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Angela Bassett

American actress

Angela Evelyn B*ett (born August 16, 1958) is an American actress, director, and producer. Known for her portrayals of African-American female leads, B*ett is the recipient of numerous accolades, including; three Black Reel Awards, a Golden Globe Award, seven NAACP Image Awards, and a Screen Actors Guild Award, in addition to nominations for an Academy Award, and seven Primetime Emmy Awards.

B*ett began her acting career in the 1980s, after graduating from Yale University. Following a few minor roles, including as Reva Styles in Boyz n the Hood (1991), B*ett had her breakthrough with her portrayal of singer Tina Turner in the biopic What's Love Got to Do with It (1993), which garnered her a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress. She went on to star in numerous acclaimed and successful films, including; as Betty Shabazz in both Malcolm X (1992) and Panther (1995), as Katherine Jackson in The Jacksons: An American Dream (1992), as Voletta Wallace in Notorious (2009), as Amanda Waller in Green Lantern (2011), and as Coretta Scott King in Betty & Coretta (2013). Her other notable film roles include Bernandine Harris in Waiting to Exhale (1995), Rachel Constantine in Contact (1997), Stella Payne in How Stella Got Her Groove Back (1998), Janet Williams in Music of the Heart (1999), Lynne Jacobs in Olympus Has Fallen (2013) and London Has Fallen (2016), and Queen Ramonda in Black Panther (2018) and Avengers: Endgame (2019).

On television, B*ett's portrayal of Rosa Parks in the television film The Rosa Parks Story (2002), garnered her a nomination for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Limited Series or Movie. In 2013, B*ett had a recurring role on the FX horror anthology series American Horror Story: Coven, earning a nomination for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie. She returned as a series regular for Freak Show, the series' fourth season, portraying Desiree Dupree, for which she received another Primetime Emmy Award nomination. For the fifth season, Hotel, she portrayed Ramona Royale, a famous movie star. B*ett returned to the series's sixth season, Roanoke, portraying an alcoholic actress named Monet Tumusiime, who plays struggling mother and former police officer Lee Harris in the My Roanoke Nightmare do*entary, and she reprised her role as Marie Laveau in a guest role in the eighth season Apocalypse. In 2018, B*ett began producing and starring in the Fox first responder drama series 9-1-1, playing LAPD patrol sergeant Athena Grant.

Contents

  • 1 Early life and education
  • 2 Career
    • 2.1 Early work
    • 2.2 1990s
    • 2.3 2000s
    • 2.4 2010s
    • 2.5 2020s
  • 3 Media image
  • 4 Personal life
  • 5 Filmography
  • 6 Awards and nominations
  • 7 References
  • 8 Further reading
  • 9 External links

Early life and education

B*ett was born in New York City, the daughter of a social worker Betty Jane (née Gilbert), a civil servant, and Daniel Benjamin B*ett, a preacher's son. B*ett's middle name was given to her in honor of her aunt Evelyn. Ten months after B*ett was born, her mother became pregnant and had a second child, B*ett's sister D'nette. B*ett said the pregnancy "only made things harder", leading her parents to send her to her father's sister, Golden, in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. While her aunt did not have any children of her own, she "loved children, and she was good with them."

At the age of four, B*ett was picked up by her mother after her parents divorced, and then relocated with her sister to St. Petersburg, Florida. B*ett did not see her father again for several years, until she attended her grandmother's funeral. There, B*ett met her father's daughter from his first marriage, Jean, who at twelve years old, was several years older than B*ett. After graduating from Jordan Park Elementary School, she began being bused out of her neighborhood to attend Disston Middle School for seventh grade. The year she began attending was 1970, one year before the first year that busing was implemented to integrate public schools in St. Petersburg. After completing seventh grade, she was bused to Azalea Middle School for eighth and ninth grade. B*ett's mother became more involved in her daughter's grades and told her and her sister the pair were going to college.

In her younger years, B*ett was "in love" with the Jackson 5 and dreamed of marrying a member of the family group, stating it would probably be "whoever had the cutest, roundest Afro at the time. In my imagination we would have children and live in a real house." As her interest in entertainment developed, Angela and her sister would often put on shows, reading poems or performing popular music for their family.

Boca Ciega High School, where B*ett as a teenager was a member of the debate team and student government among other endeavors.

At Boca Ciega High School, B*ett was a cheerleader and a member of the Upward Bound college prep program, the debate team, student government, drama club and choir. An "A" and "B" student for the most part, B*ett got her first "C" in physical education, and tried to convince her mother not to be disappointed by the grade. B*ett called the grade the "average," leading her mother to say she did not have "average kids." As B*ett described, a "sense of pride" developed in her and she did not get another "C" until college. During high school, B*ett became the first African-American from Boca Ciega to be admitted to the National Honor Society. She participated in Upward Bound, an academic and cultural enrichment program for underprivileged students. B*ett says she and the other participants did not see themselves as underprivileged.

B*ett attended Yale University and received her B.A. degree in African-American studies in 1980. In 1983, she earned an M.F.A. degree from the Yale School of Drama, despite opposition from her paternal aunt who warned her to not "waste" her "Yale education on theater." She was the only member of B*ett's family to have gone to both college and graduate school. At Yale, B*ett met her future husband Courtney B. Vance, a 1986 graduate of the drama school. B*ett was also cl*mates with actor Charles S. Dutton.

After graduation, B*ett worked as a receptionist for a beauty salon and as a photo researcher. B*ett soon looked for acting work in the New York theater. One of her first New York performances came in 1985 when she appeared in J. E. Franklin's Black Girl at Second Stage Theatre. She appeared in two August Wilson plays at the Yale Repertory Theatre under the direction of her long-time instructor Lloyd Richards. The Wilson plays featuring B*ett were Ma Rainey's Black Bottom (1984) and Joe Turner's Come and Gone (1986). In 2006, she had the opportunity to work on the Wilson canon again, starring in Fences alongside longtime collaborator Laurence Fishburne at the Pasadena Playhouse in California.

In 2018, B*ett was awarded an honorary D.F.A. degree from her alma mater, Yale University.

Career

Early work

In 1985, B*ett made her first television appearance, as a pros*ute in the made-for-TV movie Doubletake. She made her film debut as a news reporter in F/X (1986), for which she was required to join the Screen Actors Guild (SAG). B*ett moved to Los Angeles in 1988 for more acting jobs, with early guest spots on A Man Called Hawk and 227 (both 1989).

1990s

B*ett began to gain critical attention and public recognition for her performances in the films Boyz n the Hood (1991) and Malcolm X (1992). For her portrayal of Betty Shabazz in the latter, she earned an Image Award. Despite the award, the movie was not entirely given positive reception, being referred to by critics as failing to "capture" the rage of Malcolm X's autobiography. During the production of Malcolm X, Spike Lee showed B*ett a tape of the exact moment when Malcolm X was shot during his **ination, since they would be filming the scene. B*ett called the recording "haunting", but noted that after listening, she was "able to grab hold of the pain and re-create the scene." B*ett felt it was important for her to get the **ination scene correct, and wondered how Betty "found the strength to keep going, to raise her family, to educate, to sustain them." B*ett worried that after her role as Betty Shabazz in Malcolm X, she would not find another role "as satisfying". At the time of the film's release, she expressed her belief that her career would never receive such high-profile roles again. "I think I have been incredibly blessed and it is probably just all downhill from here."

B*ett subsequently played Katherine Jackson in The Jacksons: An American Dream. B*ett's agents tried to discourage her from playing the role, given the negative publicity surrounding Michael Jackson after he was accused of child molestation. She admitted to not caring about the negative view of members of the Jackson family at the time, citing her childhood fondness for the Jackson 5 as an example of her p*ion for the project and believed her "instinct" about the role had been correct once learning of the positive reviews the miniseries received after airing. B*ett had idolized the group growing up and said the Jackson family were positive influences on the African-American community for their successes.

Next, B*ett was cast as Tina Turner in What's Love Got to Do with It (1993). B*ett returned to Los Angeles after Malcolm X filming was completed, and got a call for an audition for a movie based on I, Tina, Tina Turner's memoir. B*ett won a Golden Globe and earned an Academy Award nomination for her portrayal of Turner. She was the first African-American to win the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. B*ett obtained the role after beating Halle Berry and Robin Givens, but only had a month to prepare before filming began. She met Tina Turner twice, and was given advice by the woman she would be portraying from wigs and outfits to dancing styles. Turner also did B*ett's make up, leading B*ett to call her "supportive" and her "biggest fan." B*ett described to the Orlando Sentinel going to one of Turner's concerts and crying profusely. According to B*ett, upon realizing that she knew some of Turner's dance moves, she was "almost a river of tears." Marc Bernardin of Entertainment Weekly wrote that B*ett "gave the performance of a lifetime" portraying Turner in the biopic.

B*ett at the NABOB Awards, 1996

B*ett starred in three movies in 1995, which were released with varied reactions from critics: Vampire in Brooklyn, Strange Days, and Waiting to Exhale (where she worked with author Terry McMillan). In Strange Days, B*ett played Lornette "Mace" Mason, a chauffeur and bodyguard. In Vampire in Brooklyn, she played Rita Veder, a tortured cop with a dark secret. She was excited to work with Eddie Murphy in Vampire in Brooklyn, as well as director Wes Craven. B*ett had previously worked with Craven on television shows. B*ett's character in Waiting to Exhale, Bernadine Harris, was betrayed by her husband and in revenge she set fire to his entire wardrobe and vehicle, then sold what was left for one dollar. B*ett described the then-recently filmed party scene and her character in Waiting to Exhale to the Orlando Sentinel. B*ett said, "The thing is that my character is thinking about how her husband has left her. I have a cigarette in one hand, and I'm drinking. Basically, the four of us are sitting there talking about men and having some fun."

In 1997, she starred as the President's advisor in Contact. Stephen Holden of The New York Times opinioned that B*ett was "largely wasted as a Presidential *istant."

In 1998, Fatboy Slim sampled B*ett's voice from 1995's Strange Days, specifically the line "this is your life, right here, right now!", for his hit single "Right Here, Right Now". Also in 1998, B*ett starred in How Stella Got Her Groove Back, once again collaborating with McMillan. She played Stella, a 40-year-old American professional woman who falls in love with a 20-year-old Jamaican man. She received praise for the performance, Stephen Holden of The New York Times calling B*ett's character "the best thing in the movie" and writing that B*ett "portrays this high-strung superwoman with such intensity that she makes her almost believable."

In 1999, B*ett starred in Music of the Heart, once again collaborating with horror icon Wes Craven. Matthew Eng wrote of her "terrifically specific chemistry" with Meryl Streep.

2000s

In 2000, B*ett turned down the lead role in Monster's Ball because of the script's sexual content; the role earned Halle Berry the Academy Award for Best Actress. The first film B*ett appeared in that year was Supernova, where she played a medical officer. Her other two films released in 2000 were Whispers: An Elephant's Tale and Boesman and Lena. Todd McCarthy of Variety wrote that in Boesman and Lena B*ett "abandons her recently cultivated glamorous image to dig to the core of Lena’s fierce, probing, contentious, comp*ionate character." Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times wrote B*ett captured all of her character's "mercurial mood swings" and both B*ett and her costar Danny Glover "rise to the challenge of these larger-than-life roles, just as you would expect."

She appeared in the 2001 film The Score. Her character was in a relationship with Robert De Niro's. She read the film's script and became interested. She was then telephoned by director Frank Oz, who told her Robert De Niro would "like to meet with you". B*ett met with De Niro and later realized the conversation was meant to break the ice before they started filming. In addition to The Score, that year she also had a role in the television film Ruby's Bucket of Blood. The following year, in 2002, B*ett acted in Sunshine State and The Rosa Parks Story. In The Rosa Parks Story, B*ett was cast as Rosa Parks. Laura Fries of Entertainment Weekly wrote that B*ett "takes her physical strength and turns it inward to portray Parks" and expressed her belief that "lesser hands" would allow for misinterpretation or gross underplay of Parks' personality. In addition to positive reception of her role, B*ett was seen as the "star" of the film due to playing the lead and earned a nomination for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie for her performance.

In 2003, she read from the WPA slave narratives in Unchained Memories. In the 1930s, about 100,000 former slaves were still living during the Great Depression, of which 2,300 were interviewed part of the Federal Writers' Project. The transcripts of the Slave Narratives collection of the Library of Congress is a record of slavery, bondage and misery. That year she also appeared in the film Masked and Anonymous, playing a mistress. Ann Hornaday noted her as among the "endless parade of actors who show up even for the briefest of appearances".

In 2004, she had roles in the films The Lazarus Child and Mr. 3000. Mr. 3000 was a comedy in which B*ett costarred with Bernie Mac. When asked if the film was much easier to act in than the more intense roles she had in the past, B*ett responded, "This was much easier. This was a walk in the park. It was pretty easy compared to some of the roles I’ve done that call for so much emotion or physicality." At the time of the film's release, she called both Bernie Mac and Laurence Fishburne, who she had worked with in the past, her "favorites" and said the pair were both "highly professional and extraordinarily talented." The only film she appeared in during the following year was Mr. and Mrs. Smith in an uncredited voice role.

B*ett at the 2007 The Heart Truth's Red Dress Collection.

In the 2006 film Akeelah and the Bee, B*ett portrayed Tanya Anderson, the mother of the film's lead, Akeelah, played by Keke Palmer. B*ett said she loved the story, viewing the lead character as someone that "could be anyone because each of us have had dreams and aspirations and wanting to be and needing to be supported and directed", and described working with Palmer as being "really wonderful." According to B*ett, the two bonded and that Palmer was as good an actress as any adult she had worked with. B*ett appeared in the television film Time Bomb the same year. Her role was seen as just an "extended cameo" by Brian Lowry of Variety.

B*ett provided her voice for the 2007 film Meet the Robinsons. When asked about her motives in taking on the role, B*ett said, "For one, it was a character I had never played before, which is always important to me, to keep me sharp. But it was also the desire to be part of a well-written movie that has something really positive to say about families and about all the different ways there can be to make a family."

She appeared in the 2008 film Gospel Hill. Stephen Holden of The New York Times wrote that B*ett's "fiery self-possession brings a spark of p*ion to her stick-figure character". She next appeared in Of Boys and Men, portraying Rieta Cole, the matriarch of a Chicago family who is killed in an accident in the beginning of the film and is seen through flashbacks for the remainder of the film. She and her costars Robert Townsend and Victoria Rowell were seen by Robert Gillard of LA Sentinel as doing wonderful jobs of "capturing the emotions of a family stricken by grief." B*ett also had a role in Nothing But the Truth in 2008. B*ett joined the regular cast of ER for the show's final season (2008–2009). She portrayed Dr. Catherine Banfield, an exacting Chief of the ER who was also working to recover from the death of a son and to bring another child into her family. B*ett's husband Courtney Vance played her television husband on ER as Russell Banfield.

In the 2009 film Notorious, B*ett portrayed Voletta Wallace, the mother of The Notorious B.I.G. To portray Wallace's Jamaican accent, B*ett conversed with her on and off the film set, and she practiced her accent using tapes that Wallace made. B*ett said she jumped at the chance to be part of the film after reading the script. She felt it did a "wonderful job of bringing" The Notorious B.I.G.'s "life to the page." B*ett earned positive reviews for her performance in the film, noted as being one of the more experienced actors involved.

2010s

In 2010, B*ett lent her voice to portray First Lady Michelle Obama on an episode of The Simpsons *led "Stealing First Base". B*ett was seen as a "terrific" fill in for Obama. B*ett was also cast in the superhero film Green Lantern, released in 2011, as notable DC Comics character Amanda Waller. B*ett said working on the film was "a lot of fun" and that she enjoyed being a part of it. Despite this, B*ett was taken "out of her element" with the arrangements made that accommodated the computer-generated effects. She called it her first time doing "this kind of movie" but expressed interest in seeing what her scenes looked like.In 2010, Deadline Hollywood reported that B*ett would have a role in One Police Plaza. In 2011, B*ett co-starred with Samuel L. Jackson in the play The Mountaintop a fictionalized depiction of the night before the **ination of Martin Luther King Jr. (Jackson portrays MLK) while at the Lorraine Motel. The critically acclaimed play by Katori Hall originally debuted in London's West End in 2009 and went on to win the Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Play. The production opened on Broadway on October 13, 2011. In March 2011, it was reported that B*ett had signed up for a lead role in the ABC pilot Iden*y.

She also appeared in the 2011 film Jumping the Broom, playing the matriarch of a wealthy family. B*ett had a good feeling about the film from "the start", and believed her character had a "real presence" in the film and felt she was active in the plot. B*ett's and Loretta Devine's performances in the film were called "in some ways too fierce for the room, offering nuances of hostility and hurt that the movie cannot really handle" and contributing to the "unevenness of the performances" in the film. B*ett and Devine were noted as "superb, distinguished actresses" by Kirk Honeycutt of The Hollywood Reporter, but were seen as having been "asked to overdo every moment with permanent scowls and body language more suitable to Mortal Kombat."Despite this, her performance was given some positive attention, with Elizabeth Weitzman of New York Daily News saying B*ett "makes the movie hers". The film was B*ett's second time working with Devine, as the pair had worked together previously in Waiting to Exhale. Director Salim Akil said B*ett's presence quietly makes a big difference.

B*ett was featured in the 2012 film This Means War, having been known to be attached to the film since two years prior. Tambay A. Obenson of IndieWire attributed B*ett's lack of appearances in promotional material to her having a small role and her demographic not being targeted by the film. B*ett also appeared as herself in I Ain't Scared Of You.

B*ett portrayed Coretta Scott King in the television film Betty and Coretta, which aired on February 2, 2013, continuing her trend of portraying real women. B*ett had previously played Shabazz in both Malcolm X and Panther, but instead played Coretta Scott King opposite to Mary J. Blige, who played Shabazz. B*ett was surprised to learn after researching that Coretta initially refused Martin Luther King Jr.'s "advances" and called Mrs. King a "modern day iconic *e." While being asked about what drew her to play real-life women, B*ett answered "The respect that I have for their lives—their stories, vulnerabilities, strength, and resolve." B*ett began filming her scenes during the latter part of the previous year. Mary J. Blige, when asked about what kind of experience it was to work with B*ett, said that she was "one of Angela's biggest fans" while calling her an "amazing woman." The film received mixed reviews, including negative reactions from Ilyasah Shabazz and Bernice King, the daughters of Betty Shabazz and Coretta Scott King.

B*ett appeared as Secret Service director Lynne Jacobs in the action thriller Olympus Has Fallen, released on March 22, 2013. B*ett was reported to have a role in the film in June 2012, the month before filming began. In an interview with The Huffington Post, B*ett noted that there had "never been a female head of the Secret Service, much less a woman of color". She called the decision to have a female African-American Secret Service director "a bold casting choice". Overall, B*ett viewed the film as authentic. B*ett described working with Morgan Freeman as wonderful, but she admitted to being intimidated by him. She was impressed with the preparation of director Antoine Fuqua, who she said "was just preparation to the hilt" and expressed her interest in working with him again. She appeared in the 2013 film Black Nativity. She sang and it was seen as contributing to the film's "blissful unreality". She was asked by the film's director, Kasi Lemmons, if she could sing and B*ett admitted to lying to get the role. She joked to reporter Jennifer H. Cunningham, "Yes, I can sing — you didn’t ask how well!" Singing in a film was a new experience for B*ett, who had never had to sing before and had always lip-synced.

B*ett at PaleyFest 2014 for American Horror Story: Coven.

In 2013, B*ett appeared on FX TV show American Horror Story: Coven as Marie Laveau, a voodoo witch. B*ett praised the writers, calling them "amazing". Her agent approached Ryan Murphy about her having a role in the series and he told the agent that she was the person he had in mind for Marie Laveau. B*ett watched the previous seasons of the series before meeting with Murphy and found the writing "wonderful" and the characters "so realized". B*ett's performance earned her a nomination for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie. She returned to the show for its fourth season American Horror Story: Freak Show, playing Desiree Dupree, a three-breasted woman. She received another nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie.

It was announced in May 2014 that B*ett would make her directorial debut with Whitney, a TV film based on the life of Whitney Houston, who B*ett had worked with previously. B*ett had previously expressed interest in directing the year before. It was announced in early June 2014 that Yaya DaCosta would play Houston in the film. Houston's daughter, Bobbi Kristina Brown, insulted B*ett on Twitter for not casting her as her mother in the film, to which B*ett admitted in an interview that she had never thought about casting Brown. On June 11, 2014, Ruby Dee died from natural causes. B*ett had previously worked with her on Betty and Coretta and was reported to attend the Riverside Church memorial for Dee on September 20, 2014.

In the 2015 film Survivor, B*ett portrayed United States Amb*ador to the United Kingdom Maureen Crane. In a negative review of the film, Mark Kermode lamented B*ett "appears from behind closed doors like a celebrity guest on Stars in Their Eyes."

B*et also voiced the character Six in the first-person shooter game, Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Siege.

In March 2016, B*ett appeared in London Has Fallen, reprising her role as Lynne Jacobs. B*ett noted it was "the very first sequel I've ever done" and that she had been excited at the prospect of another film after the initial success of Olympus Has Fallen.In June 2016, the Human Rights Campaign released a video in tribute to the victims of the Orlando nightclub shooting; in the video, B*ett and others told the stories of the people killed there. B*ett appeared in American Horror Story: Roanoke. She also directed its sixth episode, which aired on October 19, 2016. The episode marks the third time a woman has directed the show. Co-creator Ryan Murphy praised B*ett in an interview with E! News, saying he told her she would "'do this big, big episode and you're going to knock it out of the park,' and she did. And I've seen it time and time again with these women that we brought into this directing world that they're just killing it, and they're working twice as hard because they know they have a lot to prove."

In March 2017, B*ett appeared in "Ache", an episode of the television series Underground. Executive producer and director Anthony Hemingway said her character "was written with Angela in mind" and that the entire cast came to see B*ett the day she filmed her performance.In May 2017, B*ett appeared in an episode of Master of None, portraying major character Denise's mother Catherine. Lena Waithe wanted B*ett after being impressed by her previous work though was convinced she would turn down the role and said B*ett's inclusion influenced the series drastically with "another layer" of tension. The writers of the series also favored B*ett for the role after seeing her performance in The Jacksons: An American Dream and related her character's evolution in that feature to Catherine.

In January 2018, B*ett joined the Fox first responder procedural drama 9–1–1, of which she is also a producer. She plays officer Athena Grant, and during the show's fifth season in 2022, the character is set to cross over to its spinoff, 9-1-1: Lone Star.

In February 2018, B*ett starred in the acclaimed Marvel superhero film Black Panther as Queen Ramonda, mother of the *ular character.

In July 2018, she portrayed CIA Director Erika Sloane in the action spy film Mission: Impossible – Fallout.

In December 2018, she voiced the Decepticon villain 'Shatter' from the Transformers live-action film Bumblebee.

In 2019, she joined the cast of Gunpowder Milkshake. She also reprised her role as Ramonda in Avengers: Endgame.

2020s

B*ett provided the voice of Dorothea Williams in the Pixar animated film Soul, which was released on Disney+ on December 25, 2020. She also became narrator of the Magic Kingdom nighttime spectacular Disney Enchantment that premiered on October 1, 2021. She is set to appear alongside Millie Bobby Brown in Damsel.

Media image

B*ett has been noted for portraying real life African-American women who are usually strong and intelligent. B*ett said in 2001 that she liked those roles and added: "That's the image that I like to put out there, and those are the parts I'm attracted to. But not iron-fist kind of strong, just self-*ured. I'm nice too." She has turned down roles which she viewed as demeaning to her image. "This is a career about images. It's celluloid; they last for ever. I'm a black woman from America. My people were slaves in America, and even though we're free on paper and in law, I'm not going to allow you to enslave me on film, in celluloid, for all to see. And to cross the water, to countries where people will never meet people who look like me. So it becomes a bigger thing than me just becoming a movie star, and me just being on TV. So if you're going to show every black woman as 400lb or every black woman as the pros*ute on the street ... But I have always maintained that I cannot do because of the way I'm made up, or because of the way I think, I don't begrudge that there is someone else who has no issues with that."

Personal life

B*ett with her husband, Courtney B. Vance, March 1, 2007

B*ett married actor Courtney B. Vance in 1997. In the summer of 2005, they starred together in a production of His Girl Friday at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The couple's twins – son Slater Josiah Vance and daughter Bronwyn Golden Vance – were carried by a surrogate.

B*ett is a supporter of programs for the arts, especially for youth. She annually attends events for children with diabetes and those in foster homes. She is an active Amb*ador of UNICEF for the United States and a member of the West Angeles Church of God in Christ. B*ett is a supporter of the Royal Theater Boys & Girls Club in her hometown of St. Petersburg, Florida.

She is represented by the Executive Speakers Bureau of Memphis.

In early 2007, B*ett donated $2,300 to the presidential campaign of Barack Obama. B*ett supported Obama in his reelection campaign. In June 2012, she made an appearance at the St. Petersburg office of his campaign and said the election was not one "where we can sit on the sidelines".B*ett attended the second inauguration of Barack Obama on January 20, 2013. She endorsed Hillary Clinton for president during the 2016 United States presidential election, saying "Bar none, Clinton would make a great president." B*ett also spoke at the 2016 Democratic National Convention, introducing survivors of the previous year's Charleston church shooting, an incident about which she spoke during her remarks. After Clinton was defeated in the general election, B*ett tweeted, "Only 1455 days until November 3, 2020. Rest up my country. #ProudOfHer".

B*ett was initiated as an honorary member of Delta Sigma Theta sorority on July 13, 2013.

Filmography

Main article: Angela B*ett filmography

Awards and nominations

Main article: List of awards and nominations received by Angela B*ett

References

    Further reading

    • B*ett, Angela; Courtney B. Vance (2009). Friends: A Love Story. Kimani Press Single *le. ISBN:9780373831210.

    External links

    • Angela B*ett at IMDb:
    • Angela B*ett at the Internet Broadway Database
    • Angela B*ett at the Internet Off-Broadway Database
    • Angela B*ett at AllMovie