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| Halle Berry Biography |
| In 1983, when she was only 17 years old, Halle's boyfriend at the time entered her name in the Miss Teen Ohio beauty pageant. Once again, it's no surprise that Halle got to wear the crown in that competition. |
| But it didn't stop there, Halle won many other high-profile competitions, including Miss Teen All American, Miss USA and Miss World. Once she was done raking in points by winning pageant after pageant, Halle continued her education at Cleveland's Cuyahoga Community College in 1986, studying broadcast journalism. |
| Unfortunately, Halle didn't complete her degree - she left the program to pursue a more glamorous career in modeling, and started studying acting in Chicago. Although Halle auditioned for soap opera and drama guru Aaron Spelling for a part in Charlie's Angels and didn't get the part, Spelling encouraged Halle to pursue her dreams of being an actress. |
| Halle picked up and moved to Manhattan, where she immediately landed her first TV gig called Living Dolls. Although the show was short-lived, Halle was more determined than ever to become a great actress. |
| Halle got her first big break in 1989, when Spike Lee cast her as a crack-addicted woman in Jungle Fever starring opposite Samuel L. Jackson. She was so determined to execute the role perfectly that Halle actually interviewed real addicts and stopped bathing ten days before filming the racially charged film. |
| Soon after that, Halle reverted back to television and had a recurring role on the popular nighttime soap opera, Knots Landing, in 1991. But the big screen was Halle's goal and she soon landed another part, this time playing the exotic girlfriend of Damon Wayans in the film The Last Boy Scout, which also starred Bruce Willis. |
| As with her Jungle Fever role, Halle delved into this role wholeheartedly, so much so that she convinced a Hollywood strip-club owner to let her dance on stage. |
| In 1993, Halle landed a starring role opposite none other than the comedy man himself, Eddie Murphy in Boomerang. This is the same year that she met, fell in love with, and married Atlanta Braves right fielder David Justice. Unfortunately, the marriage was short-lived and they divorced a few years later. |
| But on a happier note, Halle became engaged to soul singer Eric Benet in 1999, and eventually married the R&B singer and actor in 2001. |
| It was her riveting big-screen role as an illiterate addict who abandons her child in a garbage can in Losing Isaiah that shot Halle's star up high. She decided to take a lighter acting job after that and starred in the 1994 movie The Flintstones. Unfortunately for Halle, she missed the role of a lifetime when she passed up the lead in the film Speed, which ultimately worked wonders for Sandra Bullock's career. |
| Other movies that Halle starred in include Executive Decision (1996); Race the Sun (1996); B*A*P*S (1997); a TV mini-series called The Wedding (1998), Bulworth (1998); and Introducing Dorothy Dandridge, for which she won a Golden Globe Award and an Emmy for Best Actress in a Miniseries or TV movie. |
| More recently, Halle starred in the live film adaptation of the cartoon strip X-Men, as Storm/Ororo Munroe and she presently makes a whopping $2.5 million for each film role she accepts. She has also returned to modeling, as a spokeperson for Revlon. Because Halle was diagnosed with diabetes not too long ago, she is an avid volunteer of the Juvenile Diabetes Association. |
| Audiences can see more of Halle in the film Monster's Ball, in her critically acclaimed portrayal of a death row convict's wife. Halle received the 2002 SAG award for Best Actress in Monster's Ball and made history at the Oscars as the first black actress to receive a Best Actress Academy Award. Her Oscar triumph has cemented her as an A-list actress. |
| But this doesn't mean there's no room for action blockbusters; Halle will appear in the second installment of what looks like an X-Men franchise, set for a 2003 release, and as Jinx in the next James Bond film, Die Another Day. |
| Halle has accomplished much fame and fortune in her professional career, but it's evident that she's going to be around for quite a long time. |
| Related websites |
| www.hallewood.com |
| Halle Berry 15 Minute Project |
| Halle Berry Online |
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