Little Richard on Drugs: ‘They Shoulda Called Me Little Cocaine’

September 6, 2023 · CelebStoner

The back-to-back Little Richard documentaries – PBS’ Little Richard: The King and Queen of Rock & Roll (2022) and Lisa Cortes’ Little Richard: I Am Everything (2023) – confirm the singer’s place in the creation of rock & roll in the ’50s with a major focus on his gayness. But not much is said about Richard’s prodigious drug use.

In this famous clip from 1981, the singer revealed:

“I started with a little bit of marijuana. Somebody said, ‘Try it, you’ll like it, a little dab will do it.’ I got my dab. I went from marijuana to angel dust, and boy I want to tell you the angels had nothing to do with that dust. I smoked that angel dust and it had me paranoid. It had me hallucinating. I went from angel dust to all types of pills. And I started drinking, all kinds of liquors. Then I went into cocaine. I used to take so much cocaine, my nose was big enough to park diesel trucks in.”

In a 1979 article, People reported:

He dropped acid, chipped heroin and took pep pills and angel dust (“Man, they think they just discovered that stuff, but it ain’t nothing but elephant tranquilizer and it’s been around for years”). “I was also blowing about $1,000 of cocaine a day,” he recalls. “Every time I blew my nose, there was flesh and blood on my handkerchief, where it had eaten out my membranes.”

On the date of his death in 2020, Rolling Stone published an article quoting Richard saying:

• “All I was interested in was getting high. I’d be riding all over the city of Los Angeles looking for cocaine. I just had to be froze. They shoulda called me Little Cocaine, was sniffing so much of the stuff.”

• “A habit like mine cost a lot of money. I was smoking marijuana and angel dust, and I was mixing heroin with coke. It was costing me about $1,000 a day – and there was always trouble with the dealers. I became very nasty, which I never used to be. Cocaine made me paranoid. It made me think evil. The drugs brought me to realize what homosexuality had made me. When I felt that, I wanted to hurt. I wanted to kill. I wanted to fight those boys who didn’t want to do what I wanted them to do.”

Richard was eventually able to kick drugs with the help of religion.  (Full Story)

In category:Celebrities
Next Post

Women of Influence: Laganja Estranja

Jay Jackson, who’s also known as Laganja Estranja, rose to fame as the undeniable breakout star on season six of the Emmy-winning RuPaul’s Drag Race. The world-renowned choreographer and artist is a fierce cannabis and LGBTQ+ advocate who champions diversity…
Read
Previous Post

Allen Iverson to Introduce Viola to Philadelphia This Weekend

Viola is coming to Pennsylvania. The city of brotherly love will welcome former NBA stars Al Harrington, who is Viola’s CEO, and Allen Iverson on Saturday, Sept. 2 for the launch of their cannabis strain “Iverson ’01.” The launch event…
Read
Random Post

Moving Marijuana To Schedule III Could Have Sweeping Impacts For Businesses, Federal Employees, Research And More

If the U.S. government moves marijuana to Schedule III of the Controlled Substance Act (CSA)—as the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has now formally recommended—the shift could have profound implications for all sorts of cannabis-related issues, ranging from research…
Read
Random Post

NBA Players Can Now Smoke Weed Legally - Ending the Worst Kept Sports Secret, Ever.

According to a statement released by the National Basketball Players Association (NBPA), the NBA and the NBPA reached a deal over the weekend for the 2023-2024 season. The seven-year collective bargaining agreement specifies that NBA players will no longer be…
Read
Random Post

US cannabis industry’s $100 billion economic impact varies by state

Medical and recreational cannabis markets continue to have a growing impact on the broader U.S. economy, but the state-level impact differs based on each market’s size, maturity and type. And while highly populated states with bigger markets have a larger…
Read
Random Post

LGBTQ+ Pride's Crucial Role in the Modern Cannabis Industry

The LGBTQ+ community stepped up to provide relief to their friends and family members dying from AIDS. Since June is Pride Month – a 30-day show of support for the LGBTQ+ community – Green Market Report thought it was worth a few…
Read