2019 was a tough year for Sasha Banks. Since debuting in the WWE in July 2015, she has wrestled in over 400 matches in 20 different countries, from the U.S. and Canada to Singapore and Japan, winning multiple championships and becoming one of the biggest stars in all of professional wrestling. That doesn’t even take into account her time spent in NXT, where she first established herself as one of the best wrestlers in the world, or the years spent training and hustling on pro wrestling’s independent scene. But by that spring, in the wake of WrestleMania 35, Banks had hit a wall.
“I really, really lost myself,” Banks recently revealed during an appearance on Stone Cold Steve Austin’s Broken Skull Sessions. “For a good seven years, I didn’t even hear my real name. I didn’t hear Mercedes anymore. All I heard was Sasha Banks…. Depression was taking over. My mind was taking over. My thoughts were taking over.”
Banks wanted out. Vince McMahon told her to take 30 days to think things over. She took four months.
Upon her return, things started off well enough. She hit the ground running with a feud against Becky Lynch, culminating in a particularly memorable Hell in a Cell match. However it wasn’t until the world shut down in the wake of the pandemic that things really started to pick up.
Live crowds are a central makeup of wrestling’s DNA. Segments on TV are structured around the fans in attendance; storylines can shift week to week depending on the reactions performers elicit. In a sense, those in attendance become their own collective character who get to interact with every aspect of the show. No one knew what WWE would look or feel like without them, and the prospect of performing for weeks on end without a crowd to bounce off of was certainly daunting for the performers. But from the start, Sasha Banks was able to lay down the blueprint for how to succeed in this new reality. She dialed her on-screen persona up, taking advantage of the quiet moments previously filled by the white noise of the crowd to give those watching from home more of the Sasha Banks character. Her in-ring work, already highly acclaimed, became crisper and more purposeful.
Refreshed and refocused, Banks proved to be a ratings draw and was awarded with multiple championship titles throughout the year. Then in October, she followed in the footsteps of The Rock and John Cena by crossing over into Hollywood, making her acting debut as Koska Reeves in the second season of The Mandalorian. To cap things off, Sports Illustrated named Banks their Wrestler of the Year. She has carried that momentum into 2021, where she’ll be headlining night one of WrestleMania 37—the first WWE event to have fans in attendance in 393 days—defending the SmackDown women’s championship against Bianca Belair. We caught up with the champ to discuss her foray into Hollywood, how she found healing in Japan during her time away from the WWE, and what’s motivating her to once again steal the show at this year’s WrestleMania.