Showing posts with label Angelina Jolie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Angelina Jolie. Show all posts

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Brad Pitt is taking on the cops

First Angelina Jolie played Christine Collins and took on an entire corrupt police force in Changeling. Now Brad Pitt and Plan B are gearing up to take on a fake cop.

Brad and Plan B are working with a team of writers to develop a biopic based on the true story of Linda Trest, a journalist in Missouri who exposed a phony cop who was supposedly cleaning up a small town’s drug problems - except that he was no longer a member of law enforcement by then.

The story sounds like it could be interesting - there’s always something fun about watching a regular parson beat the system!

It’s still very much in pre-production so at the moment there’s certainly no word on casting. For some reason I immediately pictured Julia Roberts but it might be a little too much like Erin Brokovich in that case. Time will tell!

Saturday, November 8, 2008

superstar Brad Pitt taped an episode of "The Oprah " Said ?

superstar Brad Pitt taped an episode of "The Oprah Winfrey Show" on Wednesday, where he gushed about lady love Angelina Jolie.

According to sources, Oprah told the A-lister that she thought his movie star mate is the love of his life and then asked whether this is the happiest he's been -- to which he responded "dare I say."

Brad's appearance airs November 18.

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Angelina Jolie talks about her wild days...?

Angelina Jolie is all settled down these days with six (SIX!!!!) kids, but it wasn’t too long ago that she was a little on the wild side. Here’s what she has to say about those days:
“I used to think I was unstable, because I had this thirst for something.

“I could never figure out what it was. I couldn’t sleep at night, and I always wanted to be somewhere else, and I have a window tattooed, this little box, and it’s because wherever I was, I wanted to be somewhere else. And I always saw myself - wherever I was in life - staring out the window.

“I knew little about the world, and I was completely self-absorbed. It was only when I came out of my shell and started taking care of others that I found the real Angelina.”

I know Angelina has her detractors, but I think a lot of her and her efforts to bring attention to those who need it most. It’s nice to see a celebrity using their famous status for something good.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Angelina & Brad getting married?!?!

Angelina Jolie says that her priorities have changed from career to motherhood since giving birth to twins in July.

“The kids are my priority, so it’s possible that from now on I will make fewer movies. I may even stop altogether,” Jolie tells the Italian edition of Vanity Fair. “I no longer have the ambition I had in my 20s.”

Jolie, 33, who spoke to the magazine while promoting her new movie Changeling, says that as she has had more children, she’s come into her own as a mother.

“In reality my life is a lot more chaotic and adventurous now. Brad [Pitt] and I pilot airplanes, we travel non-stop, we go to difficult places and we have chosen to do it taking all of the kids with us,” said the mother of six. “I feel a lot braver now than when I was an angry young woman.”

Of her past, she says, “I knew little about the world and I was completely self-absorbed. It was only when I came out of my shell and started taking care of others that I found the real Angelina.”

Jolie says her children have inherited her taste for globe-trotting.

“Sure I am still restless, but do you know that my kids are the same way? We were in France these last few months and after a while they started asking when we could get back on a plane.”

That curiosity about the world is a value she wants her kids to maintain throughout their lives. “I want them to be able to walk through a marketplace in Adis Ababa and not bat an eye, not think it is dirty and ugly, but that it just represents another part of the world and humanity.”

Asked if she plans to make an honest man out of Brad Pitt, the actress hints that they may end up tying the knot – under pressure from the kids.

“Usually people fall in love and everything revolves around the ritual of marriage, children are an afterthought. We did everything backwards,” says Jolie.

“But sooner or later it will be the kids who ask us [to get married]. You know, they see films and start asking questions. Such as, ‘Why are Shrek and Fiona married and you’re not?’

Angelina Jolie vs. Jennifer Aniston at high drama

Before you get too concerned about Us Weekly's cover line, Angelina hasn't LITERALLY "stabbed Jen in the heart," it's a reference to that whole thing about how Angie finally admitted that, yes, she was in love with Brad before he was divorced. That little spark is a refreshing break from the reams of Madonna divorce drama. But claps to Star for its tag: "GUY BLASTS: She won't have sex & sleeps in a plastic bag!" Let's see what other sticky and sweet secrets lurk in the 'zines this week...

"I Kissed A Girl" singer Katy Perry dove into a giant cake at the Latin American MTV Video Music Awards in Guadalajara, Mexico. Wow! They only way she could get any more WILD is to slap Paris Hilton or wear a vial of someone's blood. And oh, wait, those things are already passé.

"Project Runway" winner Leanne Marshall taking her boyfriend and her prize money and moving from Oregon to New York, where she hopes to make waves. Literally, get it? Get it?? Moving on ...

When it was put to a vote, 87% of Us Weekly readers said that Katie Holmes should cease to design her own clothes (and certainly cease to market them). And I'm 87% sure it was her "All My Sons" opening night black lace/white satin Princess Jasmine outfit that put them over the edge.

Not only are Jen Aniston and John Mayer back together, says Star, but he has agreed to marry her and father her children. How did this happen? She performed a "naughty impersonation" of Marilyn Monroe in lingerie and fed him expensive tequila. Funny, that's exactly how Charlie Sheen coaxed a "yes" out of Brooke Mueller.

Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher have approached Michael Phelps about starring in a reality show, says Life & Style, which will be fine for his image as long as he doesn't spend all his time juggling multiple random girls and growing a goatee. Oh, wait.

When Miley Cyrus turns 16 next month, she wants to move out of her parents' house and into a luxury L.A. condo. She simply wants a place, sympathizes a Star source, "where she can have friends over to watch movies and eat popcorn and have her boyfriend, Justin Gaston, over." Okay, Mom and Dad? It's just a pad for friends, movies, popcorn, and my 20-year-old boyfriend! (Optional guilt trip: "I bet Taylor Momsen's parents would let HER have a condo!")

But maybe this is all a moot point, because Life & Style says papa Billy Ray already allows sleepovers with Gaston, and that Miley brags about them on the "Hannah Montana" set. "It was like she was bragging about having been up all night doing God knows what," sneers an insider. Um, praying, insider. She was up all night praying.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Angelina Jolie: Baby No. 7 Coming Soon?

During an appearance on the Today Show Thursday, mother-of-six Angelina Jolie admitted she and Brad Pitt are—wait for it—thinking about adopting another child.

"Yeah," the Changeling star said with a smile when the subject was brought up by Matt Lauer. "I have something in mind."

As for how soon she would add to her brood, the actress, who gave birth three months ago to twins Vivienne and Knox, says, "It depends. You can't even start the process until any new children are 6 months old...to see what you can absorb into a new family—and I think that's a smart thing anyway, to understand when to bring another child in."


But if and when another sibling should arrive, Angie says the others—Maddox, 6, Pax, 4, Zahara, 3, and Shiloh, 2—would have no problems adjusting.

"We have so many children that they're not really stunned anymore when kids come home."

Our feelings exactly.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

A little parental guidance for Angelina's latest role

Angelina Jolie had an acting coach while shooting Clint Eastwood's "The Changeling" - her late mom, Marcheline Bertrand. The Oscar winner revealed to us at the New York Film Festival premiere that she often thought about Bertrand while playing a mother desperately seeking her kidnapped son. 

"My mother would fight that hard for her children," said Jolie, who attended with Brad Pitt. The role "[made me] confront my worst fear. It made me feel closer to my kids and grateful every night just to know where they are and that they're healthy. Making the phone call [in the film], saying that my kid was kidnapped, was difficult. I don't even like saying it right now." 

Jolie, who showed off her tattoo with the latitude and longitude of each of her six children's birthplaces, said their brood produces "the greatest chaos. [They're] constantly loud, constantly messy." 



So naturally they're working on another one, says the actress, "one way or another."

Source: http://www.nydailynews.com/

Monday, October 6, 2008

Angelina Jolie inks in the twins, Knox and Vivienne!

At the New York Film Festival screening of her new film," Changeling," Saturday night, Angelina Jolie talked about being sleep deprived.

"We are a little bit [sleep deprived]," the actress told People. "We have some help a couple of nights a week, so on those nights we catch up on our sleep."

But she hasn't been too busy to sit still for a little tattooing. Angelina found the time to have the international map coordinates (longitude/latitude) of Nice, France, where her twins, Knox and Vivienne, were born in July, tattooed on her left upper arm, noticeable due to her strapless black Atelier Versace gown.

Right underneath Maddox's, Sahara's, Shiloh's and Pax's commemorative tattoos.

There's still room on her arm for more ink, although she told People that they were going to "wait a while" before adopting any more babies.

Seriously. Give the babies and the ink a rest.

Six kids ranging in age from 3 months to 8 years old. Could you manage that brood plus a hunky husband, (oh, OK, life partner) full-time acting career, oscar buzz for "Changeling," international promotional appearances and moving around among homes in Hollywood, France, Germany and New York? And yet, she looks amazing. And she's breast-feeding, people!

How does she do it? Oh yeah, sure, they have help, probably a nanny, a cook, a gardener, a maid or three, a driver and a slew of bodyguards. Plus a personal stylist, makeup and hair people.

Even so, it's still pretty impressive.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Angelina Jolie

From wild-child Hollywood brat to, Academy Award winner, to respected U.N. Goodwill Ambassador, actress Angelina Jolie underwent a series of metamorphic transformations over the course of her career. An exceedingly beautiful, strikingly talented performer, Jolie broke on to the scene in the mid-1990s, quickly gaining a reputation for both her on-screen work as well as her outrageous off-camera antics. Interestingly enough, however, within a decade, Jolie shed her reckless image and successfully managed to re-invent herself – not only as an artist, but also as a celebrity humanitarian of the highest order. Only half-chidingly dubbed by Esquire magazine as “the best woman in the world, in terms of her generosity, her dedication, and her courage,” Jolie seemed intent on remaking her image on her own terms, even as the tabloids struggled to scandalize it. In the mid-2000s, Jolie’s public profile exploded into another stratosphere when she became romantically linked with the sexiest man alive, Brad Pitt – before and after he and his then wife, Jennifer Aniston called it quits. After the scandalous divorce, Pitt and Jolie slowly came out as a couple to the delight of the world’s paparazzi. Now one half of the “most gorgeous couple on earth,” Jolie used her high profile and celebrity to bring attention to a number of worthwhile causes – winning the grudging respect of even the most cynical of her critics.

The daughter of actors Jon Voight and Marcheline Bertrand, Angelina Jolie (Voight) was born on Jun. 4, 1975 in Los Angeles, CA. Like her older brother by two years, director James Haven (Voight,) Jolie seemed destined for a career in the arts. At the age of 11, she began studying at the famed Lee Strasberg Theater Institute in NYC. Even before commencing her formal training, Jolie made her screen debut as a tyke in a bit part in the Hal Ashby-directed comedy "Lookin' to Get Out" (filmed in 1980; released 1982). While reviewers savaged the movie (which was co-scripted and co-produced by her father, Jon), its littlest thespian fortunately emerged unscathed. The experience briefly turned young Angelina off of show business – she even briefly considered going into funeral directing for a time – but because it was in her blood, she eventually bounced back.

With two extremely photogenic parents, it came as no surprise that Jolie inherited gorgeous good looks – most striking of all were lush lips which made her a standout from all other young girls. Her comeliness allowed her to segue back into show business, first as a professional model, and later, as an actress in music videos. In addition to appearing in five student films directed by her older brother, Jolie became a member of the Los Angeles Metropolitan Theatre Company, where she honed her craft alongside such veteran players as Holly Hunter, Ed Harris and Amy Madigan. Jolie made her return to the screen playing a heroic human-machine hybrid in the above-average direct-to-video sci-fi actioner, "Cyborg II: Glass Shadows" (1993), but the entry went virtually unnoticed by critics. Luckily, her flashy role as Kate (a.k.a. 'Acid Burn') in the cyber-thriller "Hackers" (1995) garnered her more attention and better notices. Paired with rising young British actor Jonny Lee Miller, Jolie played a teen computer whiz battling an evil genius. “Hackers” fizzled at the box office, but the romantic leads sizzled – both on-screen and off. Jolie and Miller’s chemistry eventually culminated in their wedding in 1996. Though the two would divorce just three years later, Jolie and Miller would remain close friends even after their break-up.

More film work readily followed for Jolie, initially in small-scale character-driven indies. In an indifferently received adaptation of Joyce Carol Oates' novel "Foxfire" (1996), Jolie played a mysterious outsider named Legs Sadovsky –described in Variety as "sort of a female James Dean" – who helps some other teenaged girls stand up for their rights. In Renee Taylor and Joseph Bologna's romantic comedy-drama "Love Is All There Is" (1996), Jolie displayed a humorous and innocent light as half of a pair of star-crossed lovers divided by their families' feud. That same year, the actress appeared in the high-minded suspense drama "Without Evidence,” playing a drug-addicted teen, and "Mojave Moon,” opposite Danny Aiello. Next came "Playing God" (1997), in which Jolie capably essayed a woman torn between her gangster boyfriend (Timothy Hutton) and a discredited doctor (David Duchovny) in his employ. While the films remained largely unseen by most moviegoers, Jolie received strong notices for each of these projects.

Unlike many feature stars, Jolie showed no compunction about working on the small screen. Case in point: during the late 1990s, the actress appeared in a handful of exceptional made-for-TV productions that effectively allowed her to strut her stuff on her own terms. In 1997, Jolie received top notices for her co-starring turn alongside Annabeth Gish and Dana Delaney as Texas pioneers in the 1997 CBS historical miniseries, "True Women." Jolie then brought a fiery passion to her portrayal of Cornelia Wallace, the politician's first wife, in the biographical miniseries "George Wallace" (TNT, 1997). But it was her dazzling turn as another real-life figure – the late supermodel Gia Carangi – that catapulted Jolie into the public consciousness. Jolie’s brave, sensitive performance as the drug-addicted, AIDS-stricken title character in HBO's excellent biopic "Gia" (1998) brought the beauty widespread critical acclaim. For her efforts, Jolie was twice Emmy-nominated in the supporting category for "George Wallace" (which she lost to co-star Mare Winningham) and in the leading category for "Gia" (which she ended up losing to Ellen Barkin). Fortunately, Jolie received more-than-adequate consolation for her Emmy losses by picking up two back-to-back Golden Globe Awards for both performances.

After this spate of acclaimed television appearances, Jolie found her way back into in films, landing roles that similarly showcased her acting strengths. In 1998, Jolie received special notice for her work in the comedy-drama "Playing By Heart" (1998), as Joan, an outgoing club kid smitten with the sullen Keenan (Ryan Phillippe). Vivid and engaging, Jolie easily held her own among an ensemble cast featuring such luminaries as Gena Rowlands and Sean Connery. The following year, the actress joined John Cusack and Billy Bob Thornton in Mike Newell's Big Apple-set comedy about air traffic controllers, "Pushing Tin" (1999). Jolie later got her feet wet in the increasingly crowded crime-drama pond playing a tough rookie cop assisting a quadriplegic detective (Denzel Washington) in "The Bone Collector” (1999), a flawed, but well-acted serial-killer thriller directed by Philip Noyce. Jolie finally rounded out the year by landing the much sought-after co-starring role of the disturbed Lisa Rowe in "Girl, Interrupted.” Based on author Susanna Kaysen's best-selling memoir of her own two-year stay in a psychiatric hospital, Jolie’s showy turn as the sociopathic inmate netted Jolie a Best Supporting Actress Oscar.

But public respect would come neither immediately nor easily for Jolie, even after winning Hollywood’s highest honor. Far more interested in her girl-gone-wild ways, the tabloids tended to dismiss her talents in favor of her more unorthodox personal life. Among the gossip fodder were her exotic tattoos, extensive collection of knives and her past “cutting” experiences, her provocative revelations and her intimations of a profoundly edgy sex life. The tabloids also made much hay out of Jolie’s close relationship with her look-alike brother, James Haven – a bond which raised many eyebrows after Jolie planted a passionate kiss on his lips in plain view of drooling paparazzi. It did not help matters when she declared she was “in love with her brother” upon accepting the Oscar. Media saturation would reach a boiling point, however, in mid 2000, when Jolie became the fifth wife of her “Pushing Tin” co-star – the equally eccentric and significantly older actor Billy Bob Thornton. A match made in tabloid heaven, the couple's constant declarations of love and erotic devotion to each other was capped by the wacky revelation that the two wore vials of one another's blood around each other’s necks and had sex in the car on the way to the “Pushing Tin” premiere.

Her off-screen quirks notwithstanding, the actress continued portraying tough young women on the big screen. In the flashy but unfulfilling car heist thriller "Gone in 60 Seconds" (2000), Jolie crackled in scenes even opposite notorious scene-stealing star, Nicolas Cage. Jolie’s next project was as the flesh-and-blood embodiment of the titular adventuress in "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider" (2001). Based on the wildly popular “Tomb Raider” video game franchise, Lara Croft launched an Indiana Jones-style adventure series which failed to impress critics, but racked up a healthy box office take. The film also marked Jolie’s first adult collaboration with her father, Jon Voight, who played her character's father in the film. Shortly after their on-screen pairing, however, Voight made a series of disparaging comments regarding his daughter’s mental emotional stability (or lack thereof) to the American entertainment newsmagazine “Access Hollywood” (Synd., 1996-). Outraged by the insult, Jolie immediately responded by painting Voight as a philandering, self-righteous hypocrite who cheated on her mother. The resulting rift between father-and-daughter would last for several years and several on-camera pleas by Voight to give him another chance.

Meanwhile, back on the career front, Jolie – possibly distracted by her tumultuous personal crises – seemed a bit unfocused in her next two features. Starring opposite Antonio Banderas in the dismal noir-wannabe “Original Sin" (2001), Jolie came off less than committed, despite some steamy – and heavily hyped – erotic sequences. Her follow-up, the dramatic vehicle "Life or Something Like It" (2002) – in which she played a superficial, platinum blonde newscaster forced to examine her existence more closely – also died quickly. Jolie subsequently took a significant hiatus from film, but continued to make headlines in her personal life, divorcing Thornton in 2003 amid rumors of his infidelity (which he denied). It was also rumored that Jolie’s recent adoption of a baby boy from a Cambodian orphanage whom she named Maddox, did not help matters. The couple was allegedly at different points in their life and thus, split.

The actress returned to familiar territory for her comeback screen vehicle, the sequel "Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life" (2003), a lackluster follow-up to a lackluster first outing. Reflecting their off-screen internecine tensions, Voight, did not reprise his role in this second follow-up. “Cradle of Life” was followed by a turn in the too-righteous political/romantic drama "Beyond Borders" (2003). After this came a dangerous foray into Ashley Judd territory with a starring role in the routine thriller "Taking Lives" (2004), in which Jolie played an FBI profiler caught up in dangerous and erotic intrigue. Signing up for another purely commercial vehicle, the actress adopted another rich accent as she winkingly played the eyepatch-sporting Captain Frankie Cook, the leader of an all-female amphibious attack squadron, in the retro action-adventure "Sky Captain & the World of Tomorrow" (2004). Cast opposite Jude Law and fellow Oscar-winner, Gwyneth Paltrow, Jolie joined the CGI-laden action-adventure battling giant robots in an Art Deco, 1930s-era environment. Jolie then lent her voice to the finny femme fatale, Lola, in DreamWorks' CGI-animated underwater underworld opus "A Shark’s Tale" (2004). Finally, Jolie closed out the year with a bizarrely seductive turn as Alexander's mother, Olympias, who raises her son to believe in his impressive destiny, in Oliver Stone's epic historical bomb, "Alexander the Great.”

Jolie's profile as both a movie star and public figure rose to even more epic proportions when she co-starred with the equally lovely actor Brad Pitt in the Doug Liman-helmed action-fest "Mr. & Mrs. Smith" (2005). In it, the actors played a bored married couple who are actually rival assassins, each hired to kill the other. Almost from the get-go, spurious rumors abounded of an on-set romance between Jolie and Pitt – innuendo that contributed to Pitt's subsequent split from his high-profile marriage to actress Jennifer Aniston. Though both Pitt and Jolie initially refuted the rumors – the two later took a coyer stance after being photographed together numerous times post-Aniston separation. The intense media and public interest in their possible romance propelled “Mr. & Mrs. Smith” to huge box office receipts, thanks in large part to their palpable on-screen chemistry. Needless to say, the "are they or aren't they?" nature of the Jolie-Pitt coupling captivated star watchers and quickly became the most written-about celebrity story of 2005 – even prompting the coining of the term "Brangelina."

Taking a page from the playbook of the late Audrey Hepburn, Jolie began using her celebrity status to bring attention to such humanitarian causes as the plight of violence-torn nations. As their relationship gradually emerged in the public eye, Pitt began to accompany Jolie on her missions of mercy to third world nations and grow ever more attached to her son, Maddox. Away from the screen, Jolie expressed a dedication and commitment to increasing awareness and aid to counties devastated by internal and external conflicts, disease and third world conditions. In 2001, after the actress made several trips to the war-torn nations of Sierra Leone, Tanzania and Pakistan, Jolie had been appointed Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. It was during one of these trips that in 2005, she adopted an infant daughter from an Ethiopian orphanage whom she named Zahara. Later that year, surprising the world at large, Pitt petitioned to adopt the two children as his own. A year later, on May 27, 2006, Jolie and Pitt welcomed their biological firstborn child into the world – a daughter named Shiloh Nouvel Jolie-Pitt. Clearly serious about starting a family, in March 2007 – Jolie and Pitt made headlines once again by adopting a fourth child – a three-year-old boy from Vietnam whom they named Pax.

Returning to the big screen later that summer, Jolie next starred as Marianne Pearl, the wife of murdered journalist Daniel Pearl, in the gripping drama “A Mighty Heart” (2007). Though Jolie’s casting initially sparked a furor of controversy among minority groups, as Marianne Pearl was of Afro-Cuban/Dutch ancestry, much of the complaints dissipated upon the film’s release. Hailed by many as quite possibly the boldest performance of her career, Jolie’s portrayal of Marianne Pearl was rooted in dignity and reflected a tragic truthfulness free of exploitative sentimentality. Unfortunately, the serious film was released during the summer box office season, rendering it lost amidst all the big-budget special effect movies.

  • Also Credited As:
    Angelina Jolie Voight, Angie
  • Born:
    Angelina Jolie Voight on June 4, 1975 in Los Angeles, California
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Model
Family
  • Brother: James Haven. Born c. 1973; studied filmmaking at USC; directed sister in five student films
  • Daughter: Shiloh Nouvel Jolie-Pitt. Born May 27, 2006 in Namibia; father is Brad Pitt; first pictures of baby Shiloh were sold to People Magazine for a reported sum of $4.1 million
  • Daughter: Zahara Marley Jolie-Pitt. Born Jan. 8, 2005; adopted July 2005, from an Ethiopian orphanage at six months; mother died of AIDS and father is unknown; legally adopted by Brad Pitt in 2006
  • Father: Jon Voight. Separated from Jolie's mother when Angelina was one-year-old; estranged from father
  • Mother: Marcheline Bertrand. Born c. 1950; part-Iroquois; separated from Jolie's father when Angelina was one-year-old; died of cancer in 2007
  • Son: Maddox Chivan Jolie-Pitt. Adopted at seven months from a Cambodian orphanage in 2002; legally adopted by Brad Pitt in 2006
  • Son: Pax Thien Jolie-Pitt. Adopted at three years old from a Vietnamese orphanage in 2007; Jolie adopted the boy as a single parent because Vietnam's adoption regulations don't allow unmarried couples to co-adopt; name was legally changed to Jolie-Pitt three months after his adoption
Significant Others
  • Companion: Brad Pitt. Met while filming "Mr. and Mrs. Smith" (2005); rumored to be romantically involved throughout filming, but this was denied by both parties; began being photographed together as a couple in spring 2005
  • Companion: Colin Farrell. Rumored to have dated for a brief period during the filming of "Alexander" (2004)
  • Husband: Billy Bob Thornton. acted together in "Pushing Tin" (1999); eloped to Las Vegas on May 5, 2000; Jolie has a tatoo on her arm that reads "Billy Bob;" reportedly split in June 2002; Jolie filed for divorce on July 17, 2002
  • Husband: Jonny Lee Miller. British; met during filming of "Hackers"; married in March 1996; separated in 1997; divorced in February 1999; rumored to have dated again in 2002 and in 2004
  • Companion: Timothy Hutton. dated in 1998 and 1999; co-starred together in "Playing God"; Jolie was reportedly tattooed with an "H"; no longer together
Education
  • New York University, New York, NY, film
  • The Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute, New York, NY
Milestones
  • 1976 Moved to Palisades, New York with mother and brother
  • 1980 Feature debut in Hal Ashby's "Lookin' to Get Out"; co-produced and co-written by her father; credited as Angelina Jolie Voight (released in 1982)
  • 1986 At age 11, began studying acting at the Lee Strasberg Theater Institute in NYC
  • 1993 Co-starred in the direct-to-video sci-fi film "Cyborg II: Glass Shadows"
  • 1995 First lead in a theatrical release, "Hackers"; co-starred with future husband, British actor Jonny Lee Miller
  • 1996 Starred in the feature "Foxfire"
  • 1997 Portrayed the politician's first wife Cornelia Wallace in the TNT miniseries "George Wallace"; received an Emmy nomination for Best Supporting Actress
  • 1998 Earned raves reviews for her performance as Gia Carangi, a drug addicted, bisexual model who died of complications from AIDS, in the HBO film "Gia"; received an Emmy nomination for Best Actress
  • 1998 Had supporting role as a club kid in the ensemble comedy-drama "Playing By Heart"
  • 1999 Cast as a tough detective assisting a quadriplegic colleague (Denzel Washington) in tracking a serial killer in "The Bone Collector"
  • 1999 Portrayed the wife of an air traffic controller (Billy Bob Thornton) in Mike Newell's "Pushing Tin"
  • 1999 Won an Academy Award for her supporting role in "Girl, Interrupted" a drama based on the memoirs of a woman's two-year stay in a psychiatric hospital
  • 2000 Acted opposite Nicolas Cage in "Gone in 60 Seconds"
  • 2001 Achieved international fame playing the videogame heroine Lara Croft in "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider"
  • 2001 Starred opposite Antonio Banderas in "Original Sin"
  • 2002 Appointed Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
  • 2002 Portrayed a TV reporter forced to question her choices in "Life or Something Like It"
  • 2003 Reprised her role as Lara Croft for "Lara Croft and the Cradle of Life: Tomb Raider 2"
  • 2003 Starred opposite Clive Owen in "Beyond Borders"
  • 2004 Co-starred with Colin Farrell in Oliver Stone's "Alexander" playing Olympias, the mother of Alexander the Great
  • 2004 Portrayed Captain Franky Cook in the Sci-fi thriller "Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow" opposite Jude Law and Gwyneth Paltrow
  • 2004 Starred as Special Agent Illeana Scott in the thriller "Taking Lives" also starred Ethan Hawke and Kiefer Sutherland
  • 2004 Voiced Lola in the animated feature "Shark Tale "
  • 2005 Appeared in the MTV special "The Diary of Angelina Jolie & Dr. Jeffrey Sachs in Africa," which will follow their trip to Sauri, a remote group of villages in western Kenya
  • 2005 Starred opposite Brad Pitt, as a bored married couple that is surprised to learn that they are assassins hired to kill each other in "Mr. and Mrs. Smith"
  • 2006 Played a CIA agent's (Matt Damon) long-suffering wife in Robert De Niro's "The Good Shepherd"
  • 2007 Cast in "A Mighty Heart," as Marianne Pearl, the wife of Wall Street Journal reporter, Daniel Pearl, who was kidnapped and killed in 2002 while reporting in Pakistan; produced by her partner Brad Pitt; earned an Independent Spirit Award Nomination for Best Actress; also received Golden Globe and SAG nominations for Best Actress
  • 2007 Made directorial debut with the documentary "A Place in Time"
  • 2007 Portrayed Grendel's mother in Robert Zemeckis' big-budget film version of the epic poem "Beowulf"
  • Acted in five student films directed by her brother, James Haven Voight
  • Appeared in music videos by Meat Loaf, The Lemonheads, Rolling Stones and others
  • As part of the Met Theater group in Los Angeles, worked with such veteran actors as Holly Hunter, Ed Harris and Amy Madigan
  • Made stage debut playing a German dominatrix in "Room Service"
  • Reportedly planned to become a funeral director
  • Worked briefly as a professional model

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Angelina Jolie's Image Not Wanted in U.K.


Los Angeles (E! Online) - Angelina Jolie has the ability to glamorize many things—all one British media watchdog group is asking is for her to use her powers for good instead of evil.

The U.K.'s Advertising Standards Authority has banned two movie posters for the Jolie-starring action flick Wanted, upholding public complaints that the sultry, weapon-baring promotional images glamorize the use of guns and violence and are unsuitable for children.

Just 17 complaints were lodged against the ads, one of which features Jolie draped over the hood of a car brandishing guns. In another ad, costar James McAvoy is pointing two pistols directly toward the camera, above what the ASA deemed to be "aspirational text."

"We acknowledged most viewers would understand the posters reflected the content of an action film," the ASA said in a statement. "However, we considered that because the ads featured a glamorous actress, action poses, several images of, or related to guns and aspirational text, they could be seen to glamorize the use of guns and violence."

The ASA's reaction was no doubt due in part to the increasingly sensitive social climate in Britain given the recent and rapid rise of gun use and violence among youth.

Still, while Universal Pictures UK defended their images, claiming the poses, like the movie itself, were highly stylized and in keeping with the comic-book-based nature of the flick, the ASA ruled that the posters were no longer to appear in public.

Not that that should be too much of a problem.

Wanted opened in the U.K. back in June and Universal Pictures said the images had already been taken out of circulation, with no plans to use them again in the future.