Archive for March, 2009

Halle Berry

halle berry

We just can’t help it, can we? We all have an innate suspicion of models who become actors. We immediately feel that, otherwise talentless, they’ve been cast on their looks alone, that they have no real right to inhabit our screens. Whenever someone tries it, the jeers begin and those terrible four words are uttered: Cindy, Crawford, Fair and Game. Yet Halle Berry, a former model and, worse still, a Beauty Pageant winner, has risen above all that. Through a combination of the usual luck and, above all, hard work and persistence, she’s made herself into a fine actress, an Emmy winner and the most welcome Oscar winner in recent years. And it has not been easy…

Halle Maria Berry was born on the 14th of August, 1968 (though some insist it was 1966), in Cleveland, Ohio. She was named after the town’s Halle Building, which originally housed the Halle Brothers department store but is now an office block (it’s also used in the Drew Carey Show). Her father, Jerome, an African American and a hospital attendant by trade, left when she was just four, so she and her elder sister Heidi were raised by their Caucasian, Liverpool-born mother, Judith, herself a nurse in a psychiatric ward. Jerome would return after four years but the violence he directed towards Judith and Heidi meant that he did not stay for long. Throughout her adult life, Halle Would have no contact with him at all, still being estranged when Jerome died in 2003.

Halle’s first few years were spent in a black neighbourhood of Cleveland. Here her fair complexion made her stand out, but not as much as she did when her mother moved them out of the inner-city to a mainly white suburb. Now, a little older and in this conservative milieu, her “difference” was not so readily tolerated. “I’m black,” she said later. “I realised very early in my life that I wasn’t going to be this mulatto stuck in the middle, not knowing if I’m black or white”.

To overcome these racial difficulties, Halle threw herself into school activities at Bedford High and tried to make friends. She did well. She was in the Honour Society, a cheerleader, class president, and an editor on the school newspaper. And, naturally, she was Prom Queen. At least, she was joint Prom Queen. Having won outright, she was accused of voting irregularities and (guess what?) forced to share her title with a WASP.

Kate Winslet

kate winsletA luminous English rose with ivory skin and strawberry hair, Winslet made an impressive feature debut as Juliet Hulme, an intelligent, spoiled and sickly teenager who helps murder her best girlfriend’s mother in Peter Jackson’s acclaimed “Heavenly Creatures” (1994). A third-generation thespian, the Reading, England native began studying drama at the age of eleven. Kate Winslet began her career almost immediately when she was cast as a spokesperson for a cereal in British TV commercials. Stage roles followed, including the female leads in a musical version of “Adrian Mole”. She made her TV debut in the drama “Shrinks” and her resume also includes a recurring stint on the sitcom “Get Back”.
Winslet landed the role of Juliet in “Heavenly Creatures” after an impressive audition. Her on screen performance marked her as one to watch: she was riveting as the tubercular, highly intelligent teen who develops a strong rapport with a fellow student, allowing the pair to create a fantasy world and, when threatened with separation, conspire to commit murder. Kate Winslet then played a princess in Disney’s “A Kid in King Arthur’s Court” (1995) before winning raves and an Oscar nomination as Best Supporting Actress for her subtle performance as the spirited Marianne Dashwood in “Sense and Sensibility” (also 1995). Winslet continued to appear in period pieces with “Jude” (1996). Adapted from “Jude the Obscure” by Thomas Hardy, the film featured Winslet as Sue, the title character’s unconventional cousin whose mercurial nature creates problems. Later that year, she was Ophelia to Kenneth Branagh “Hamlet”, in the actor-director’s all-star feature version of the Shakespeare classic.

Moving from Shakespeare, Winslet adopted an American accent as a Philadelphia socialite who finds unlikely romance with a lower-class artist Leonardo DiCaprio in James Cameron’s spectacular “Titanic” (1997). More than just a film, “Titanic” became a phenomenon: grossing more than $600 million and earning 14 Oscar nominations, including one for Winslet as Best Actress. Kate Winslets onscreen chemistry with DiCaprio had a cross-generational appeal and the young actress found herself on magazine covers and fodder for the tabloids. Rather than become confined to Hollywood blockbusters, though, Winslet accepted roles in two rather small films that both shared some similarities in that they revolved around a spiritual search. “Hideous Kinky” (1999) cast the actress as the mother of two young daughters who packs up and heads to Marrakech seeking wisdom from a Sufi while “Holy Smoke” (also 1999) saw her portray a cult member whose family hires a deprogrammer. Both roles allowed the young actress to display her emotional intensity and daring range, as well as to play relatively contemporary characters.

In 2000, it was back to the petticoats as Winslet portrayed a laundress in the asylum of Charenton who colludes with the incarcerated Marquis de Sade to help smuggle out his writings in “Quills”. Once again, the actress demonstrated her remarkable gifts for playing intelligent and sensual characters, and to continue to reveal her utter fearlessness as an actress, unafraid to explore dark corners and push conventional boundaries. In “Enigma” (2001), the WWII-era spy drama in which she co-starred as a mathematician working on breaking the German code, she took a role that was less emotionally charged and edgy, instead more subtle. Again she showed a gift for believably thinking on screen in the contemplative drama. “Iris” (also 2001), in which she essayed the youthful incarnation of the British philosopher and novelist Iris Murdoch, was a return to form (although she split the role with Judi Dench, who played Murdoch in her Alzheimer’s period, a juicier era for an actress to explore). Nevertheless, Kate Winslet caught Murdoch’s unconventional, free-spirited youth and realistically portrayed her romance with her eventual husband. Her work brought the actress a third career Academy Award nomination , this time as Best Supporting Actress. Winslet next appeared as Elizabeth “Bitesy” Bloom, an ambitious reporter investigating the case of a death row inmate in “The Life of David Gale” (2003). Winslet was praised for her performance, but it couldn’t overcome the bad feelings engendered by the film’s overwrought, unconvincing story and the overkill behind its anti-death penalty message.

The full-figured—and, after childbirth, zaftig—Winslet proudly refused to conform to the typical Hollywood standard for extreme thinness, and her fan base loved her for it—not only was she happy with her figure, she unabashedly displayed it in several films and spoke openly of defying her industry’s physical expectations. A small firestorm erupted in 2003, however, when a radically thinned-down Winslet appeared on the cover of GQ magazine. It turned out that the actress was digitally slimmed by photo retouchers, but she blamed the controversy on herself for being so outspoken on the subject—still, she claimed she had no plans to change her own natural shape.

In 2004 Kate Winslet took on another free-spirited role for “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” playing Clementine, the ex-girlfriend with the multicolored hair whose break-up with her repressed boyfriend Jim Carrey prompts him to undergo a procedure to erase all trace of her from his memory. Again employing a flawless American accent, Winslett turned in a rich, multi-layered performance in one her best films to date, though it was not a major box office champion. The role did, however, earn the actress several award nominations: she was given nods by the Screen Actors Guild, the Golden Globes, and the Academy Awards. In “Finding Neverland” (2004), Winslet was on top of her game once more, playing Sylvia Llewelyn Davies, the widowed mother of four boys who, along with her sons, becomes the muse for “Peter Pan” author J.M. Barrie Johnny Depp and whose life takes a tragic turn.

Maria Sharapova

sharapovaMaria Sharapova was born on April 19, 1987 in Nyagan, a town in the Siberian region of Russia. In 1989, the family moved to the Black Sea resort town of Sochi.

When she was 4 years old, a chance encounter changed her life. She met with the father of tennis champion Yevgeny Kafelnikov, and the man gave her a racket. From that moment, she started hitting tennis balls. The game soon became a passion for her.

Two years later, she was performing at a tennis clinic when another tennis champion changed her life. Martina Navratilova was in the building and she was flabbergasted by the talent of the 6-year-old. She went to her father, Yuri, and recommended that he take his daughter to the world-famous Bollettieri Tennis Academy in Florida.

sharapova moves to america

Soon after, this same advice was repeated by the head coach of the Russian Federation. Everyone agreed it was the best thing to do in light of Maria’s enormous talent. When she was only 7, Yuri took his daughter to the U.S. without knowing a word of English and with less than $1,000 in his pocket.

IMG, the sports management company, agreed to sponsor Maria and put up the $35,000 US per year it costs to stay at the Bollettieri Academy. Not knowing any English either, she was very shy and introverted.

While her father took odd jobs, Maria moved into the school dorm when she was 9. Sharing a room with three older girls, she quickly learned the language. Still, it was hard on her, especially since her mother, Yelena, remained in Russia because she couldn’t get the proper visa.

Two years later, her mother was finally able to come to Florida and be reunited with her daughter and husband. From that moment, she took it upon herself to educate Maria, who has never been in a formal school in her life.

maria’s smash hit

Her official tennis career began in 2001, when she joined the junior circuit. During that year, she won 25 matches and only lost three. In the process, she came away with three titles: Sacramento, Hilton Head and Pilsen in the Czech Republic.

The following season, Sharapova did even better on the junior circuit with 26 victories and, again, only three losses. She once more won three titles: Vancouver, Peachtree and Gunma in Japan. The same year, she was allowed to play a limited number of matches on the professional tour.

She won one match and lost two, including one against Monica Seles in the second round at Indian Wells, her first professional tournament. After all the results were tabulated, she was ranked 186th on the WTA charts.

sharapova’s year

By 2003, Sharapova had paid her dues and was able to play in the big leagues. She joined the WTA Tour and impressed everyone with her talent. For that season, she came away with 34 wins and a negligible 11 losses.

Sharapova also won two professional titles: Quebec City and the Japan Open. She also won two doubles titles with Tamarine Tanasugarn: Luxembourg and the Japan Open. When the season was over, her ranking had improved to place her at number 32.

In 2004, she stunned Wimbledon audiences when she beat champion player Serena Williams, making Sharapova the first Russian to win a Wimbledon singles title and the third-youngest women’s champion in history.

sharapova hits the books

At present, she is putting an end to her high school education through Keystone High, an online high school. She does photo shoots once in a while but her priority is tennis. Besides, she doesn’t need the money, as she has very lucrative endorsement deals with Nike, NEC and Prince. Sharapova currently resides in Bradenton, Florida.