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Brooklyn basketball courts renamed for Notorious B.I.G., fulfilling councilman’s vow to honor slain rapper

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  • Robert E. Cornegy Jr. attends the Notorious B.I.G. street naming...

    Mychal Watts / Getty Images

    Robert E. Cornegy Jr. attends the Notorious B.I.G. street naming in Brooklyn, New York on June 10, 2019.

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    Danielle Hyams for New York Daily News

    Saint James Place in Brooklyn, New York has been officially coined Christopher "Notorious B.I.G." Wallace Way, honoring the late rapper who grew up nearby.

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    Chris Walter/Wireimage

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  • T'yanna Wallace (right of sign), the daughter of Christopher Wallace,...

    James Keivom for New York Daily News

    T'yanna Wallace (right of sign), the daughter of Christopher Wallace, aka the Notorious B.I.G., and her mother, Jan Jackson (left of sign), attended a ceremony dedicating the basketball courts at Crispus Attucks Playground for Christopher "Biggie" Wallace, on Aug. 2, 2017 in Brooklyn, N.Y.

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    Budd Williams/New York Daily News

    Mourners from all walks of life, including former New York City Mayor David Dinkins (above), came to the Frank E. Campbell Funeral Home to pay respects to the iconic son of the City.

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  • The crowd cheers at the Notorious B.I.G. street naming in Brooklyn,...

    Mychal Watts / Getty Images

    The crowd cheers at the Notorious B.I.G. street naming in Brooklyn, New York on June 10, 2019.

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    New York Daily News

    The front page of the Daily News from March 10, 1997 read "Blown Away: Fear strikes rap world after gangsta star Biggie Smalls is shot dead."

  • Christopher Wallace began to rap after stuggling with dealing drugs...

    Clarence Davis / New York Daily News

    Christopher Wallace began to rap after stuggling with dealing drugs as a teen. Following his release from jail in 1991, he recorded a demo tape titled "Microphone Murderer" under the name of Biggie Smalls. The tape was picked up by the editor of The Source magazine, who later featured him in their Unsigned Hype column in 1992. He was later signed to Sean Combs' record label Bad Boy Records and went on to guest star on singles and album cuts for the likes of Mary J. Blige and Heavy D.

  • T'yanna Wallace (right of sign, in jeans), the daughter of...

    James Keivom/New York Daily News

    T'yanna Wallace (right of sign, in jeans), the daughter of Christopher Wallace, and her mother, Jan Jackson (left of sign in gray dress), attended a ceremony dedicating the basketball courts at Crispus Attucks Playground for the late rapper.

  • Queen Latifah, left, is consoled by an unidentified man following...

    ADAM NADEL / Associated Press

    Queen Latifah, left, is consoled by an unidentified man following the funeral for rapper Notorious B.I.G at the Frank E. Campbell Funeral Home in New York on March 18, 1997.

  • As the hearse escorting Biggie slowly crept along St. James...

    Todd Maisel/New York Daily News

    As the hearse escorting Biggie slowly crept along St. James Place, his old stomping grounds in Bed-Stuy, the crowd of mourners shouted the legend's name and some even recited lyrics in tribute to a man from Brooklyn who had touched so many lives.

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    Phil Caruso/Fox Searchlight/Ap Photo

    Biggie's life also made the silver screen, in the January 2009 film "Notorious." Brooklyn MC Jamal (Gravy) Woolard was chosen to play Wallace in the major release, directed by George Tillman Jr. The film grossed more than $44,000,000 worldwide.

  • Mary J. Blige (l.) lends a shoulder to the inconsolable...

    Jon Naso/New York Daily News

    Mary J. Blige (l.) lends a shoulder to the inconsolable Lil' Kim outside the chapel following funeral services for Notorious B.I.G. on March 18, 1997.

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    Tupac (c., with Biggie, l., and Redman) was somewhat of a mentor to the young B.I.G. in the early '90s. Both were featured in a legendary live freestyle session during a 1995 Big Daddy Kane concert. The two later would become mortal enemies, the main event in a late '90s coastal rap war.

  • Rapper Notorious B.I.G., aka Biggie Smalls, is pictured with Junior...

    Clarence Davis for New York Daily News

    Rapper Notorious B.I.G., aka Biggie Smalls, is pictured with Junior Mafia outside his mother's house in Brooklyn.

  • Christopher 'CJ' Wallace and Voletta Wallace attend the Notorious B.I.G....

    Mychal Watts / Getty Images

    Christopher 'CJ' Wallace and Voletta Wallace attend the Notorious B.I.G. street naming in Brooklyn, New York on June 10, 2019.

  • Biggie left behind (from l.) ex-wife Fath Evans, daughter T'Yanna,...

    Richard Corkery/New York Daily News

    Biggie left behind (from l.) ex-wife Fath Evans, daughter T'Yanna, mother Voletta Wallace and son Christopher Jr.

  • Christopher "Biggie" Wallace and Sean Combs attend the 11th Annual...

    Ron Galella, Ltd. / WireImage / Getty Images

    Christopher "Biggie" Wallace and Sean Combs attend the 11th Annual Soul Train Music Awards on Mar. 7, 1997 at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, California. Later than night, Biggie Smalls would be gunned down and killed.

  • Pallbearers wheel the casket containing rap star Biggie Smalls to...

    Stan Honda/AFP/Getty Images

    Pallbearers wheel the casket containing rap star Biggie Smalls to a hearse after the funeral on Mar. 18, 1997 in New York. Smalls, whose real name was Christopher Wallace, was killed on March 9 in a drive-by shooting in Los Angeles.

  • The rapper, whose real name was Christopher Wallace, frequented the...

    Debbie Egan-Chin/New York Daily News

    The rapper, whose real name was Christopher Wallace, frequented the basketball court before he became famous with hit songs "Juicy," "Big Poppa" and "What's Beef."

  • The New York Daily News front page covered Biggie Smalls' funeral on...

    New York Daily News

    The New York Daily News front page covered Biggie Smalls' funeral on March 19, 1997.

  • Fellow rap legend Flava Flav leaves the funeral at the...

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    Fellow rap legend Flava Flav leaves the funeral at the Frank E. Campbell Funeral Chapel in Manhattan. Other famous mourners at the funeral included Queen Latifah, Run-DMC, Busta Rhymes, Salt-N-Pepa and Foxy Brown.

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A Brooklyn basketball court and playground got a B.I.G. overhaul Wednesday.

The Crispus Attucks Playground now contains the Christopher “Biggie” Wallace Courts, named after late rapper Notorious B.I.G. during a ceremony led by City Councilman Robert Cornegy.

And it fulfills a promise the city lawmaker made to Voletta Wallace, the slain hip hop star’s mother, that he would honor her son.

The Crispus Attucks Playground now contains the Christopher “Biggie” Wallace Courts, named after late rapper Notorious B.I.G. during a ceremony led by City Councilman Robert Cornegy.

“The feeling is surreal,” Cornegy said during the ribbon cutting on Fulton St. and Classon Ave. in Bedford-Stuyvesant.

The courts are part of a $2.5 million playground renovation that took the Parks Department five years to complete, according to its records. It includes improved handball courts, new playground equipment and a redone safety surface. The park area around the playground also got new stairs and new landscaping all around it.

T'yanna Wallace (right of sign, in jeans), the daughter of Christopher Wallace, and her mother, Jan Jackson (left of sign in gray dress), attended a ceremony dedicating the basketball courts at Crispus Attucks Playground for the late rapper.
T’yanna Wallace (right of sign, in jeans), the daughter of Christopher Wallace, and her mother, Jan Jackson (left of sign in gray dress), attended a ceremony dedicating the basketball courts at Crispus Attucks Playground for the late rapper.

The rapper, whose real name was Christopher Wallace, frequented the basketball court before he became famous with hit songs “Juicy,” “Big Poppa” and “What’s Beef.”

Cornegy has been trying to honor the rapper for years. His proposal in 2013 to rename a section of St. James Place was nixed by opponents who cited Biggie’s violent lyrics and drug-dealing history.

On Wednesday, Cornegy stressed that the rapper’s mother has changed her son’s legacy by creating the Christopher Wallace Memorial Foundation.

“(His mother) changed the acronym for B.I.G. to stand for books instead of guns,” Cornegy said. “We’re in the process of redoing libraries providing books for young kids in school and that was her commitment.”

The playground renovation includes improved handball courts, new playground equipment, and a redone safety surface.
The playground renovation includes improved handball courts, new playground equipment, and a redone safety surface.

Biggie was murdered in a drive-by shooting in Los Angeles March 9, 1997, hours after the Soul Train Music Awards. No one has ever been charged in the killing.

Some of Biggie’s old friends found it all hard to believe.

The rapper, whose real name was Christopher Wallace, frequented the basketball court before he became famous with hit songs “Juicy,” “Big Poppa” and “What’s Beef.”

“If you were to tell Biggie that he was getting basketball courts named after him he would have laughed,” said Mr. C from Junior Mafia. “He was just a funny dude, always laughing.”

The rapper’s daughter was overjoyed.

“I’m so grateful for this,” Said T’yanna Wallace. “I’m proud of him. We’re all proud of him.”

The playground itself is named for Crispus Attucks, a black man who was killed in the Boston Massacre and considered the first casualty of the American Revolution.