Angela Bassett Did The Thing!
Welcome to Adoring Angela Bassett. Best known for her performances in What's Love Got To Do With It, American Horror Story, Wakanda Forever, 9-1-1, and many more, this site is determined to bring you the most up to date information & photos on this talented actress and her career.  Enjoy your stay!
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Apr
12
2023

Angela attended the Opening Night of Terence Blanchard’s “Champion” with her husband Courtney! Photos of her attending have been added, enjiy!


 

Mar
27
2023

Screencaps of the latest 9-1-1 Episode have been added, big thanks to Josh for donating these!


 Television Productions > 2018-9-1-1 > Season 6 > Episode Screencaptures > 6.12:”Recovery”

 

Mar
14
2023

Screencaps of the latest episode of 9-1-1 have been added to our gallery, enjoy!


 

Mar
13
2023

Angela was in attendance at the 95th Annual Academy Awards tonight as she was nominated for Best Supporting Actress, she sadly lost (robbed) but still looked amazing nontheless! I’ve added photos of her attending the carpet with her family and at the Vanity Fair Oscar Party too. Enjoy!



 

Mar
11
2023

Screencaps of the latest episode of 9-1-1 have been added to our gallery, enjoy! Big thanks to Joshua for donating these!


 

Mar
09
2023

Last night Angela was in attendance of the TIME Women Of The Year 2023 Gala as she is one of the many women Nominated and well deserved! Photos from the Event have been added to our gallery, enjoy!


Events & Appearances > 2023 > March 08: TIME Women Of The Year 2023 Gala
 

Mar
07
2023



Screencaptures > 2023 > Angela Bassett On This Year’s Academy Awards | CBS
 

Events & Appearances > 2023 >
Decades after her first performance in front of an audience, Angela Bassett can still remember her lines.She told “CBS Mornings” co-host Gayle King that her first performance was Langston Hughes’ poem, “Madam and the Minister.” Since then, she’s starred in dozens of movies, including “What’s Love Got To Do With It” and “How Stella Got Her Groove Back,” and this year she’s Oscar-nominated for her performance as Queen Ramonda in “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever,” the sequel to the 2018 Marvel hit “Black Panther.”

Bassett woke up early to see if her name would be read.

“I mean, so excited that I woke up at 3:45. I did not plan to do that. I set my alarm for 5:25, just five minutes before, (to) sleep as long as I could,” Bassett laughed.

When her name was called, Bassett said, she yelped with excitement.

Her nomination for Best Supporting Actress comes nearly three decades after her last Oscar nomination, when she played Tina Turner in the 1993 biopic “What’s Love Got To Do With It.”

“The nomination now, it seems a lot busier, you know?” Bassett said. “I was green.”

In honor of her latest nomination, King and Bassett took a trip down memory lane, all the way back to the early 90s. King surprised Bassett with the “Proud Mary” dress that she wore in the 1993 film. It’s one of the few archived pieces from the movie.

“We would do take, and take, and take. We did that song all day,” Bassett said. “We’d do it from the top of the song to the end of the song, completely through, not like bits and pieces. The entire thing, me and the girls, The Ikettes, and afterwards … He would say ‘Go again,’ and you were like, ‘Can an actor have a moment, a minute?'”

Bassett added that she hadn’t seen the garment since the last day of filming.

“I love it. I love it,” she said. “Can I take it home? I’ll keep it safe.”

Bassett didn’t win the Oscar for “What’s Love Got To Do With It,” much to the world’s shock.

“In the moment … you’re hoping, and praying, and wishing, but I don’t walk away thinking ‘I’ve been robbed,'” Bassett said. “That’s too negative of an emotion to carry with me for the rest of my life.”

“I choose to believe that there’s a reason why it didn’t happen,” she said.

Bassett’s next role didn’t come for 18 months, but in 1995, she was in “Strange Days,” “Vampire in Brooklyn,” and “Waiting to Exhale,” a movie that King said she celebrated with a party.

“This was before we even knew the phrase ‘Black girl magic,'” King said. “But it was a group of Black women gathered around to watch that movie, and there was always something that everybody could relate to. And I loved ‘Waiting to Exhale.'”

Bassett said the movie was a “beautiful, serious, funny, poignant story” that wasn’t seen before.

“We hadn’t seen those characters and those stories and all those women together at the same moment in time, because it was as if women and Black women couldn’t carry a story, and we proved that we could,” Bassett said.

Bassett said it’s been an honor to be a part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

“Queen Ramonda, for me, is just, at its core, a representation of the strong women that I’ve had in my life who’ve raised me, of the strong women I see, my love for them, my appreciation of them,” Bassett said.

Mar
07
2023

Celebrating her second Oscar nomination nearly three decades after her first, the star is ready to explain the elusive quality that has always set her apart.

 

Mar
03
2023

Angela Bassett did the thing.

 

This year, the screen icon became the first actor to be Oscar-nominated for a Marvel movie, playing the grieving Queen Ramonda in “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.” The nod comes nearly three decades after her first Oscar nomination for best actress in 1994, for her electrifying portrayal of Tina Turner in the biopic “What’s Love Got to Do With It.”

Returning to the Oscars after 29 years, Bassett, 64, has one of the longest gaps between nominations for Hollywood stars. But she’s delivered no shortage of captivating performances in the time since, with dynamic film roles in “Sunshine State,” “Waiting to Exhale” and “How Stella Got Her Groove Back,” and memorable TV turns in Fox’s “9-1-1” and FX’s “American Horror Story.” She’s also inspired the next generation of actors, with Ariana DeBose name-checking Bassett in her now-viral rap about powerhouse women.

If Bassett could tell her younger self anything, “I’d probably say, ‘Just hang in there, girl,’ ” she says with a laugh. ” ‘Take care of yourself, be grateful and just don’t give up. It’s going to be a long time coming maybe, but keep it all in perspective. It’s only doing good work that’s going to potentially get you there (again).’ ”

‘One of the closest best supporting actress races’ in history

In “Wakanda Forever,” a sequel to 2018’s best picture-nominated “Black Panther,” Ramonda struggles to find a way forward after the death of her son, T’Challa (the late Chadwick Boseman). She fiercely leads the nation of Wakanda while also trying to protect her daughter, Shuri (Letitia Wright), who reluctantly takes up the mantle of Black Panther from her superhero sibling.

When “we are up against something that’s incredibly difficult,we have a choice: whether it will defeat us or whether we will find a way out of the darkness and back to ourselves,” Bassett says. “I’m always interested in the juxtaposition of the vulnerable and the strong, and how they live together. (Ramonda) definitely possesses that.”

Bassett says she “absolutely” felt the weight of expectation going into “Wakanda Forever,” after Boseman’s shocking death from colon cancer in 2020. But the sequel, which puts female characters at the center, was embraced by both moviegoers and awards voters, netting $858.5 million at the global box office and five Oscar nominations.

Bassett was once considered the Oscar front-runner for her soul-baring work in the film, earning best supporting actress prizes at the Golden Globes and Critics Choice Awards. But she now faces stiff competition from fellow nominees Kerry Condon (“The Banshees of Inisherin”) and Jamie Lee Curtis (“Everything Everywhere All at Once”), who triumphed in the category at the British Academy Film Awards and Screen Actors Guild Awards, respectively.

“While her losses at SAG and BAFTA are disappointing, there is no denying the powerful work Bassett is doing here,” says Ryan McQuade, executive editor of AwardsWatch. “In one of the closest best supporting actress races we’ve had in Academy Awards history, her legendary status, decades of versatile work and long-overdue narrative still has enough power to push her over the top.”

‘It really is about the spirit of never giving up’

Oscar nominations morning was, by all accounts, a regular workday for Bassett, who stars in the sixth season of the crime procedural “9-1-1.” She didn’t text Rihanna, a best original song nominee for “Wakanda Forever” theme “Lift Me Up.” (“I don’t have her digits in my phone!”) Nor did she go out and celebrate with her husband, actor Courtney B. Vance, and their twins Bronwyn and Slater, 17.

“I had to take them to school and go to work, so that kept me really grounded,” Bassett says. She credits Vance for his unwavering support: accompanying her to awards shows and sweetly filming her acceptance speeches on his smartphone.

“He was supportive before the whirlwind,” Bassett says. “He always trusted and believed that a nomination like this might one day happen for me.”

One of the highlights of Oscar season has been simply mingling with her fellow nominees – actors like herself who have “labored in the vineyard” for decades, she says. “When I think of my girl Michelle Yeoh and it being her first nomination, it really is about the spirit of never giving up.”

After years of “just waiting” for opportunities to come her way, she’s now creating them with Vance and their joint company Bassett Vance Productions. And although Ramonda’s chapter closes in “Wakanda Forever,” no one is ever truly gone in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Has she heard from director Ryan Coogler about a third “Black Panther?”  

“It’s a little too early for that,” Bassett says with a grin. “As big as this movie was, and the depths he had to go to bring a satisfying story to the screen, I hope he’s somewhere lying in the sun with a nice, cool drink in his hand.”

Mar
02
2023

Oscar fever is heating up here with only two weeks to go until the big evening.

I’ve spoken to not one of the women vying for the top acting awards…or even two of them. In the past few weeks I’ve chatted to three.

Kerry Condon is nominated for best actress in a supporting role for The Banshees Of Inisherin. Meanwhile, Cate Blanchett is an Oscar veteran and she’s nominated for best actress in the classical music drama Tar.

I also had a chat with one of the queens of Hollywood – and the Queen of Wakanda – Angela Bassett, who’s up against Condon in the best supporting actress category.

Bassett was of course nominated 30 years ago for her starring role in the wonderful What’s Love Got To Do With It, the biopic of the life of Tina Turner.

Last year she appeared in a different type of emotional role as Ramonda, the mother of superhero Black Panther. He was previously played by Chadwick Boseman who died before filming of the sequel began, which turned the movie, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, into an emotional tribute – as well as a rip-roaring adventure.

“What I love about this is, despite life and its challenges and its ebbs and flows, its inevitabilities, that we were able to come together and create something this memorable and exciting for audiences and theatre-goers,” Bassett told me at the recent Bafta Tea Party Awards here in Los Angeles.

It was a rare cold day in Hollywood and Bassett couldn’t help but aim a dig at me once she found out I was Scottish. “Did you bring this over with you?” she laughed.

It’s why I always wear thermal undies, Angela!

First-time nominee Condon told me how wonderful it had been to work with Colin Farrell.

“I’ve known him for quite a long time so it was pretty easy to pretend that we were brother and sister,” said Condon, “and I knew Brendan (Gleeson) as well and a lot of the other actors in it, so it was nice. But we all wanted to do a really good job.”

The location off the west coast of Ireland was breathtaking and Condon took the time to watch the sunsets each day. “The director of photography would run outside and capture all these beautiful little moments. I just watched it and thought nice thoughts. It’s like a character almost.”

Meanwhile, Blanchett revealed the secret of her physical performance as a troubled conductor – having a dance!

“I asked the director how he was going to shoot it and he said, ‘I’m just going to shoot it’. So I knew there was nowhere to hide,” she explained. “But it was amazing. I kind of treated it like a dance.

“There’s such an alchemy to it and it looks so otherworldly. I don’t know how to get an opportunity to do something this big again, I’m quitting.”

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