Lil’ Kim Shares What She Learned From Her 2021 Projects
Itâs been a pretty busy year for Kimberly Denise âLilâ Kimâ Jones. In addition to adding two new entries to her filmography, the Brooklyn-born rapper has also written a memoir, completed a high-profile tour, and announced her first cannabis venture.
Of all these projects, the memoir The Queen Bee was the most cathartic. Kim tells BLACK ENTERPRISE that, while sheâs been approached by several publishers over the years, she knew now was the time because she felt the need to purge some of the weight sheâs been carrying throughout her life and career.
âIâve obtained so much knowledge. Iâve been through so much, and itâs time to release it,â she explains. âDoing my book with Kathy [Iandoli] was very therapeutic for me. And thatâs when I knew it was time. I was feeling the therapeutic need. In working on my memoir, I found out a lot of things about myself. When youâre in it, itâs hard, so hard to see the big picture. And stepping outside, I got to see myself.â
While the book, released Nov. 2, is sure to give fans new insight into the usually private starâs evolution as both a woman and an artist, she says the process of writing it also taught her a lot about herself.
âIâve grown a lot,â shares Kim. âAnd I had to be proud of that. Some things I never took the time to pat myself on the back for or be proud of. Some things I also never got to take the time to release and grow from. Some things I never matured from. But I like being the businesswoman that I am. I like being the firm kind of woman sometimes that I can be because now I know how to say no nicely.â
Just ahead of the release of The Queen Bee, the hip-hop legend confirmed that she would be returning for a second season as the voice of American Gangster: Trap Queens on BET+. Kim took over the role from rapper Jeezy for season 2, which premiered on the BET streamer on Oct. 7.
The Queen Bee Joins Trap Queen
Though itâs not the first time sheâs tried her hand at narration, she says she approached Trap Queens much differently.
âWeâre talking about these womenâs real lives,â she says. âYou donât wanna offend anyone; you wanna make sure your voice is relatable. And that was the biggest challenge for me.â
In watching the stories of the 11 women profiled this season, itâs easy to forget that the voice moving their compelling stories along is one of the most recognizable voices in hip-hop. Kim herself admits that, as a viewer, she lost herself in the varied narratives she helped tell on Trap Queensâfrom that of former Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh to BMF âqueenpinâ Tonesha Welsh, to former artist Priscilla Echi, with whom Kim shares a bond, thanks to the womenâs close respective relationships with late rapper DMX.
âAll of these womenâs stories automatically resonated with me because I was once there,â Kim tells BE. âMaking a mistake in the industry is no different than making a mistake on the streets. And I ended up in prison for a year and a day. I knew so many women like them in the hood coming up. A lot of my girls that I came up with have similar stories.Â
âI was proud of a lot of these women because they turned their lives around; they made it through, she continues. âA lot of women go through wild situations, and they donât make it out on top. These women managed to say, âIâm bigger than what my life was. I lost, but I got it back, and I got it back the right way this time.â To me, that is the epitome of a true hustler. And I was honored that they chose me to tell their stories.âÂ
Up next, fans can expect to catch Lilâ Kim in the upcoming Christmas movie Miracles Across 125th Street, coming to VH1 on Dec. 20. In it, she stars as the ex-girlfriend who gets in the way of Nick Cannonâs characterââa Harlem rapper who returns to his familyâs church after battling drug addiction, to confront his past on Christmas Eve,â as described by Deadline.
While she says Cannon, whoâs recently joined her management team, is pushing her to do more acting, Lilâ Kim is far from ready to let go of the musical stage. Her latest tourâa six-date run as part of the Legendz of the Streetz run, which found her in complete creative control of planning and designing her set for the first time in her careerâserved to reconfirm a lifelong goal.
âOne thing I always wanted to do was continue touring like Tina Turner to touch people around the world,â she shares. âFor me, itâs bigger than just my music. Iâve had people crying. Knowing that just my presence alone can touch people gives me a big joy.â