Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Bassett talks 29-year journey back to Oscars: ‘Don’t give up’

- Patrick Ryan

Angela Bassett did the thing. This year, the screen icon became the first 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 first 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 film roles in “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).’ ”

In “Wakanda Forever,” a sequel to 2018’s best picture-nominated “Black Panther,” Ramonda struggles to find a way forward after the death of her son, T’Challa (the late Chadwick Boseman). She fiercely 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 brother.

When “we are up against something that’s incredibly difficult, we have a choice: whether it will defeat us or whether we will find 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) definitely possesses that.”

Bassett says she “absolutely” felt the weight of expectatio­n going into “Wakanda Forever,” after Boseman’s 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 office and five Oscar nomination­s.

Bassett was once considered the Oscar front-runner for her soul-baring work in the film, 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.

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.

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 first nomination, it really is about the spirit of never giving up.”

 ?? DAN MACMEDAN/USA TODAY ?? Angela Bassett is the first actor to be Oscar-nominated for a Marvel movie, playing the grieving Queen Ramonda in “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.”
DAN MACMEDAN/USA TODAY Angela Bassett is the first actor to be Oscar-nominated for a Marvel movie, playing the grieving Queen Ramonda in “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.”

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