Is Angela Basset Just Hatin?


Originally posted by D-NICE
Makaho, you need to send Alan Keyes to Hollywood, maybe he can make some Sense of it. LOL

Man, before he goes he needs to make a trip to the Stylist. I been tellin that brutha for years he needs a haircut and a beard trim. I tell him, look at J.C. Watts and Colin Powell and Rod Paige..they got their hair presentable. You need to stop by "SOUL SCISSORS" and get hooked up. LOL
:lmao: :lmao:

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Originally posted by THAMES
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Bassett, 43, insists she doesn't begrudge Berry for taking the part she rejected.

"It wasn't the role for me, but I told her she'd win, and I told her to get what was hers. Of course I want [an Oscar]. But it has to be for something I can sleep with at night," she tells Newsweek.

.....

I do not think that she is hatin' on Halle.

Even a Black female with the ability and resume of Angela Basset can get messed over in Hollywood.
 
Here is the Newsweek Article....

Here is the newsweek Article....I think this puts her thoughts and comments more clearly...
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Ten years ago, Angela Bassett was Hollywood?s premier black actress. What happened? The ?Sunshine State? star talks frankly about race, sex, age and Hollywood

By Allison Samuels
NEWSWEEK

July 1 issue ? Angela Bassett has a flair for the dramatic. Two hours into a long, frank interview at a Beverly Hills lounge, the actress is asked why, after not starring in a movie for four years, she turned down a chance for the lead in ?Monster?s Ball.? Bassett bolts out of her overstuffed chair, and throws out her arms in a gesture worthy of her idol, Bette Davis: ?It?s about character , darling.?
IN ?MONSTER?S BALL,? which won Halle Berry an Oscar, a black waitress has a graphic, tortured?and, Bassett believed, demeaning?affair with her husband?s executioner. ?I wasn?t going to be a prostitute on film,? she says. ?I couldn?t do that because it?s such a stereotype about black women and sexuality.? Bassett is clear she isn?t criticizing Berry?just the way Hollywood views women in general and black women in particular. Several actresses, including Vanessa Williams, passed on ?Monster?s Ball? as well. ?Film is forever,? says Bassett. ?It?s about putting something out there you can be proud of 10 years later. I mean, Meryl Streep won Oscars without all that.?
It?s been almost 10 years since Bassett, now 43, had her own shot at the Oscar, exploding onto the screen as a rip-roaring, muscle-flexing Tina Turner in ?What?s Love Got to Do With It.? Trained at Yale?s drama school, and blessed with regal cheekbones and flawless skin, Bassett radiated a cool that audiences hadn?t seen from a black actress on the big screen since the days of Diana Ross, Diahann Carroll and Cicely Tyson in the early ?70s. Bassett seemed on her way to a glorious career in the mainstream. But talent and opportunity don?t always go hand in hand in Tinseltown.
Bassett is the first to admit that her career hasn?t gone the way she?d dreamed it would when the spotlight swung her way after ?What?s Love Got to Do With It.? ?I remember sitting at the Oscars and thinking, ?This is great! This is the beginning of something big for me?,? says the actress, dressed California chic in a faded denim shirt and beige tank top. ?But I didn?t work again for another year and a half. I guess I was pretty naive to think it would be different?that it was just about the talent?particularly for someone who looks like me. You forget that sometimes.? Bassett hasn?t headlined a movie since 1998?s ?How Stella Got Her Groove Back.? Now she?s back, drawing raves in John Sayles?s new ensemble drama ?Sunshine State.? Bassett shows off her trademark intensity and range as Desiree, a struggling actress with a past she?d rather forget. ?Because of Angela?s theater background, she has a strong command of the art form,? says Sayles. ?She just keeps digging and digging into a character so you get every ounce.?
As a kid in St. Petersburg, Fla., Bassett devoured everything from the poetry of Langston Hughes to the films of Bette Davis. After appearing in high-school and community plays, she won a full scholarship to Yale to study drama. Only for a moment, she says, did she think to herself, ?My skin has been kissed by the sun?can I really do this successfully?? By the mid-?80s she was working with August Wilson on Broadway, and by the early ?90s she was in Hollywood, playing supporting roles in ?Boyz N the Hood? and ?Malcolm X.? By 1993, she had landed the role of a life-time. ?Playing Tina was such a big, demanding role?one that could eat you up if you weren?t a very strong, confident actress. But Angela ate it up,? says black-film historian Donald Bogle. ?Bassett is like the old-style actresses. She very much reminds me of Joan Crawford and Bette Davis, women who commanded your attention in a film even when their mouths were closed.?
After grabbing Hollywood?s attention, Bassett was sure she?d get the quality roles befitting a classically trained actress. Instead, she got offered a lot of ?booty call? scripts. She snagged the lead in film adaptations of two Terry McMillan books, ?Waiting to Exhale? and ?How Stella Got Her Groove Back,? but then found herself waiting for Hollywood to make the next move. Bassett figured the drought was over when she read with Sean Connery for the 1999 romantic thriller ?Entrapment.? ?Sean told me he would love what our being in the film would mean across the board for black and white,? recalls Bassett, her voice getting deeper, head tilting back in thought. ?I remember him saying how beautiful our skin would look next to each other?s, and how I was perfect. I left the meeting thinking, ?It?s mine.? But a few weeks later, they cast a lesser-known actress at the time.? (That ?lesser-known? actress, Catherine Zeta-Jones, went on to become Mrs. Michael Douglas.) ?I guess Hollywood wasn?t as progressive as Connery thought,? she says. ?I think I really could have added spice to that role.? Connery couldn?t be reached for comment.
If race is the No. 1 obstacle for Bassett, age is a close second. ?She doesn?t work much because most actresses over 25 don?t, and that certainly applies to black actresses even more,? says director Sayles. ?It?s a lack of interest and imagination by the studios.? At 43, Bassett still doesn?t look much over 30?and she?s proud of it. ?Black don?t crack, honey. Do you see a wrinkle?!? she says, offering her face up for close inspection. That hasn?t stopped studios from relegating her to supporting parts in films like ?Contact? and ?The Score,? even as ?What?s Love Got to Do With It? costar Laurence Fishburne is making $10 million on ?Matrix? sequels.
Bassett says it is a constant struggle, balancing her love of the craft with the reality of paying the bills. She?s not much of a Hollywood player, opting to spend nights at home with her husband, actor Courtney Vance (?Law & Order: Criminal Intent?), instead of networking. But Bassett says she has no regrets. She says she loved Halle Berry?s performance in ?Monster?s Ball? and was moved to tears when Berry mentioned her in her acceptance speech. ?I can?t and don?t begrudge Halle her success,? she says. ?It wasn?t the role for me, but I told her she?d win and I told her to go get what was hers. Of course I want one, too. I would love to have an Oscar. But it has to be for something I can sleep with it at night.?
A high road to take. How long can she stay on it? ?I?m not living on beans and water yet,? says Bassett. ?I?ll just have to wait for it to come to me. If it?s supposed to be mine, it will be.?

? 2002 Newsweek, Inc.
 
What's wrong with her dayum GRILL??

Did Courtney "Ike" her arse before that photo shoot?
 
I still disagree with Angela Bassett's opinion that the role in Monster's Ball was a prostitute. She was not a prostitute. She was a hard working mother whose husband had been in jail for a long time and then was executed. She never walked the street, never solicited sex for money, I mean where was the role in any way being a prostitute? Are you a prostitute when you have sex with a man you are not married to?...then let's all raise our hands!

Someone explained it earlier, Nice or Robber, whoever, the bottom line was that there are some of us who disagree about whether the movie was good/bad, Halle's performance was good/bad and whether she deserved to win the Oscar.

The last issue was clearly put to rest by the members of the Academy of Arts and Sciences in April.

As for the opinions of Angela Bassett and everyone else...you know the adage: OPINIONS are like azzholes, WE ALL GOT 'EM.
 
Originally posted by Makaho Bedrock
I just wish that some people had a higher self-esteem and not get upset over Hollywood stereotypes. It was a dayummmed movie for goodness sakes. I saw Spiderman too, but I aint gonna try and climb a skyscraper though.


Spiderman ain't real???!!! :eek2: :eek2: :eek2:


~~Batman, send help!~~
 
I disagree with Angela Basset as well.

Latisha was a hardworking single mother in that film....If you didn't know, you can tell when the folks came to evict her and she said, "I done 'bout got the money!"

Never mind what was said, Halle has an Oscar. That, my friends, can not be taken away from her!
 
Angela Bassett's is only saying how she feels and I don't fault her for that. I mean I know I am not the only person who was pissed when Cuba won a award for Jerry Mcgruier :smh: that in it's self shows how for black actors and actress you have to lower your self to win a Oscar...

And look what he has done since that :smh:


But like SS said "OPINIONS are like azzholes, WE ALL GOT 'EM." and my azzhole agrees with Angela...

But again I view alot of things differently....
 
Now come on now Toia, you can't tell me you didn't like "Men Of Honor", or "As Good As It Gets"?

NICE
 
Originally posted by JSU*Toi
Angela Bassett's is only saying how she feels and I don't fault her for that. I mean I know I am not the only person who was pissed when Cuba won a award for Jerry Mcgruier :smh: that in it's self shows how for black actors and actress you have to lower your self to win a Oscar...

And look what he has done since that :smh:


But like SS said "OPINIONS are like azzholes, WE ALL GOT 'EM." and my azzhole agrees with Angela...

But again I view alot of things differently....
Naw I was pissed too. He was a complete idiot in Jerry McGruier.:smh:
 
Originally posted by jelli
Naw I was pissed too. He was a complete idiot in Jerry McGruier.:smh:

I don't get why you all are downing him for this role.....

He played an arrogant, egotistical multimillion dollar athlete....
Tell me athletes like Deion Sanders, Randy Moss and Ray Lewis don't act like that. As a matter of fact they consulted George Steinbrenner for the movie.
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Re: Here is the Newsweek Article....

Originally posted by jelli
By Allison Samuels
NEWSWEEK
...Bassett figured the drought was over when she read with Sean Connery for the 1999 romantic thriller ?Entrapment.? ?Sean told me he would love what our being in the film would mean across the board for black and white,? recalls Bassett, her voice getting deeper, head tilting back in thought. ?I remember him saying how beautiful our skin would look next to each other?s, and how I was perfect. I left the meeting thinking, ?It?s mine.? But a few weeks later, they cast a lesser-known actress at the time.? (That ?lesser-known? actress, Catherine Zeta-Jones, went on to become Mrs. Michael Douglas.) ?I guess Hollywood wasn?t as progressive as Connery thought,? she says. ?I think I really could have added spice to that role.? Connery couldn?t be reached for comment.

Wow! That coulda been Angela's butt hunched up in the air!!! Kidding :D I can see Angela in that role, too. Especially since old azz Sean Connery can get up there and still be great. Why not an older woman too? Then again, that wouldn't have sold. HOEllywood has already told us the women must be YOUNG and THIN to impress. I'm kinda surprised Angela was even offered the Monster's Ball role.

She isn't saying the role was a prostitute in the literal sense. It's obvious she knows Halle's role wasn't selling herself on the streets. We also know from other roles that Angela don't mind getting sexy. But she's just saying the role was WAAY TOO sexually explicit for her and she didn't want to represent or be remembered for that. I don't blame her. She still gave Halle her props! What's wrong with someone wanting to maintain a fairly positive image and get props for that? Sheesh! :xeye:
 
Originally posted by Makaho Bedrock


I don't get why you all are downing him for this role.....

He played an arrogant, egotistical multimillion dollar athlete....
Tell me athletes like Deion Sanders, Randy Moss and Ray Lewis don't act like that. As a matter of fact they consulted George Steinbrenner for the movie.
Hey if the afore mentioned act like Cuba did in that movie then they are idoiots too....:rolleyes:
 

Originally posted by Makaho Bedrock


I don't get why you all are downing him for this role.....

He played an arrogant, egotistical multimillion dollar athlete....
Tell me athletes like Deion Sanders, Randy Moss and Ray Lewis don't act like that. As a matter of fact they consulted George Steinbrenner for the movie.

Ok true that was it good enough to get a Oscar hellllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll naw... and then when he did sambo on stage I could have throw my tv out the window... :rolleyes:
 
On Topic:
I hate that Angela said that. I think everyone assumed she would be the first to get the Best Actress Oscar, myself included...and this is just lashing out. I finally saw Monster's Ball (It took me forever because of that love scene), and sensitivity aside Halle held her on. The subject may be taboo, but she deserved her Oscar, as have many sisters before her (who didn't get it). Angela has the right to voice her opinion, but between Rosa Parks and Stella she's done roles that didn't exactly make me proud. (i.e. "The Score" -When she was Deniro's woman-, & let's not discuss "Ruby's Bucket of Blood" etc.)
:rolleyes:

Bottom Line: Angela hasn't "brought it" lately, and now she's throwing rocks.....at the thrown. It's unattractive.:smh:

I'll admit I initially thought of Halle's oscar as a punic victory, but let's be fair. Judge the performance not what we think of the role.

Originally posted by JSU*Toi
Angela Bassett's is only saying how she feels and I don't fault her for that. I mean I know I am not the only person who was pissed when Cuba won a award for Jerry Mcgruier :smh: that in it's self shows how for black actors and actress you have to lower your self to win a Oscar...

Off Topic:
I personally found the roles that Cuba Gooding and Regina King played refreshing. If you look past the OBVIOUS in that film, you'll see that they were shown as a loving black couple. In fact they were what the white couple (Cruise and Zellweger) aspired to be. Their was alot more to that role than, "Show me the money". How many times have you seen loving black couples in non-black movies? (I didn't think so).

JSU*Toi, I'm with you on the Sambo tip. That made me sick too. ;)

*Stepping down from my soapbox.* :blush:
 
Originally posted by Storm_ofSU
Off Topic:
I personally found the roles that Cuba Gooding and Regina King played refreshing. If you look past the OBVIOUS in that film, you'll see that they were shown as a loving black couple. In fact they were what the white couple (Cruise and Zellweger) aspired to be. Their was alot more to that role than, "Show me the money". How many times have you seen loving black couples in non-black movies? (I didn't think so).

Stormy,

Thanks for reminding me of the great, honest, sensual and REAL love relationship between those too. RARELY do we see BLACK LOVE portrayed as supportive, MARRIED, happily in love, untroubled, to death to them part, oh so good baby.

My favorite scene in that movie also produced the most PROFOUND statement a wife can say to her husband and I plan to say it EVERYDAY...Cuba was feeling down and out about the contract and money and not always being there for her and all and she grabbed his face in her hands and made him look her directly in the eyes and then she said, "YOU ARE A SPLENDID BLACK MAN!" That was so affirming, so loving, so generous to put her husband on that pedestal! Her love made him believe in himself and he felt INVINCIBLE. Dayum near made me cry!

Yes indeed baby, BE SPLENDID or BE OUT!
 
Originally posted by Storm_ofSU
Off Topic:
I personally found the roles that Cuba Gooding and Regina King played refreshing. If you look past the OBVIOUS in that film, you'll see that they were shown as a loving black couple. In fact they were what the white couple (Cruise and Zellweger) aspired to be. Their was alot more to that role than, "Show me the money". How many times have you seen loving black couples in non-black movies? (I didn't think so).


TRUE DAT!!! :tup:
 
Originally posted by Ms. Jag4Jag
I saw the movie two weeks ago, and Halle did an excellent job. Sure, she showed her ass, but her ass and tits were out in the movie about Dorothy Dandridge. So her winning just because she showed her ass for the 2nd time.......is a stupid and null point.

On top of that, the script was fine. It was a twisted love story. Out of this turmoil with her husband (Puffy) getting Kilt...Yeah, I said KILT....She was a single Mom trying to make it.

It was coincidence OR fate that the guard who WAS racist (because his daddy was) is the same guy who lead her deathrow husband to the 'lectric chair. She was hurting over being a single struggling mom with a dead husband...

The guard was hurtin' over the fact that his very son who DID not want to be racist, killed himself in front of him and the racist Grandpa...

Well the love he had for "Latisha" outshined ALL of that hate... In the end, it was love that mattered most... He overcame his teachings......


You have to see the story and view it subjectively....it really was a great story and she did a marvelous job...

I don't know if Angela was envious or just insensitive...Perhaps it was her PERCEPTION that the roll was slutty... It really was not... You have to see it to believe it.

My thoughts:

I agree Haille did a good job in the role...

The movie was pretty boring for me...

Yall can say love changed him all you want, but bottom line is
she "whupped" him. But really that's the same thing!
 
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