Angel Reese Is a New Kind of Basketball Star

“I love being able to see the little girls that look up to me, who are inspired by me.”

As told to Kaitlyn Greenidge; Photographed by Mario Sorrenti; Styling by Beat Bolliger and Edward Bowleg III

Balenciaga bomber. Prada cropped knit. Willy Chavarria jeans. Clash de Cartier earrings. PHOTO: MARIO SORRENTI

Louisiana State University has known great basketball players like Shaquille O’Neal and “Pistol Pete” Maravich, but the LSU Tigers—and the basketball world in general—has never seen anyone like Angel Reese, the six-foot-three-inch playmaking forward who led the school’s women’s team past fellow phenom Caitlin Clark’s Iowa Hawkeyes this year to the program’s first NCAA national championship.

Reese, a Harpers Bazaar Icon for 2023, possesses a mix of on-court talent and off-court charisma that’s palpable. (For more on the 2023 Icons, including cover stars Kendall Jenner, Doja Cat, and Paul Mescal, click here.) At 21, she’s already a star—and one likely headed to the WNBA at a time when women’s basketball is exploding in popularity.

My biggest priority right now is just being me. My goal is to play in the WNBA, but I also have aspirations to be a model, just being able to tap into both sides. A lot of people don’t see women’s basketball players being able to do both. I want to push that new narrative of being able to be cute off court but when you get on the court, just being able to ball.

Angel Reese

Prada cropped knit. Cartier Clash de Cartier earrings. MARIO SORRENTI

I’ve always been confident. I am unapologetic. I stay firm on what I believe in, and, being a Black woman, I can do whatever I put my mind to. When I was younger, I knew basketball was going to be my avenue of getting through life and getting to college.

I don’t have time now to do anything that doesn’t make sense. I don’t get as much sleep as I used to, and I don’t have much free time, so if I do make time for you, then obviously you’re important to me.

“I’ve always been confident. I am unapologetic. I stay firm on what I believe in, and, being a Black woman, I can do whatever I put my mind to.”

I love being able to see the little girls that look up to me, who are inspired by me. I didn’t know how many people that I had inspired and touched, but now it feels like every time I go out somewhere, everybody actually recognizes me. Even men. Usually, men don’t really respect women’s basketball. But just to be able to say, “You inspired me …” It’s guys saying that! Even older women saying, “You’re speaking out about things that I was scared to speak out about.” And people who haven’t had a voice … being able to use my platform, my voice, to talk and touch the people who don’t have a voice.

I want to get another national championship. That’s my biggest thing [with] college, just walking out national champion and getting a degree. Then going into the WNBA. I hope that there will be more teams so that everybody has an opportunity, because there are so many great players and they currently only have 144 [roster spots] in the league. I want the WNBA to grow. So hopefully, by the time I and Caitlin Clark and all these other players go out, there will be opportunities for others to get on a team.

This interview and photo shoot were conducted before the SAG-AFTRA strike.

Hair: Tomo Jidai for Oribe; makeup: Frank B for LoveSeen; manicures: Honey for UN/DN Laqr; production: Katie Fash and Layla Néméjanski; set design: Philipp Haemmerle