Current:Home > NewsTina Knowles Details Protecting Beyoncé and Solange Knowles During Rise to Fame -Mastery Money Tools
Tina Knowles Details Protecting Beyoncé and Solange Knowles During Rise to Fame
View
Date:2025-04-13 04:21:20
Tina Knowles made sure nobody ever took her daughters’ power.
And that’s why it was important for her to take on a position on both Beyoncé and Solange Knowles’ teams early in their careers.
“Very early on I owned a very successful hair salon and very early on I started doing the girls hair to earn my keep so that I could travel with them because I wanted to protect them,” Tina said during a joint interview with Donna Kelce, Maggie Baird and Mandy Teefy published Oct. 3 for Glamour’s Women of the Year issue. “Not because I wanted to go on plane every day, cause it was nothing glamourous about it. I wanted to protect my kids because they were 14 and15 in an industry that can chew you up and spit you out.”
For, Beyoncé, 43, it was around that time she began her career with Destiny’s Child alongside Ms. Tina’s “bonus daughter” Kelly Rowland.
Meanwhile, Solange, 38, found success as a teen actress before branching into music herself. Still, amid all their fame and growth, Tina recalled the moment that she would have to be there to protect her kids throughout their decades-long careers.
“After a while I was like, ‘Oh, I’ll get to go back home.’ But I never did because I saw the need to be there.”
Echoing sentiments Billie Eilish and Finneas O’Connell’s mom Maggie shared with her fellow moms, she added, “Like Maggie said, you’re the person that doesn’t have any other agenda. Those are your kids, and you want to protect them, and they need protection trust me.”
While reflecting on fame with her fellow moms of superstars—Mandy is Selena Gomez’s mom while Donna is mom to NFL stars Jason Kelce and Travis Kelce—Tina said that protecting her daughters from social media has been a challenge, despite them being all grown up.
“That’s the hardest part about this whole thing because that’s your children,” she said about the negative comments she sees about Beyoncé and Solange—whom she shares with ex Matthew Knowles—across social media. “We talked about protection. You want to protect them. You can’t because you can’t fight the whole internet.”
And her Grammy-winning daughters have made it clear they don’t want the outside noise to bring her down, down, down, down, down.
“My kids are like ,‘Mom, don’t you answer those crazy people. Just ignore them,’” she continued. “And I can to a certain degree but sometimes it just gets to be too much. And then I have to say what I say and be done with it.”
Mama Tina is OK when it comes to her oldest girls, but she does draw a line when it comes to her grandchildren which include, Blue Ivy, 12, Sir and Rumi Carter, 7—Bey’s kids with Jay-Z—and Solange’s son Juelz Smith, 19, with ex-husband Daniel Smith.
“I take it with a grain of salt most of the time,” she emphasized. “It depends. You mess with my grandchildren, though, I’m coming. Because they’re minors, and they didn’t ask to be in this. I have gotten on and let people have a piece of my mind several times, but I take a lot and then there’s certain things that I just have to draw the line on.”
veryGood! (7296)
Related
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- What does Watch Night mean for Black Americans today? It dates back to the Emancipation Proclamation
- Kim Zolciak Shares Message on Letting Go in 2024 Amid Kroy Biermann Divorce
- Eurostar cancels trains due to flooding, stranding hundreds of travelers in Paris and London
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Prosecutors urge appeals court to reject Trump’s immunity claims in election subversion case
- Ice-fishing 'bus' crashes through ice on Minnesota lake, killing 1 man
- Francia Raísa Says She and Selena Gomez Hadn't Spoken Much in 6 Years Before Reconciliation
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Magnetic balls sold at Walmart recalled: Feds say they're too strong, pose ingestion hazards
Ranking
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Russell Wilson says Broncos had threatened benching if he didn't renegotiate contract
- Buy the Gifts You Really Wanted With 87% Off Deals on Peter Thomas Roth, Tarte, Peace Out & More
- Frank Thomas blasts 'irresponsible' Fox News after network mistakenly claimed he died
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- New York governor vetoes change to wrongful death statute, nixing damages for emotional suffering
- Suspect in 2 killings, high-speed chase was armed with stolen rifle from Vegas gun show, police say
- Ex-Trump lawyer Michael Cohen says he unwittingly sent AI-generated fake legal cases to his attorney
Recommendation
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
Medical marijuana dispensary licenses blocked in Alabama amid dispute over selection process
Missing teenager found in man’s bedroom under trap door
Revelers set to pack into Times Square for annual New Year’s Eve ball drop
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Alex Murdaugh’s pursuit of a new murder trial is set for an evidentiary hearing next month
For transgender youth in crisis, hospitals sometimes compound the trauma
U.S. population grew to more than 335 million in 2023. Here's the prediction for 2024.