Angela Bassett was so dedicated to playing Tina Turner, she would often lose herself in the role, recalled co-star Laurence Fishburne. ”It’s like Angela’s not there anymore,” he told EW. For her performance, Bassett was nominated for an Academy Award and became the first African-American to win the Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy.
Though already shrouded in controversy, Saldana’s turn as the brilliant Nina Simone in the upcoming biopic is certainly a coveted role by Hollywood standards.
As The Cosby Show’s Clair Huxtable, Tony Award-winning actress Phylica Rashad was everyone’s favorite mom in the 80s. Clair was a welcome antidote in an era where an empowered Black woman was a rarity on network TV. She had a beautiful (and stable) family and a successful career.
Oprah Winfrey put in a tremendous amount of work into making Sofia one of the most intriguing female characters in Black cinema. In her own way — and though it gets her in trouble — “Miss Sofia” uses her assertiveness to fight against racism and male dominance.
The most intuitive 10-year-old we’ll ever meet, Eve Batiste (Smollett) attempts to understand her complex family and her father’s death by reaching deep into Louisiana’s deep traditions. “The summer I killed my father, I was 10 years old,” she declares with conviction, in one of the most riveting roles ever inhabited by a young Black actress.
Actress Emayatzy Corinealdi shines as Ruby, a nurse struggling at a crossroads: Should she continue standing by her incarcerated husband, for whom she’s already sacrificed her dreams, or should she make moves toward building a new life? Ruby is a fully realized, nuanced character, and the movie delves into every aspect of her — her deep wells of love, yearning and resilience.
For the title role of the television movie The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, Tyson portrayed a former slave who lived through both the Jim Crow and Civil Rights Eras. The actress, pictured here taking a drink from a “whites only” water fountain, aged from 19 to 111 and won two Emmy Awards for her work.
Succeeding against the odds was the theme of 2008, and this film captures that feeling perfectly. Young breakout KeKe Palmer played 11-year-old Akeelah, who strives to overcome her rough Los Angeles environment one word at a time, through triumphant spelling competitions. An added bonus: the big-screen reunion of Boyz in the Hood stars Angela Bassett and Laurence Fishburne as Akeelah’s mother and coach.
It’s hard to believe that Jennifer Husdon’s performance as Effie White in Dreamgirls (2006) was her acting debut. The talented singer experiences one of the most memorable character trajectories of the film as she goes from being a member of The Dreams to welfare mother, back to the top as she returns to the music industry.
Based on actor Ruben Santiago-Hudson’s childhood, Lackawanna Blues paints an unforgettable picture of Rachel “Nanny” Crosby, the owner of a local boarding house who became his caregiver. The acclaimed HBO movie allowed Merkerson, long a supporting player on Law & Order, to bring all her emotion, talent and warmth to her first lead role (for which she won a Golden Globe, Emmy, and Screen Actor’s Guild award).