C. Delores Tucker(1927-2005)
- Additional Crew
C. Delores Tucker, once one of the highest ranking African-American
women in state government, as well as being nationally known as a
stalwart opponent of gangsta rap, was born in Philadelphia, the tenth
of eleven children of a Bahamian-born Baptist minister and his
"Christian feminist" wife who operated a grocery, an employment agency
and a real estate business. After attending Temple University and the
Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, she married the owner
of a construction company who also owned several parcels of real estate
in and around the Philadelphia area; she sold real estate and insurance
and was active in local Democratic politics, eventually being known as
an accomplished fund raiser and public speaker. In 1971, Pennsylvania
Governor Milton J. Shapp named Mrs. Tucker as Secretary of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; however, six years later, she was fired
from her position due to allegations that she used state employees to
write political speeches for which she was paid. Subsequent attempts to
be elected to political office--Lieutanant Governor; a Congressional
seat; the United States Senate--went all for naught. Mrs. Tucker turned
her attentions to community activities, working with underprivileged
youth both in Philadelphia and on the national scene, and working to
heighten the involvement of African American women in politics--she
helped to found the National Congress of Black Women in 1984, and for
eleven years, she served as the chairman of the National Black Caucus
of the Democratic Party. However, despite her accomplishments, Mrs.
Tucker will probably be best known for her strident opposition to
gangsta rap and those who both wrote, performed, and produced them,
particularly Tupac Shakur and the president of Death Row Records,
Marion "Suge" Knight, both of whom she challenged in court. She first
became involved with it when a niece she was raising was ostracized for
using offensive language found in one of the songs. Mrs. Tucker found
that the lyrics emphasized and glorified the degradation of women and
violence in general. She targeted Time Warner, bought shares of stock
in the company, and appeared at stockholders' meetings to deliver
speeches against their involvement with the purveyors of gangsta rap,
particularly Death Row Records. Although she counted Time Warner's sale
of its 50% share in Interscope, the distributor of Death Row Records,
as a victory, Shakur, in one of his songs, rhymed her name with an
obscenity. A subsequent lawsuit against Shakur's estate in 1996,
claiming defamation and loss of consortium was subsequently
dismissed.