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TLC's 'Left Eye' Lopes, 30, dies in crash

The ''crazy'' member of the Grammy-winning pop trio, who had her share of ups and downs, was on a humanitarian visit to Honduras.

©Associated Press
April 27, 2002


Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes, the effervescent, sometimes volatile member of the Grammy-winning trio TLC, was killed in a car crash while on a humanitarian visit to Honduras, officials said.

Ms. Lopes, who would have turned 31 next month, was traveling in the Central American nation when the accident happened Thursday night, Arista Records' spokeswoman Laura Swanson said.

"No words can possibly express the sorrow and sadness I feel for this most devastating loss," said Arista president L.A. Reid, who helped shape the career of the Atlanta-based R&B group, one of the best-selling female groups in history.

The crash happened near Jutiapa, 150 miles north of Tegucigalpa, the Honduran capital. "The car rolled for reasons that we still don't know and that are being investigated," police spokesman Luis Aguilar said. The other six people in the car were taken to a hospital.

Ms. Lopes had been visiting La Ceiba, another Honduran city. According to the U.S. Embassy spokesman in Honduras, Carlos Bakota, she often visited the region and was working with a child development center there.

TLC, which also includes Tionne "T-Boz" Watkins and Rozonda "Chilli" Thomas, had such hits as Waterfall, No Scrubs and Unpretty. Their latest album was FanMail.

"We had all grown up together and were as close as a family," the surviving bandmates said in a statement. "Today we have truly lost our sister."

Their songs delivered a message of female empowerment, using sassy, tongue-in-cheek rhymes. The lyrics to Ain't Too Proud to Beg, Waterfalls and No Scrubs were straight from the streets yet poignantly addressed safe sex, AIDS, black-on-black crime and self-respect.

The group made its debut in 1992 with the disc Ooooooh . . . On the TLC Tip! Their unique sound, which paired Watkins and Thomas' vocals with the Philadelphia-born Ms. Lopes' fast-paced, squeaky-voiced rhymes, along with their baggy wardrobe with condoms attached, made them an immediate sensation.

Ms. Lopes' nickname came from her habit of replacing one lens of her glasses with a condom during performances.

In 1994, the band returned with CrazySexyCool -- Ms. Lopes was dubbed the "crazy" member of the group, Thomas the "sexy" one and Watkins the "cool" one. The quadruple platinum album saw the women abandon their sometimes gimmicky image to evolve into a critically acclaimed group. The disc included the No. 1 hit Creep and won them the first two of their four Grammy Awards.

But with success came enough turmoil to fill a VH1 Behind the Music special. The trio declared bankruptcy a few years ago, citing poorly structured recording contracts. Watkins was hospitalized several times, suffering from sickle cell anemia.

In 1994, Ms. Lopes pleaded guilty to arson after a fire destroyed the million-dollar mansion of her boyfriend, former Atlanta Falcons receiver Andre Rison. Ms. Lopes was sentenced to a halfway house and five years' probation, plus a $10,000 fine.

Ms. Lopes admitted she started the fire after an argument with Rison. The two later broke up, only to reunite and break up again. However, last year they announced plans to marry.

TLC had been on hiatus but had recently been in the studio working on a new record due to have been released this year.

In the past few months, Ms. Lopes reportedly signed a solo deal with Suge Knight's Death Row label to put out another solo project under the pseudonym N.I.N.A. (New Identity Not Applicable). She also helped start the group Blaque, an R&B trio that had the hit Bring It Home to Me.

The embassy said Ms. Lopes had visited Honduras frequently since Hurricane Mitch killed thousands and caused billions of dollars in damage across Central America in 1998.

Police did not identify the other six people riding in the car with Ms. Lopes, but Bakota said he believed they also had been working at the child development center with her.

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