'What Happened Miss Simone' Director Reveals What an Oscar Would've Meant to Nina Simone

Director Liz Garbus will attend the awards show with Simone's family.

Winning on Sunday would be a boon to Simone's legacy, Garbus noted, especially because the piano prodigy never won a Grammy, despite garnering multiple nominations.

"The industry will applaud work, but only so far. This is a recurring thing. People can go so far but not all the way, and right before she died, they gave her a Hall of Fame award, but it was too little, too late," she told ABC News. "[An Oscar] would show that these stories can go all the way."

"It was incredible. It took a lot of convincing for a lot of these folks. People felt like Nina was very, very easy to get wrong. She was complicated," Garbus explained. "You can go too far and destroy somebody. So people were very protective and didn't know how to talk about her in some ways, but they wanted to honor her and be truthful."

"To make a movie about Nina Simone and not go there psychologically would not be a film that people who are interested in her would find satisfying," Garbus said. "Her work can still be in the canon. Her work can be the brilliant, extraordinary, groundbreaking work it was while the human being at the center is in pain and struggling and making decisions that we don't want her to make. She can be canonized but that does not mean she needs to be idealized."

Though Garbus admitted she was nervous to show Kelly the film, she was touched by her reaction.

"I got a beautiful email from Lisa: 'I told mommy when she died I'd have her back, and now my job is done. I don't need to explain anymore,'" Garbus recalled. "For her, it was a way of being able to move on, I think."

"She would definitely be concerned with what her legacy was. She was called the High Priestess of Soul and she felt like she deserved that type of respect," Garbus said. "I think it would be false to say she didn’t care about such things. We know she would!"

The 88th Academy Awards will air at 7 p.m. ET on Feb. 28, 2016 on ABC.