About the Deceased

Name Of Deceased

Bruce Williamson Jr.

Date of Birth

09/29/1970

Date of Passing

09/06/2020

Place of Birth

Los Angeles

Gender

Male

Memorial

Obituary

When Bruce Williamson Jr. was a child growing up in Los Angeles and singing gospel music at local churches and on the radio, he was billed as “the little boy with the big voice.”
Years later, when he’d become a professional singer and a member of the Temptations, the longtime R&B hitmakers, Mr. Williamson acquired a new nickname. A large but nimble man, a churchy shouter who flirted with audiences, he was known as “Big Sexy.”
Mr. Williamson died on Sept. 6 at MountainView Hospital in Las Vegas. He was 49. His mother said the cause was complications of the coronavirus after he had contracted pneumonia.
Mr. Williamson had been wowing audiences for 30 years by the time he got his break with the Temptations in 2007. G.C. Cameron,one of the group’s lead singers, left that year to pursue a solo career. According to Mr. Williamson, in an article on the website of the magazine Las Vegas Black Image, he met Ron Tyson, the group’s longtime tenor, who recognized his talent and lobbied for him to become a member.
Mr. Williamson sang on the Temptations albums “Back to Front” and “Still Here” and toured the world with the group.
Bruce Alan Williamson Jr. was born on Sept. 29, 1970, in Los Angeles. His father was a long-haul truck driver. His mother worked as a charter bus driver and sang in the choir at Magnolia Missionary Baptist Church. It was there that she first heard what she called her son’s God-given talent.
“My sister took him to the youth choir,” Ms. Robinson recalled. “They surprised me the next Sunday by not telling me that my son would be leading a song.”
“When he started singing,” she added, “I stood up. I froze.”
Mr. Williamson spent his youth singing in the church and performing alongside gospel stars like James Cleveland and Kenneth Glover in concerts that were broadcast on Sundays on KDAY, Los Angeles’s gospel radio station at the time.
The family moved to Las Vegas when Mr. Williamson was a teenager. After graduating from Eldorado High School, his younger brother, Cliff Robinson, said, he began singing on the Las Vegas Strip.
After nine years with the Temptations, Mr. Williamson returned to Las Vegas and never lost a step, performing with the Lon Bronson BandSons of Soul and other local acts.
He was married and divorced three times. In addition to his mother and brother, he is survived by his sons, Rernishio, Tristian and Bruce III.

Family

Name of Children

Rernishio Williamson, Tristian Williamson, Bruce III Williamson

Name of Parents

Frances Robinson

Name of Siblings

Cliff Robinson

Name of Author

Name

COVTIUARY TEAM

Gender

Media