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- <text id=93TT1902>
- <title>
- June 21, 1993: Aye, Tina!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jun. 21, 1993 Sex for Sale
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SHOW BUSINESS, Page 64
- AYE, TINA!
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The Soul Survivor is as hot as ever, with an album, a tour and
- her life on film
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD CORLISS--With reporting by Janice C. Simpson/ Reno
- </p>
- <p> Tina Turner is too sick to sing. Anemia has sapped the strength
- she needs to sell her raw-meat music. She can't go on. She must
- go on; Ike is there, all silky unspoken threat, to see that
- she fulfills her obligation to the man who found her, nursed
- her to stardom, gave her her name. He only wants her to sing
- the hit he has written for her, A Fool in Love ("You can't understand/
- Why he treats you like he do when he's such a good man"). So,
- as she stands mute and trembling on the stage of the Apollo
- Theatre in 1965, Ike walks up to her and kisses her on the cheek.
- Softly. It's very sweet and utterly false--pure show biz.
- It is also a warning: a kiss that could be a kick. Tears rushing
- down her face, Tina wails the song's first word. It is "Woe,"
- and it sounds like a moan from beneath the earth, from any woman
- who can't understand why her man treats her like he does.
- </p>
- <p> There are grislier scenes in What's Love Got to Do with It,
- the drama based on Turner's autobiography, I, Tina. Ike beating
- Tina. Ike kicking Tina. Ike choking Tina while he rapes her.
- Ike in the ambulance with Tina after her suicide attempt, whispering,
- "If you don't make it, I'll kill you." But none is more harrowing
- than the moment of Ike's killer kiss. It shows how tender a
- man's domination can seem and how a woman, prodded by terror
- and responsibility, can see no option except acceding to his
- abuse. The happy ending--escape from his thrall, sanity restored,
- a career of her own--comes later.
- </p>
- <p> Directed by Brian Gibson and starring Angela Bassett as Tina
- and Laurence Fishburne as Ike, What's Love Got to Do with It
- is no movie masterpiece. The picture's canvas is so broad (40
- years), and its depiction of Ike's brutality so encyclopedic,
- that it sometimes plays like a Greatest Hits package in which
- all the songs sound alike. But the film will be a crowd pleaser
- and a curative because Tina Turner has lent it the voltage of
- her star presence and the joltage of her awful, exemplary life.
- The concert stage was where she could release, through her primal
- art, all the anguish inside her. It was also the cage Ike kept
- her in, shackled by duty, love and fear. Tina had a right to
- sing the blues.
- </p>
- <p> So, as she launches an album of old and new songs and opens
- a 53-city U.S. tour to an ecstatic house in Reno, Nevada, Tina
- is in no hurry to see the film of her life. "Do you think I
- want to see Ike Turner hit somebody again?" she asks. "It's
- not enough that I was hit. Now I have to watch him hit somebody
- else? I don't need to see this movie, 'cause I saw it already.
- I lived it."
- </p>
- <p> Like many abused women, Turner was embarrassed by what she had
- endured. "No one knew," she says. "It was ugly. I was ashamed.
- Finally I wrote I, Tina to stop people from talking to me about
- Ike Turner." The book had a greater impact than she suspected.
- "People have said, `You've inspired me. I've cleaned up my life.'
- Some dance-hall girls have gone back and become nurses. A man
- came up to me in the Atlanta airport and said, `I want to tell
- you that I read your book, and I will never beat my wife again.'
- " But reliving the Ike years, even from the bright side, was
- an ordeal to this soul survivor. "And now when the noise from
- the book calms down," she says ruefully, "here comes the movie."
- </p>
- <p> And here, like a Freddy Krueger who won't stay down, comes Ike
- Turner, feeling frisky after two years in jail on a cocaine
- rap and ready for his 15 fresh minutes of notoriety. When TIME
- called to request an interview with Ike, his manager immediately
- asked how much Ike would be paid for it. (Nothing.) Disney,
- Ike says later, paid him $45,000 in exchange for his signing
- a waiver not to sue over the film's portrayal of him.
- </p>
- <p> "I hear they murdered me in the movie," says Ike, 61, from his
- home in Santa Monica, California. His battering of Tina was,
- of course, her fault. "Each time I hit her it was because of
- her attitude," he says without any evident irony. "She was always
- looking sad, and I can't stand people looking sad. Instead of
- telling me what was wrong, she'd ball it all up inside of her,
- and then she'd look right over me, and I can't stand that, so
- I'd slap the shit out of her." Did he ever kick her? "Hell no,"
- he says. Choke her? "Maybe. I don't want to say I didn't." And
- what about cheating on Tina? "As far as the stuff with other
- women and partying, well, yeah, I did it. We didn't have AIDS
- then." Told that movie audiences cheer when Tina finally fights
- back at her oppressor, Ike waxes philosophical. "I understand
- it," he says. "When I was a kid, I loved Lena Horne. And I would
- have hated it if I thought somebody was abusing her."
- </p>
- <p> What Ike hates now is the thought of one last career opportunity
- slipping by. In his way, he is as bruised by her solo success
- as she was by his fists. So, astonishingly and naturally, he
- wants to be Tina's opening act: "Just my band and hers. We wouldn't
- even have to see each other."
- </p>
- <p> No chance, Ike. Tina is pleased to enjoy the sweet life in Cologne,
- Germany, with her companion, record exec Erwin Bach, who is
- 17 years younger than she. "He's a very strong young man," she
- says. "I like the force of a strong man, but it doesn't mean
- I'm going to allow another man to beat me up. Strength is not
- always ugly." And she likes showing fans like those in Reno
- that she is still in great, size-8 form. "They are there for
- me," she says, "and I am there for them." She realizes that
- a diva's life span is limited. "This is my 54th year. I watched
- Bette Davis until she almost dropped right there on the screen.
- But nobody can tell me that a 75-year-old woman can stand on
- the stage and sing Steamy Windows."
- </p>
- <p> Now and forever, rock's ageless wonder declines the honor of
- Ike's company. "I gave all those years," she says. "Sixteen
- years. I fulfilled my commitment. He took all the money. He
- took all the property. I don't need to see Ike Turner anymore.
- My next years are for me. He must live his own life now. And
- I must live mine."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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