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The Sun (UK) July 20, 1990
INTERVIEW WITH TINA
Tina Turner wows fans all over the world with her X-certificate stage show
- who can believe she is 50 years old and a grandmother?
But
Tina, currently on tour in the UK, is used to dishing out surprises. After
an unsettled early life, she fought back to become one of pop’s biggest
stars.
Her album sales have made her a multi-millionairess and after a disastrous
marriage she now boasts a toyboy lover.
Q: You had a difficult childhood. What were your parents like?
A: I am part Navajo and Cherokee Indian and was born in the tiny
backwoods town of Nutbush, Tennessee in 1939 where my father worked in the
cotton fields. I was not close to my father, I felt he didn’t like me. I
didn’t get much love or affection because my parents were always fighting.
Q: What happened after you
joined?
A: I married him and we formed the Ike and Tina Turner Revue. I
became known as quite a dirty girl. When I was offered a part in porn
movies I confess I was tempted. But Ike wouldn’t let me. I guess I did go
over the top in that revue. But I was acting under orders and those orders
were to give it everything I’d got musically and sexually.
Even in later years when I’ve been working on my own I admit I’ve tried to
turn on the guys, but I’m not ashamed of it.
I don’t think I would have attracted so many fans standing at the
microphone like a statue.
Q:
Some people say that woman choose men who are like their fathers. Is that
what happened to you?
A; Ike and I were friends for years and that’s how we should have
kept it. Physically Ike was nothing like my father but I guess
psychologically they were similar. My father fought with my mother and Ike
fought with his women.
Q: Is that why you turned down the role eventually played by
Oscar-nominated Whoopi Goldberg in Steven Spielberg’s blockbuster The
Color Purple?
A; Even if I had received an Oscar for it, I would not have been
really excited. Every time I looked at it, it would have reminded me of a
side of my life I do not care to remember.
Q; You re-launched your career as a solo singer. How did you do
it?
A; I worked at changing everything I didn’t like about myself. My
red hair became wilder, I apply make-up much better, I’m thinner and my
body is now in much better shape than it has ever been.
It had much to do with my being a happier person.
Q; People say Mick Jagger-who you teamed up with at Live Aid in
1985-learned to dance by watching you bop on stage. How did you meet him?
A; Mick wasn’t dancing when we toured with the Stones in 1966. I
didn’t know who he was. I thought he had a very strange face. It was a
really white, white face with big lips. He was always standing in the
wings behind the speakers looking at me. Finally I said something to Ike
and he said ‘ That’s Mick Jagger’. Ike brought Mick into the room
backstage with the Ikettes and I started to play around.
From then on Mick would always walk into the dressing room without
knocking while we were dressing, and Ike was with Keith Richards and the
guitars. After that Mick started to move around on stage.
Q; In the past you have put your back out. What happens?
A; A lot of my sexy dance moves are caused by pains in my back. I
cannot stand up straight and hit some of the notes I hit. A lot of my body
language has to do with the song I’m singing. Better Be Good To Me and
Show Some Respect can actually injure me.
The legs are moving, the heart is really pumping, the body is
straining-it’s wild.
That is one of the main reasons why I am touring again. I just get a
tremendous thrill out of playing in front of all those people.
Q:
Your hair has always completed your look and you have worn wigs for years.
Why?
A; I started wearing wigs around 1960 when Ike was in St. Louis
standing trial for a bank job he’d allegedly pulled. I decided to have my
hair bleached because it was back in fashion but they left the heat cap on
too long and my hair fell out. So I got into wigs.
Q: You make the wigs yourself. Does it involve much work?
A; Each wig is clipped to my real hair which I wear in little
braids, so it doesn’t fly off in the show. You have to treat the wig hair
and prepare it first. A lot of the hair I used to get came from Japan and
you can’t color their hair. Now I order the hair from Italy and each stage
wig lasts around a year.
Q: You seem to have found
happiness at last with Erwin Bach, a 32-year-old German record company
boss, and have bought a house in Cologne to be near to him. What’s the
attraction?
A; Erwin keeps me young. But believe it or not he is much more
mature than I am. Sometimes he looks at me a little strangely. I don’t
always act my age.
We laugh a lot. He’s definitely what I call a real man and not intimidated
by me.
Q: Are you self-conscious about the age gap between you?
A; I always try to be attractive for myself rather than for any man.
Q: You’ve hinted this recent tour for the Foreign Affair album may
be your last. Will you retire?
A; Dancing is very much part of my act so I don’t plan to carry on
until I’m 60 or 80. I think I know this is the last real tour. You start
degenerating at 50.
But I don’t really think about my age. Happiness is far more important. |