
Sly Stone's daughter once snorted lines of sidewalk chalk to mimic his cocaine use: doc
Growing up, Sly Stone's daughter wanted to be just like the star in every way.
Phunne Stone is sharing the dark side of her childhood in a new Hulu documentary, "Sly Lives! (aka the Burden of Black Genius)." In it, Phunne described how, as a child, she snorted sidewalk chalk to mimic her dad. She even used one of the razor blades he collected to cut lines of cocaine.
"I went and grabbed me one and my box of chalk," Phunne explained, as quoted by People magazine. "And I said, 'We gon' do what the grown folks do.' So, I got my chalk and I chopped up about 37 lines of chalk out there and got the Monopoly money, rolled up."
"We were out there … about 19 lines," she said. "We sneezing and s--t."
Phunne's mother, Sly and the Family Stone co-founder and trumpet player Cynthia Robinson, caught her daughter in the act.
"My mama came out and was like, 'What are you doing?!'" Phunne recalled. "I mean, it's green and pink, 'cause you know the chalk [is] different colors. And I'm telling mom, 'Nothing!'"
"I went and grabbed me one and my box of chalk. And I said, 'We gon' do what the grown folks do.' So, I got my chalk and I chopped up about 37 lines of chalk out there and got the Monopoly money, rolled up."
"She beat the brakes off me," Phunne added.
According to the outlet, Phunne was often the only child in her music family. She described living "in an adult world, to where I thought I was grown." While she admitted that the funk artist was not the most present father, she is adamant that her parents' love for each other was genuine.
Robinson died in 2015 at age 69.
"I think that my dad is ... shy, and I think drugs helped him be fearless," said Phunne, as quoted by the outlet. "My mom loved him more than any man. She never dated another man after my dad. But he wasn't always around when I lived with my mom."
In the documentary, Phunne said that she has only recently rebuilt her relationship with Stone, 81.
"He cried, I cried, everybody around us was crying," she said about their reunion. "And we [were] hugging and shaking and all that."
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Born Sylvester Stewart in Texas and raised in Vallejo, California, across the bay from San Francisco, he studied music composition at a junior college while working as a radio DJ, becoming known for his whimsical patter and eclectic playlists.
Stone went on to develop what was described as a no-barrier style of music that would meld Motown pop-soul, James Brown's funk, R&B, gospel and psychedelic rock.
Shortly after forming in 1966, Sly and the Family Stone produced a string of hits, including "Everyday People," "I Want to Take You Higher," "Hot Fun in the Summertime" and "Stand!"
Stone's music took a more cynical turn as drugs took hold of his life. While on tour, Stone carried a violin filled with cocaine. At concerts, fans never knew whether they'd get one of his famously ecstatic performances, or whether Stone would bother showing up at all.
The band splintered soon after 1973's "Fresh." Stone then entered a decades-long cycle of addiction, doomed tours and tax woes. He later went on PCP binges.
Stone was eventually overtaken by a dependence on crack cocaine. It resulted in ruined relationships, regular stints in jail and rehab.
Today, Stone has chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and has lost a large amount of his lung capacity, The Guardian reported. According to the outlet, he got clean in 2019.
In 2023, Stone's memoir was published. At the time, he admitted that he occasionally had to depend on the recollections of others, because his memory wasn't always reliable.
In the documentary, Stone's son Sylvester Stewart Jr. also spoke out.
"As a kid, hearing about him being arrested for drugs or whatever, I didn't like it," said Sylvester in the film, as quoted by People magazine. "I always wanted him to be the person that I was always told he was when I was a baby."
"… These last few years are the most normal times I've had with him," he added.
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