Cheech Marin was from a quick witted family where you had to be on stage to get a word in at the dinner table. His father was a cop, who, through a period of massive cvil discontent, rose up among the ranks of police administration in Los Angeles.
He was not happy when son Richard Anthony Marin, nicknamed Cheech, dodged the draft and left the country for Alberta, Canada.
The family was stable and straight in the sometimes volatile South Central neighborhood, and later in moving to the (whiter) San Fernando Valley. Cheech remembers South Central as being easier for him, racially, (as he expresses it) in a Biography Channel documentary about his life. Thoughtfully, father Oscar respected his adult son’s right to make the decision for himself, and Cheech was later granted immunity from federal prosecution and returned to LA. The dope comedy and films of Cheech and Chong that rode a rocket to fame in the 1960’s and 70’s, by the 1980’s, had played out.
Cheech was Tommy Chong’s “straight man,” a disciplined achiever, and talented performer since childhood. Knowing this fact helps put what would come later into perspective, as Cheech relied on his analytical mind, rapid fire consciousness, and spirit of personal revolution, to re-find his audience and step, in the public’s eye, from being a performer in a role, even if based on his own improv abilities, to that of a guide and leader amidst a complex social and cultural environment.
And “Born in East LA” was arguably the new beginning he sought, although Marin credits his voice acting in animated movies such as “The Lion King” and “Cars” with elevating his career. “Born in East LA,” is a parable about immigration that nails our current discourse and policies, because that’s what Cheech saw around him, that’s what Cheech lived among. And inequity and overcoming the stigmas of racism, is what, in the final assessment of the period marking the emergence of cannabis and cannabis humor in the movies, will be remembered alongside the long overdue changing of attitudes about weed.
It is this inequity that sparked a response from the largest and as Cheech says wealthiest (“They had money”), generation. “Good luck” he says in an interview with High Times Magazine from July, 2018.