(Soundbite of documentary "Last Days of Left Eye") You know, so many people who have seen this film have told me that it's stuck with them for days afterwards, and I think that is because she is willing to be so raw and so open and naked and personal.ĬHIDEYA: Well, let's take a listen to Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes talking about what happened after she burned down her boyfriend's home. I think she is very much a work in progress, and I think that's part of what makes the film so relatable and so haunting. LAUREN LAZIN (Director, "Last Days of Left Eye"): No. I asked her if Left Eye had made peace with her inner demons before she died. Now that footage has been turned into a VH1 documentary called "Last Days of Left Eye." In 2002, at the age of 30, Left Eye died in a car crash during a spiritual retreat in Honduras. ![]() Her run-ins with the law and substance abuse rocked TLC. Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes was the heart of TLC and she was constantly in trouble. But success didn't come without controversy. Please stick to the rivers and the lakes that you're used to.ĬHIDEYA: They are still one of the best-selling female R&B groups of all time. TLC: (Singing) Don't go chasing waterfalls. It was their biggest hit, "Waterfalls," that made TLC a household name. The trio instantly shot to the top of the charts and stayed there. ![]() Their bright, baggy clothes and playful jams brought out the girl in us, and their sexually progressive lyrics spoke to the women in us. (Unintelligible)ĬHIDEYA: T-Boz, Left Eye and Chilli made up the pop phenomenon known as TLC. In 1992, three young women from Atlanta exploded onto to the music scene.
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