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Halle bär

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Halle Maria bär

Bär som besöker med sjömän och flottor under invigningsdagen av Hastig vecka New York 2006.
Fött: Augusti 14, 1966
Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.
Ockupation: Aktris, modellera
Website: HalleWood.com

Halle Maria bär (fött Augusti 14, 1966) är Oscar- segra Amerikan aktris och gamlan danar modellera. I 2002 segrade bär den bäst aktrisen på Oscarna för hennes roll in Monster klumpa ihop sig.

Tillfredsställer

Biografi

Tidig sortliv och karriär

Utvalda bär föräldrar hennes förnamn från det av Halles varuhus, som var därefter en lokallandmark i hennes födelseort av Cleveland Ohio. Hon är dottern av Judith Ann Hawkins, a Liverpudlian[1], och Jerome J. Bär, som är afrikansk amerikan. Bär var maternal farmor, Nellie Dicken, bördiga Sawley, Derbyshire, England, while her maternal grandfather, Earl Ellsworth Hawkins, was born in Ohio.[2] Berry's parents divorced when she was 4 years old and she subsequently was raised by her mother, a psychiatric nurse. Her father was an orderly in the same psychiatric ward where her mother worked. Berry has an older sister, Heidi.

Berry was a popular student at Bedford High School and was a cheerleader, honor society member, editor of the school newspaper, class president and prom queen. She worked in the children's department at Higbee's Department store. She subsequently attended Cuyahoga Community College.

Before becoming an actress, she entered and won several beauty contests, including Miss Ohio USA, Miss Teen All-American, Miss USA (was first runner-up in 1986 to Christy Fitchner of Texas), and Miss World 1986 (as "Miss United States World", she placed sixth in a contest won by Trinidad & Tobago's Giselle Laronde.)

Hollywood career

In the late 1980s, she went to Chicago, to pursue a modeling career as well as acting. One of her first acting projects was a television series for local cable by Gordon Lake Productions called "Chicago Force."

Berry auditioned for a role in an updated Charlie's Angels television series by producer Aaron Spelling. At the time, Spelling wanted one of the "Angels" to be an African American woman. She did not get the role (because the project never materialized) but she impressed Spelling with her skills, who encouraged her to continue perfecting her craft.

In 1989, Berry landed the role of brainy Emily Franklin in the short-lived ABC television series Living Dolls (a spin-off of Who's the Boss?). Her breakthrough feature film role was in Spike Lee's Jungle Fever in which she played a drug addict named Vivian. Her first co-starring role was in the film Strictly Business. Another early role Berry played was the villain/friend in the Flintstones movie as "Sharon Stone", in a part rumored to have been intended for Sharon Stone (Berry would later co-star alongside Stone in Catwoman). In 1996, she played the role of Sandra Beecher in Race the Sun, which was based on a true story. The year before, Berry really caught the public's attention with her portrayal as a female biracial slave in the TV adaption of Queen: The Story of an American Family, by Alex Haley.

Berry is also known by many comic book fans for her portrayal of the regal mutant Storm in the movie adaptation of the popular comic book series X-Men (2000) and its successful sequels X2: X-Men United (2003) and X-Men: The Last Stand (2006).

In late 2001, Berry appeared as Leticia Musgrove, the wife of an executed murderer, in the film Monster's Ball. The role earned her an Academy Award for Best Actress.

As Bond Girl Jinx in 2002's Die Another Day she famously re-created the scene from Dr. No, bursting from the surf - scantily clad - to be greeted by James Bond, as Ursula Andress did 40 years earlier.

In late 2003, Berry starred in the psychological thriller Gothika opposite Charles S. Dutton, which was the first film that she "carried," i.e., her role was the most important one in the film. Her next lead role was in the film Catwoman, for which she was awarded a "worst actress" Razzie award in 2005, which she actually accepted in person with a sense of humour and recognition that "to be at the top, you must experience the rock bottom".

She has recently wrapped (2006) filming the thriller Perfect Stranger with Bruce Willis and is next set to star in Things We Lost in the Fire with Benicio Del Toro.

Berry is also making a transition to behind the scenes work in film and television. She is working with author Angela Nissel to executive produce an HBO comedy series based on Nissel's two memoirs, The Broke Diaries and Mixed: My Life in Black and White.[3]

Berry has served many years as the face of Revlon cosmetics and was recently named the new face of Versace. She is featured in Maxim magazine's Girls of Maxim gallery. She is also one of the highest paid actresses in Hollywood, commanding $14 million each for Gothika and Catwoman.

Personal life

Berry has been married twice. Her first marriage in 1992 to pro baseball player David Justice ended in a 1996 divorce due to alleged infidelity and incompatibility. Her second marriage in 2001 to musician Eric Benét has resulted in a 2004 separation (and 2005 divorce) allegedly due to Benét's infidelity. She has publicly stated that she will never marry again, claiming that "men are more interested in my body than my brains." [citation needed] As of 2006, she is currently dating Canadian model Gabriel Aubry. The couple met at a Versace photoshoot.

Berry recently revealed to Extra that she plans to adopt children. "I will adopt if it doesn't happen for me naturally", she said. "I will definitely adopt. And I probably will adopt even if it does happen naturally".

Film Awards

  • Berry "won" a Razzie for her infamously poor performance in 2004's Catwoman. She made headlines by accepting her award in person, an unusual gesture that was last performed by Tom Green in 2001. Berry accepted her award with dignity, saying, "When I was a kid, my mother told me that if you could not be a good loser, then there's no way you could be a good winner" but adding "I hope to God I never see these people again!" shortly afterward. At the podium, she appeared with her Razzie in one hand, and her 2002 Oscar in the other (see e.g. BBC News).
Preceded by:
Julia Roberts
for Erin Brockovich
Academy Award for Best Actress
2001
for Monster's Ball
Succeeded by:
Nicole Kidman
for The Hours

Controversy

  • In February 2000, she was involved in a car accident when she struck another vehicle after running a red light and left the scene before the police arrived. Berry, who had sustained a head injury, later stated she had no recollection of the accident and pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor charge. She paid a fine, made restitution to the other driver, performed community services, and was placed on three years’ probation.
  • Having long refused to do any nude scenes, much was made of her first topless scene in the film Swordfish, which was promoted by costar John Travolta on the Tonight Show. Berry said she did the scene to boost her confidence she needed to film the graphic sex scenes in Monster's Ball.
  • Berry's portrayal of Storm in the X-Men films has provoked some criticism and controversy from fans of the series as well as critics. Some fans of the character of Storm refer to Berry as "HalleStorm" or "movie Storm". One of the most obvious deviations from the comics is that Berry's Storm is some four or five inches shorter than comic Storm, who is cited at 5'11" tall. (It should be noted, however, that Hugh Jackman, who played Wolverine, is nearly a foot taller than the comics version of his character, and this hardly ever seems to make controversy.) Furthermore, Storm is half African-American, half Kenyan; Berry is of mixed race, and her skin tone is much lighter than how Storm is usually drawn. Also, Berry's Storm has dark brown eyes, but comic Storm's eyes are blue. Further controversy would occur after Berry allegedly stated on a talk show that because of a lack of roles for black women in Hollywood, she'd been "reduced to playing a comic book character". Berry denies having said this, and co-star Sir Ian McKellen supported her, saying, "Halle's observations about the scarcity of work for black women in Hollywood have obviously been misunderstood by some of the press." Another criticism levelled was her African accent, made clear in the first film, which disappeared completely in the sequels.
  • In May 2006, Berry's recounting of her lifelong struggles with and views on race brought controversy: "Every day I wake up with this brown skin. I don't care how much money I have, how many movies I do, how many awards I have on my shelf. Every day, I am still aware that I am a woman of color and there is still certain discrimination that goes along with that...I wondered why I didn't look like my mother, and when she moved us from a black neighborhood to an all-white neighborhood, I started to feel like an outcast. I thought my life would be easier and kids would accept me if I looked like her so I wanted to change myself. I've learned to realize that the best thing about me is that I don't have blond hair and blue eyes and that I do have brown skin...I do not think that we live in a color-blind society, where racism is null and void - that is pretty absurd. But I believe that it is possible that things are moving in that direction, and I believe that one day, color and race won't matter. I hope I am here to see it, but it hasn't happened yet."

Trivia

Filmography

Upcoming:

TV work

External links

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