Angela Bassett Reveals One Iconic Scene From "Waiting To Exhale" Was Improvised

1 year ago 35
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“And then afterwards, I guess they enjoyed it so much, they actually then went forward to secure the rights to use what we had filmed – just waiting and playing around – to include it in the movie.”

Waiting to Exhale will forever be one of the most emotional and empowering films of the '90s.

Promotional image for "Waiting to Exhale" featuring four women smiling and dressed in elegant evening wear

20th Century Fox

Directed by Forest Whitaker, the 1995 film picked up four NAACP Image Awards, with the Babyface-produced original soundtrack going 7x platinum album and the lead song ("Exhale (Shoop Shoop)") winning a Grammy for Best R&B song.

Well, Angela Bassett has revealed a behind-the-scenes secret about one scene that makes it even more iconic.

A person smiling warmly, wearing a stylish button-up shirt with a decorative pattern, seated indoors

BuzzFeed UK

Speaking to BuzzFeed, Angela shared that acting alongside the late Whitney Houston was one of the best parts of the film. In fact, the cast – Lela Rochon, Loretta Devine, Angela, and Whitney – had so much natural chemistry that one of the film’s most loved scenes wasn’t part of the script at all.

Group of four women reclining on a couch, surrounded by candles and a decorated cake, in a relaxed and celebratory setting

20th Century Fox

“The four of us were in the car scene near the end before we wind up at the bonfire for New Year's Eve. I was driving and we actually had the radio on and a song came on and Whitney’s like, ‘What is this song? What is this song?’ So she's trying to get the song and we're singing it.” she recalls.

Four women in elegant attire are inside a car, appearing joyful and engaged in conversation

20th Century Fox

The song they were singing along to is Roberta Flack's version of "It Might Be You," which she released in 1994. If you watch the scene carefully, you can hear the stars discussing the cover, referencing the fact that the original version was performed in the 1982 film, Tootsie.

“And then afterwards, I guess they enjoyed it so much, they actually then went forward to secure the rights to use what we had filmed – just waiting and playing around – to include it in the movie.”

20th Century Fox

This wasn't the film's only unscripted moment: a lot of the lines of Bernadine's car-burning monologue were improvised by Angela Bassett in the heat of the moment.

Person with long hair smokes a cigarette near an outdoor fire, dressed in a white robe

20th Century Fox

In an interview on The Oprah Winfrey Show, Angela explained, "During that scene I did feel myself, at one point, go into a trance, and then we said, 'Cut.'"

If you were looking for a sign to give Waiting to Exhale a rewatch: this is it.

It's on Disney+ – enjoy!

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