Entertainment Music R&B Music How Tina Turner's Humble Tenn. Beginnings Helped Steer Her to Stardom Look back at Turner's incredible life and career and celebrate her legacy with PEOPLE's special edition, Tina Turner: The Queen of Rock & Roll By Rachel DeSantis Rachel DeSantis Rachel DeSantis is a senior writer on the music team at PEOPLE. She has been working at PEOPLE since 2019, and her work has previously appeared in Entertainment Weekly and the New York Daily News. People Editorial Guidelines Published on June 9, 2023 05:35PM EDT Tina Turner in 1964. Photo: Getty Tina Turner may have been made for superstardom, but Anna Mae Bullock's origins were slightly less glamorous. Turner, who died on May 24 at age 83 following a long illness, was born Anna Mae to Zelma and Floyd Bullock in in rural Tennessee in 1939. Her parents were farmers, and young Anna Mae and her older sister Alline would help by working in the cotton fields. Though Turner found happiness singing in the choir at Spring Hill Baptist Church in Nutbush, things are home were difficult; Floyd was abusive to his wife, and Turner and her mother’s relationship was distant. "My mother didn’t love me; it was as simple as that," the singer told Scotland’s Daily Record in 1999. "Even when I was a little girl, I knew she didn’t love me." Tina Turner. Tina Turner Wasn't 'Scared of Death' After 'Wonderful Last Part of Life,' Says Longtime Friend (Exclusive) When Turner was 11, Zelma left the family and moved to St. Louis, cutting off contact with both her husband and her daughters. After Floyd remarried and moved to Detroit, Turner and Alline were left in the care of relatives — and eventually reunited with Zelma in St. Louis after the death of their grandmother in 1955. For the "Proud Mary" singer, St. Louis wound up being a serendipitous twist of fate, as it was at the city’s Club Manhattan that she first met future husband and collaborator Ike Turner at 17. RELATED VIDEO: Queen of Rock 'n' Roll Tina Turner Dead at 83 After 'Long Illness': Rep Tina Turner's Marriage to Erwin Bach 'Sustained' Her amid Sons' Deaths, Health Issues (Exclusive) "I couldn't help thinking, 'God, he’s ugly,'" she wrote in her 2018 memoir My Love Story. "[But] he really had something when he came out onstage and lit it up. People just went crazy. Like me. That's who I responded to that first night, a great guitarist playing the most exciting music, music that made me want to burst into song and dance." Though she initially was just a spectator, she was plucked one night from the crowd to sing onstage. Turner wowed with B.B. King's "You Know I Love You," and before long, Ike had hired her to be a featured singer with his Kings of Rhythm band. And the rest, as they say, is history. Look back at Turner’s incredible life and career and celebrate her legacy with PEOPLE's special edition, Tina Turner: The Queen of Rock & Roll (on sale now). Close