CULTURE: The Final Word on Tina Turner
The HBO documentary Tina gives the singer the last say on a life that was, for long periods, out of her own hands.
HANNAH GIORGIS March 27, 2021
đˇ RHONDA GRAAM / HBO
Before âWhatâs Love Got to Do With Itâ was a Grammy Hall of Fame record, the title of an Angela Bassettâfronted biopic, or a No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot 100, it was a breathy little ditty sung by the British pop group Bucks Fizz. After the ABBA-reminiscent band recorded its rendition, the songwriter Terry Britten took his track to a very different artist who initially disliked it, before she brought it to life with a new vigor. âThey werenât used to a strong voice standing on top of music, but I converted it,â Tina Turner recalls in Tina, a new HBO documentary about the famed musician. âI made it my own.â
Turner did with that sleepy song what she always did with rock and roll as a genre: claim it. When the music industry didnât open its doors to her, or to Black women more broadly, she found a window to climb throughâor kicked the door down altogether. Just look at what she did for Creedence Clearwater Revivalâs âProud Maryâ in 1971. âTurner upped the intensity of [John] Fogertyâs country-rock anthem by a factor of 10,â the author Jason Heller recently wrote. âItâs Turnerâs soulful ecstasy that sells it.â The song may have helped liberate Tina, as Heller notes, but her cover also pushed the genre forward.
The documentary, from Oscar winners Daniel Lindsay and T. J. Martin, premiering today, isnât a neat story of one womanâs triumph against the odds. Instead, it follows the artistâs constant battles for control of her life, career, and legacy. Through 2019 interviews with Turner at her home in Zurich, as well as archival footage, the film chronicles her fight for personal and creative autonomy. âLook what I have done in this lifetime, with this body,â she says at one point, her voice sounding at once triumphant and incredulous. The gravity of that contradiction hangs over Tina, which reminds its viewers not just of the starâs talent but of all the turns at which that vibrance was nearly cut off from the world altogether.
The struggle of navigating public life as a high-profile Black woman musician has been explored in other recent works: The December documentary Billie and the February biopic The United States vs. Billie Holiday both track the blues singerâs contentious relationship with the media and the music industry. And like those films, past documentaries and biopics about Whitney Houston and Nina Simone, in addition to forthcoming works about Aretha Franklin, all lack an element that differentiates Tina: the subjectâs voice. In works of biographical entertainment, the impulse for an artist to control their own narrative can lead to hagiographies that strip their subjects of unflattering histories. But, like the biopic and musical before it, Tina doesnât avoid the darker chapters of the starâs life. Framed as Turnerâs farewell to public life, the documentary instead allows her to define her story in its totality, in part by revisitingâand in some cases rewritingâthe eras in which others wrote it for her.
Tina homes in on two related struggles: Turnerâs insistence on making it as a rock musician and her commitment to owning, and reinventing, her name. Born Anna Mae Bullock in Nutbush, Tennessee, Tina Turner wasnât destined to perform for crowds of more than 100,000 people around the world. The first of Tinaâs two acts introduces her early years and the subsequent move to Missouri, where she met the locally famous musician Ike Turner. It was Ike who first called her âTina,â a name that he chose partly for its closeness to âSheena,â the name of a racy, jungle-dwelling comic-book character. By attaching his own last name to Tina when they became a musical duo in 1960, and then marrying the young singer in 1962, Ike hoped to keep her from abandoning him after they found success, she explains. âI was truly a friend to Ike, and I had promised to help him,â Tina says of their embattled marriage and creative partnership. âSo I was still trying to help him get a hit record.â
Without glossing over the wrenching details of Ikeâs physical and emotional abuse (the late singer admitted to hitting Tina, but claimed that the abuse allegations are exaggerated), the documentary highlights the moments when Tina got some respite. Recording with the producer Phil Spector in 1966, she was able to sing without Ike controlling her arrangements only because Spector had paid him not to be present. âThat was a freedom I didnât have,â Tina says of singing with boundless might over the monumental orchestration of âRiver Deep â Mountain High.â âYouâre like a bird that gets out of a cage.â The song didnât become a hit in the United Statesâunlike in the U.K.âbut it planted the seeds for Tinaâs genre-defying musical repertoire separate from Ike.
In the film, Turner explains why she doesnât consider Private Dancer, the first commercial success she achieved following her divorce from Ike, a comeback record: âTina had never arrived,â she says. âIt was Tinaâs debut for the first time. This was my first album.â Most often, she speaks about the immense toll of wresting her identity back from Ikeâand from the subsequent media attention. Speaking about her 1978 divorce proceedings, for example, a younger Tina corrects a journalist who comments that Ike wanted to own all of the duoâs artistic work. âNo, he wanted to own me,â she says.
Itâs no wonder, then, that the 1986 autobiography in which Turner detailed their relationship was titled I, Tina. The journalist Kurt Loder, with whom she wrote the book, appears in the new documentary, as does Katori Hall, who co-wrote the 2019 Broadway musical about the singerâs life, also titled Tina. Hall notes that the musicianâs decision to claim her name in court during a divorce in which she got nothing else was its own rebellion against Ike: âYou gave me this name,â she imagines Tina thinking then. âBut watch what I build with it.â Thereâs no shortage of works that detail or recreate the abuses the singer has suffered. But Tina, importantly, also doesnât lose sight of how sheâs remade herself after her traumas with rigor and acumen.
The constant media coverage of Ikeâs alleged abuse was not the only persistent tedium the singer faced. Plenty of the documentaryâs second act focuses on the barriers Tina encountered in trying to establish herself, explicitly, as a rock artist. She speaks candidly about the calculated choices she made to push back against an industry that saw her as too Black to make âwhiteâ music, listeners who suggested that she was straying from her roots, and rock critics who accused her of toying recklessly with the genre. She wonders aloud how listeners would have responded to her music if it had been released without her faceâwithout any indication of the artistâs raceâon the marketing materials. âMy dream was to be the first Black rock-and-roll singer to pack places like the [Rolling] Stones,â she muses.
Undoubtedly, many of the objections to Tinaâs ascent were rooted in racist perceptions of who could lay claim to rock music. One particularly revelatory moment in the documentary quotes the late John Carter, the Capitol Records executive who signed Tina as a solo artist, remembering the racist, vitriolic response of a label co-worker at the time. But other industry players recognized that her artistry pointed clearly to the genreâs Black origins. Though many of the most celebrated rock stars have been white men, its earliest pioneers were Black artists such as Sister Rosetta Tharpe, a multi-instrumentalist whose early-20th-century recordings brought the ecstatic expression of Black southern gospel to secular music. Along with Black radio stations, the Black church shaped the musical stylings of white rockers such as Elvis Presley. As the cultural anthropologist Maureen Mahon writes in Black Diamond Queens: African American Women and Rock and Roll, âTurner was arguably the genuine article, someone who had the vocal sound that white rock vocalists from Mick Jagger to Janis Joplin to Robert Plant to John Fogerty were trying to achieve. She had the wrenching strain, the effortless rasp, the wails, volume, and passion, as well as the ability to somehow sound both hot and cool.â
The HBO film is certainly a celebratory work, but it doesnât feel like a sterile product of image management. In capturing the 81-year-old singerâs reflections while she is still alive to give them, Tina offers an intimate examination of what it means for any artistâand especially a Black woman whose music has challenged the narrow confines of genreâto create her own mythos. It lets viewers, even those familiar with the arc of her career, appreciate the monumental work it took for Tina to make rock her own.
HANNAH GIORGIS is a staff writer at The Atlantic, where she covers culture.













