At the 9th Annual Independent Spirit Awards, he was nominated for Best Actor alongside Jeff Bridges, Vincent D'Onofrio, and Matthew Modine. He did not win, but Roger Ebert found him afterward and told him directly that he should have been in Oscar contention. He belonged at "the Big Show," Ebert said.
Yes! This '90s icon is none other than Tyrin Turner, the boy from 51st and Hoover, whom Hollywood underestimated even before he largely disappeared.
The Friendship Hollywood Didn't See Coming
Still, the proof of just how respected Turner remained, even during his quieter years, showed up in unexpected places. At a New York nightclub, Leonardo DiCaprio spotted him and spent the next hour reciting "Menace II Society" lines back to him.
At a Rihanna concert, A$AP Rocky's sister completely ignored Jamie Foxx the moment she realized Turner was standing nearby.
That brings us to Foxx, who has been one of Turner's closest friends for over two decades. They first connected on "In Living Color" in the early '90s and discovered almost immediately that they operated on the same frequency.
"We just bonded; it was crazy," Turner said. "The friendship is just more like we get money together, we play sports, we like to hang out. We do a lot of the same things."
The two also built something real professionally. Turner helped write material for Foxx's stand-up tours, contributing the majority of the jokes for one major run.
"He wrote like 45 minutes of the hour and a half that I had to do," Foxx confirmed. During the actual show, Turner stood backstage with the script, feeding him lines in real time. They eventually formed a production company called No Brainer and co-created the Fox series "Alert."
Given how much time the two spent together, rumors were probably inevitable.
When Suge Knight posted a social media claim suggesting they had been in a romantic relationship, Turner addressed it directly in a conversation with The Art of Dialogue.
"Me and Jamie have been like brothers and best friends for years," he said. "What people don't understand is that we do a lot of business together... people want to throw the little gay rumor. It's always somebody always got to be gay in the world. But you know, hey, I know what I like."
When Foxx had his health scare in 2023, Turner was equally straightforward about it. "He's in great shape. He's cool. He had a little scare, but he got over that fast," he said, adding that in his view, Foxx had simply been overworked and pushed past his limit.
The Comedian Nobody Knew About
There is an entire side of Turner that his filmography barely hints at. Long before "Menace" turned him into a leading man, he wanted to make people laugh.
"First of all, I'm funny as hell, that's for sure," he told DJ Vlad in 2021. "I wanted to be a comedian at first. I was a class clown. Menace came, and then somebody sold me on being a [expletive] sex symbol."
He once spent two uninterrupted hours trading jokes with Dave Chappelle in a limousine, right around the time "Half Baked" came out, and by his account, he held his own the entire time. He says Chappelle will back him up on it.
That comedic instinct found its way into his work regardless. His credits beyond "Menace" include Rico in "Belly" alongside DMX and Nas, a role in "Meet the Blacks," and a recurring part in "Alert: Missing Persons Unit."
He also appeared in the psychological thriller "Fatale" with Michael Ealy and Hilary Swank. The range was always there. Hollywood just took a while to use it.
The Family He Built Along the Way
Still, the most grounded part of Turner's story has nothing to do with film sets or industry events. It's all about his family life. The comedian has twins: a son, Tyrin Turner Jr., who records music as Lil Caine, and a daughter named Tai Turner, who were born in 1998. All three of them share July 17 as their birthday.
Surprisingly, he found out the hard way that he was having two. "The first time the doc said he heard one heart beat... becuz they was beatin at same time same rhythm [sic]," Turner wrote on Instagram in 2019. "Didn't Know i was having 2for one til the 5 visit... when he said Im was havin 2 kids it thru me off [sic]."
He and the twins' mother, Shawnda Silva, have remained close even after their relationship ended, something Turner has been open about crediting her for publicly.
He has written that she never dragged him into legal disputes over child support, never brought outside interference into their co-parenting, and always had his back. He has also complimented her for being a great mom.
Regarding his relationship with the twins, Turner has mentioned them often on his social media. In a post from 2019, he and his son play basketball together like brothers. But about Tai, he once wrote:
"She def got her smile from me."
The Twins Who Look Just Like Dad
Over the years, both Tyrin Jr. and Tai have gotten serious double-takes from people who come across photos of them next to their father. The resemblance is the kind that makes people stop scrolling, and the internet has not been quiet about it.
When a photo of Turner with his son surfaced, the comments came fast. One person wrote, "So they're cloning these days??" Another kept it simple, "Twins!! Wow ๐ [sic]."
A third went straight to the source, tagging Turner directly and adding, "Definitely your twin @tyrinturner. [sic]."
Photos of Tai sparked the same reaction. Followers pointed out the likeness immediately, with one writing, "She's pretty ๐ looks just like you @tyrinturner ๐๐ผ [sic]," and another added, "@tyrinturner wow she looks just like you...beautiful daughter ๐ [sic]."
One commenter wrapped it up best: "Well she's you all the way bro. You did a great job man!! [sic]
Ultimately, Turner outgrew the gritty roles of his youth to embrace his true passions for comedy and family. Whether writing for superstars or raising his look-alike twins, he proved his greatest talent wasn't playing a character, but being himself.
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