How old was angela bassett when she played tina turner

Twenty-eight years have passed since actress Angela Bassett wowed audiences with her portrayal of icon Tina Turner in the film “What’s Love Got to Do with It.” And although Bassett has starred in countless films and television shows since 1993, taking on the role of Turner is still ranked as her most challenging acting experience.

During an interview for PEOPLE’s podcast, “People Every Day,” the stunning 62-year-old spoke about the tall task of bringing Turner’s story to life for the big screen.

How old was angela bassett when she played tina turner
Angela Bassett. (Photo by Stephane Cardinale – Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images)

“Definitely nothing has been as difficult as Tina Turner,” Bassett said. “Nothing as difficult physically, emotionally, spiritually, vocally. Nothing, absolutely nothing.”

In the biopic, Bassett stars alongside Laurence Fishburne, who portrays Turner’s abusive ex-husband Ike Turner. Bassett said the film took a toll on her personality and body while filming — at times making it difficult to step out of character and simply be herself.

“It was good to have a colleague, to have that with someone you trust,” said Bassett during a March 2020 interview with “The Breakfast Club.”

“Because he’s really got you, you know, emotionally actor-to-actor. Because the hours were long, it was extremely physical, you actually hurt for 30 straight days…But you had to go on. And some of it was understood like dynamics within a relationship or a man and a woman, or black love, or violence or whatever and you take it seriously. Like you said, it inhabits your spirit and yet we’re making a movie. But we’re not just making a movie, but as we make this movie you’re living through it,” she continued.

While Bassett went on to win a Golden Globe for best actress in a musical or comedy, and an Oscar nomination for best actress, the role of Turner is not the only one for which she is celebrated.

From portraying a single mother in “Boyz in the Hood” to a scorned ex-wife in “Waiting to Exhale” to an overworked woman in corporate America who finds love in the Bahamas in “How Stella Got Her Groove Back,” audiences have sung her praises for more than 30 years.

But by far her most regal role was portraying Ramonda, the Black Panther’s mother, in Marvel’s “Black Panther” box-office hit.

Bassett said the significance of the film and seeing powerful Black figures swayed her to break a family rule: bringing her twins: son, Slater, and daughter, Bronwyn, to the film’s premiere.

“[Black Panther] was one that we felt it was imperative that they experienced and witnessed. It’s an iconic film. It’s such positive images,” she said to Vanity Fair of her and her husband, fellow actor Courtney B. Vance. “They can see themselves in a light as warriors, as heroes, as kings, as queens, and potential panthers. All things positive. I really wanted them to experience something that in the way they carry themselves, how they walk through the day, with their heads held high and their chests poked out, feeling good about who they are.”

Stars Angela Bassett and Laurence Fishburne left it all on the floor as Ike and Tina, but Academy voters didn't seem to care.

Given the wild variables of timing, industry politics, and personal taste, the Academy will always swing how it may. What's fair got to do with it? Still, the Oscar-night shutout of late director Brian Gibson's electrifying 1993 Tina Turner biopic feels no less raw some 30 years on — not least because it garnered just two nods total, for the outstanding performances of its leads.

As the little girl with the huge voice born Anna Mae Bullock, Angela Bassett — who, legend has it, landed the job over the likes of Halle Berry, Janet Jackson, Robin Givens, and Pam Grier just a month before production began — had mere weeks to prepare. Laurence Fishburne, on the other hand, repeatedly turned down the role of Ike Turner, the man who would give Tina her name and for nearly two decades essentially hold her hostage in a relationship so rife with physical, mental, and sexual abuse that his villainy came to define their story even more, some might argue, than the music.

WHAT'S LOVE GOT TO DO WITH IT?

Angela Bassett in 'What's Love Got to Do With It'

| Credit: Everett Collection

It's all there in movie: the blood and bruises and even a brutalizing intimate-partner rape scene. But so is the transcendent talent and joy of Tina as a performer (just try to watch that "River Deep, Mountain High" scene in Phil Spector's studio and not get several kinds of chills). To be fair, both actors had the misfortune of landing in an especially strong year, one dominated by films like Schindler's List, Philadelphia, and The Fugitive. Fishburne, who brings pathos and nuance and real terror to what could easily have been a cartoon-heavy role — let's not even begin to talk about the jumpsuits — likely never stood a chance against Tom Hanks' crusading AIDS patient.

Holly Hunter's win for her ferocious, largely wordless performance as a mute mail-order bride in Jane Campion's art-house drama The Piano is also hard to fault on its own standing. Still, it's impossible to think that Bassett earned almost nothing beyond the 1994 Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Musical or Comedy, so completely does she burn down the screen as a woman fighting for her family, her artistry, her dignity, and ultimately, her life. In a crowded field, her Tina was simply the best; Hollywood just didn't see it.

EW's countdown to the 2022 Oscars has everything you're looking for, from our expert predictions and in-depth Awardist interviews with this year's nominees to nostalgia and our takes on the movies and actors we wish had gotten more Oscars love. You can check it all out at The Awardist.

Related content:

  • The Snub That Still Hurts: Goodfellas amused us and the Oscars needed to show a little respect
  • The Snub That Still Hurts: Samuel L. Jackson's performance in 'Pulp Fiction' was more than a tasty burger
  • The snub That Still Hurts: Wall-E

What's Love Got to Do With It

How old was Angela Bassett in Tina Turner movie?

The film was directed by Brian Gibson, from a screenplay by Kate Lanier. Angela Bassett, a 34-year-old actress who is alternately intense, engaging and unusually candid, remains transfixed by a role that has the potential to change her career. Her performance as Tina Turner, and that of Laurence Fishburne as Mr.

Are Tina Turner and Angela Bassett friends?

Bassett and Turner have remained friends since What's Love Got to Do With It, with the actress appearing in the 2021 HBO documentary Tina.

How did Angela Bassett train for Tina Turner?

He says he had exactly 28 days to get Bassett into Tina-shape, and the actress was no gym rat. Training smarter, not harder, was the key. Her daily routine included a sane hour to 90 minutes of weights and cardio. “We did everything within her ability,” he says, “And I made sure Angela had perfect form.

How many movies did Laurence Fishburne and Angela Bassett play in together?

Fishburne has worked with actress Angela Bassett on four projects.