Synopsis
Born
August 14, 1966, in Cleveland, Ohio, Halle Berry was a pageant queen
before working in TV as an actress. She went on to a huge film career,
with roles in work like Jungle Fever, Boomerang, Losing Isaiah and X-Men. She became the first Black woman to win an Oscar for Best Actress for her role in Monster's Ball. She’s also won an Emmy for her portrayal of screen icon Dorothy Dandridge.
Early Life
Actress
and model. Halle Maria Berry was born August 14th, 1966, in Cleveland,
Ohio. The youngest daughter born to Jerome and Judith Berry, an
interracial couple. Halle and her older sister Heidi spent the first few
years of their childhood living in an inner-city neighborhood. In the
early 1970s, Jerome Berry abandoned his wife and children, after which
Judith moved her family to the predominantly white Cleveland suburb of
Bedford.
Berry
attended a nearly all-white public school, and as a result was
subjected to discrimination at an early age. Her early bouts with racism
greatly influenced her desire to excel. Throughout high school, the
determined teen participated in a dizzying array of extracurricular
activities, holding positions of newspaper editor, class president, and
head cheerleader.
A
natural performer, Berry earned a handful of beauty pageant titles
during the early 1980s, including Miss Teen Ohio and Miss Teen America.
She was eventually awarded first runner-up in the 1985 Miss U.S.A.
competition. For a short time she attended Cleveland 's Cuyahoga
Community College, where she studied broadcast journalism. However,
Berry abandoned her idea of a career in news reporting before receiving
her degree. Choosing to wholeheartedly devote her time to a career in
entertainment, Berry first moved to Chicago and then New York City,
where she found work as a catalog model.
Early Film Career
As the 80s turned into the 90s, the aspiring actress began a career in television with a role on the short-lived sitcom Living Dolls (1989), followed by a year-long run on the CBS prime-time drama Knot's Landing,
in 1991. Berry's first big-screen break came later that year when she
was cast as Samuel L. Jackson's drug-addicted girlfriend in Spike Lee's
crticially acclaimed film, Jungle Fever. More substantial supporting roles followed, including that of a stripper in the action-thriller The Last Boy Scout (1991), starring Bruce Willis, and as the woman who finally wins Eddie Murphy's heart in the romantic comedy Boomerang (1992).
With a few films under her belt, Berry accepted more offbeat roles, making cameos in the rockumentary CB4 (1993), which traced the rise and fall of a rap group by the same name. In 1994, the live-action version of The Flintstones featured Berry as a Stone Age seductress.
Berry offered a no-holds-barred performance as a rehabilitated crack addict seeking to regain custody of her son in Losing Isaiah
(1995). Berry, who played opposite Jessica Lange and David Strathairn,
was noted for her believable portrayal of a mother struggling with
addiction and loss. Later that year, Berry overcame Hollywood's racial
barriers when she was cast as the first African-American to play the
Queen of Sheeba in Showtime's movie Solomon & Sheeba.
Berry's acting credits the next year included two 1996 crime thrillers: The Rich Man's Wife, and Executive Decision. The latter film marked Berry's first leading role in a feature.
In 1998, she took a turn as one of three wives laying claim to Frankie Lyman's estate in the biographical drama Why Do Fools Fall in Love?, and then played a liberal urban youth in the political satire Bulworth, opposite Hollywood veteran Warren Beatty.
In 1999, Berry released her most passionate project to date, co-producing and starring in Introducing Dorothy Dandridge,
an HBO biopic. Berry was noted for her striking resemblance to the late
Dandridge, and for her engaging depiction of the actress' struggle to
succeed in the racially biased industry of 1950s Hollywood. Berry earned
both a Golden Globe Award and an Emmy Award for Best Actress in a
Television Movie for her role.
Oscar Winner
In
February of 2000, Berry faced controversy when the actress was involved
in a hit-and-run accident that erupted into a tabloid scandal. After
enduring a minor head injury, she claimed that she did not remember
leaving the scene. As a result of her actions, she was placed on
probation, given community service, and fined $13,500.
Undeterred by the challenges faced in her personal life, Berry continued to star in blockbuster hits, including X-Men
(2000), the big-budget screen adaptation of the long-running Marvel
Comic. In the highly anticipated summer release, Berry's character,
Storm, teamed up with fellow mutant heroes played by Anna Paquin and
Patrick Stewart.
In the summer of 2001, she co-starred with John Travolta in the action movie Swordfish.
Audiences did not respond positively to the film, and publicity for the
movie centered mostly around Berry's topless scene, for which the
actress was allegedly paid a $500,000 bonus. But Berry also garnered the
most positive critical notice of her film career that same year in the
dark drama Monster's Ball. Berry played the wife of a death row
prisoner (Sean "Puffy" Combs) who becomes romantically involved with a
racist prison guard (Billy Bob Thornton).
The
role earned Berry a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress in a Drama
and the Academy Award for Leading Actress. In her emotional acceptance
speech, Berry acknowledged the honor of becoming the first
African-American actress to win the Oscar for her lead role by thanking
all the performers who came before her.
Hollywood Star
In 2002, Halle Berry joined the ranks of the legendary "Bond Girls" as the character Jinx in the hit James Bond spy adventure Die Another Day.
The actress appeared in several more comic-book-inspired films over the
next few years. First, she reprised her role as Storm in X2 (2003), the second installment of Marvel Comics' X-Men film franchise. She then starred in the film adaptation of DC Comics' Catwoman, in which she played the lead character and her feline alter-ego.
In 2005, she took the lead in the TV adaptation of Zora Neale Hurston's classic 1937 novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God, which was produced by Oprah Winfrey's production company, Harpo. She also lent her voice for the CGI cartoon project, Robots. Then in 2006, she starred in the third X-Men installment, X-Men: The Final Stand, switching gears in 2007 to star in the heart-racing thriller, Perfect Stranger, co-starring Bruce Willis. In April of 2007, she was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Personal Life
Berry has a checkered romantic past; she was involved in a stormy relationship with Jungle Fever
co-star Wesley Snipes before marrying Atlanta Braves outfielder David
Justice in 1993. The couple divorced in 1997, after which Berry became
secretly engaged to jazz musician Eric Benét. She and Benét were married
from 2001 to 2005. During a photoshoot for Versace in November 2005,
Berry met her next boyfriend, French-Canadian supermodel Gabriel Aubry.
Several months later, Berry confirmed that she and Aubry were expecting
their first child together. The couple welcomed a daughter, Nahla
Ariela, on March 16th, 2008. She says she and Aubry have no plans for
marriage, but do hope to have a second child as soon as possible.
In addition to her honors as an actress, Berry is widely acknowledged for her beauty. Playboy named Halle Berry among the "100 Sexiest Women of the Century" in 1998, she's been on People magazine's "50 Most Beautiful People in the World" list, and the starlet was named Esquire magazine's "Sexiest Woman Alive" in 2008.
Berry is also one of the highest-paid actresses in Hollywood, earning as much as $14 million a film.
Source:biography.com
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