HBO Documentary Tina Explores the Survivor Narrative Around Tina Turner

Ike Turner is one in every of the focal points of the HBO documentary ‘Tina.’ Read more about Ike, his loss of life, and Tina Turner’s abuse accusations in opposition to him.
HBO says its new documentary Tina — premiering this night, Saturday, March 27, at 8 p.m. ET — shines a gentle no longer just on the Queen of Rock ’n’ Roll’s artistry but additionally on the “survivor narrative” that supposed Tina Turner may never absolutely put her previous behind her after escaping her abusive marriage to Ike Turner.
As a acting duo, Tina and Ike changed into superstars with the hits “Proud Mary” and “River Deep Mountain High.” But Tina suffered in the back of closed doors till she left Ike in 1976, and she denounced him as an abusive husband in her 1986 guide, I, Tina, which impressed the 1993 biopic What’s Love Got to Do With It, as Reuters in the past reported.
Read on for more info about Tina, Ike, and the new HBO film.
What was Ike Turner's cause of demise?
Ike, who rose to fame as a musician in the Nineteen Fifties, died on Dec. 12, 2007, at his home in San Marcos, Calif. The San Diego scientific examiner’s officer concluded the following month that he died of a cocaine overdose, list his reason behind loss of life as “cocaine toxicity,” in keeping with the Los Angeles Times. He used to be Seventy six years previous.
At the time, a consultant for Tina gave a temporary remark to Access Hollywood. “Tina hasn’t had any contact with Ike in more than 30 years,” the rep stated, according to People. “No additional comment might be made.”
Ike Turner in 2005
Tina elaborated on her relationship with Ike in her 2018 memoir 'My Love Story.'
In her 2018 memoir, My Love Story, Tina recalled horrific moments during her courting with Ike.
"He threw hot coffee in my face, giving me third-degree burns,” she wrote, per USA Today. “He used my nose as a punching bag so many times that I could taste blood running down my throat when I sang. He broke my jaw. And I couldn’t remember what it was like not to have a black eye.”
Most distressingly, she said that she attempted suicide, taking 50 sleeping pills before a show one night. “When I took those pills, I chose death, and I chose it honestly. I was unhappy when I woke up.”
The documentarians didn’t want to drag Tina “into the muck of her past.”
For the documentary Tina, co-directors T.J. Martin and Dan Lindsay relied on archival footage and audio of Tina talking about Ike, according to USA Today.
“[There’s value] in people coming forward with their truth, to not only shine a light on certain aspects of our society, but also to help other survivors,” Dan told the newspaper. “But the other side of that, and the kind of paradox, is that by asking people who suffered this trauma to talk about it, you are inevitably re-traumatizing them in some shape or form.”
T.J. added, “We didn’t want to drag her back into the muck of her past. … Tina’s not an activist — that’s just not her personality type. She was literally just surviving, and as a result, made all these heroic actions for the benefit of her own health that we all admired. And that obviously became the story of Tina Turner.”
If you or someone you know are experiencing suicidal thoughts, call the National Suicide Prevention Hotline at 1-800-273-8255 or textual content HOME to the Crisis Text Line at 741741.
If you or any person you understand is experiencing home violence, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1−800−799−7233.
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