Angelina Jolie
Actress. Born Angelina Jolie Voight, on June 4, 1975 in Los
Angeles, California. Her father, actor Jon Voight—best known for
Midnight Cowboy (1969) and Coming Home (1978), for which he won
an Oscar—separated from her mother, the former model/actress
Marcheline Bertrand, when Jolie was just a year old. Raised by
her mother along with her older brother, James Haven, in
Palisades, New York, Jolie made her feature film debut with a
bit role in the poorly received 1982 film Lookin’ to Get Out,
co-produced and co-written by Voight, who also starred.
Jolie began formally studying acting at the renowned Lee
Strasberg Theater Institute in New York City at age 11. Five
years later, she began living on her own, working as a
professional model and appearing in music videos for artists
including the Rolling Stones, Lenny Kravitz, Meat Loaf, and the
Lemonheads. Moving back to Los Angeles, Jolie acted in several
student films directed by her brother, who was then attending
the University of Southern California film school; she also
joined the Met Theater Group and performed alongside fellow
members like Ed Harris and Holly Hunter.
After a couple forgettable films (including the direct-to-video
Cyborg II: Glass Shadows), Jolie landed her first starring role
in the 1995 cyber-thriller Hackers. Though the film met with a
generally poor reception, Jolie earned praise for her
performance; she also fell in love with co-star Jonny Lee
Miller. At the couple’s wedding ceremony in March 1996, the
unconventional bride wore black rubber pants and a shirt on
which she had written the groom’s name in her own bloodOver the
next several years, Jolie’s reputation as Hollywood’s newest
“bad girl” grew steadily, even as a number of highly acclaimed
performances established her as a talented A-list actress. In
1997, she earned an Emmy nomination and a Golden Globe Award for
her supporting turn in the TNT biopic George Wallace, starring
Gary Sinise. She achieved the same feats—this time as Best
Actress—the following year, for her emotionally-charged
performance at the center of HBO’s Gia, based on the true story
of Gia Carangi, a rebellious, heroin-addicted model who died of
AIDS in the mid-1980s.
On the big screen, Jolie initially had less success, starring in
several poorly received films, most notably Foxfire (1996) and
Playing God (1997), co-starring Timothy Hutton and David
Duchovny. She had more luck with the ensemble comedy-drama
Playing By Heart (1998), appearing alongside such heavy-hitters
as Sean Connery and Gena Rowlands. In 1999, Jolie appeared in
three major films: the disappointing comedy Pushing Tin,
co-starring John Cusack, Billy Bob Thornton, and Cate Blanchett;
The Bone Collector, a thriller co-starring Denzel Washington;
and Girl, Interrupted, co-starring Winona Ryder. In the latter
film, Jolie’s performance as Lisa, a charismatic sociopathic
inmate in a psychiatric hospital, earned her rave reviews, a
third straight Golden Globe, and an Academy Award for Best
Supporting Actress.

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