Halle Maria Berry was born August 14, 1966 , in
Cleveland, Ohio. The youngest daughter of two,
Halle was born to the parents of Jerome and
Judith Berry, an interracial couple. Halle, and
her older sister Heidi, spent the first few
years of their childhood living in an inner-city
neighborhood. In the early 1970s, Jerome Berry
abandoned his wife and children, after which
Judith moved her family to the predominantly
white Cleveland suburb of Bedford. Berry
attended a nearly all-white public school, and
as a result was subjected to discrimination at
an early age. Her early bouts with racism
greatly influenced her desire to excel.
Throughout high school, the determined teen
participated in a dizzying array of
extracurricular activities, holding positions of
newspaper editor, class president, and head
cheerleader.
Beauty Queen
A natural performer, Halle Berry earned a
handful of beauty pageant titles during the
early 1980s, including Miss Teen Ohio and Miss
Teen America. She was eventually awarded first
runner-up in the 1985 Miss U.S.A. competition.
For a short time she attended Cleveland ’s
Cuyahoga Community College , where she studied
broadcast journalism. However, Berry abandoned
her idea of a career in news reporting before
receiving her degree. Choosing to wholeheartedly
devote her time to a career in entertainment.
Halle then decided to make the move from
Cleveland to Chicago and then New York City ,
where she found work as a catalog model.
First Act
As the ‘80s turned into the ‘90s, the aspiring
actress began a career in television with a role
on the short-lived sitcom "Living Dolls" (1989),
followed by a year-long run on the CBS
prime-time drama "Knot’s Landing". Halle's first
big screen break wasn't far along, in 1991 Halle
was cast as Samuel L. Jackson’s drug-addicted
girlfriend in Spike Lee’s "Jungle Fever". More
substantial supporting roles followed, including
that of a stripper in the action-thriller "The
Last Boy Scout" (1991), starring Bruce Willis;
and as the woman who finally wins Eddie Murphy’s
heart in the romantic comedy "Boomerang" (1992).
Actress on the Verge
With a few films under her belt, Halle Berry
accepted more offbeat roles, making cameos in
the rockumentary "CB4" (1993), which traced the
rise and fall of the titled rap group. 1994’s
live-action version of "The Flintstones"
featured Berry as a Stone Age seductress. Halle
Berry offered a no-holds-barred performance as a
rehabilitated crack addict seeking to regain
custody of her son in "Losing Isaiah" (1995). In
the midst of a bitter custody battle with
adoptive parents played by Jessica Lange and
David Strathairn, Berry was noted for her
believable portrayal in the unglamorous role.
Later that year, Halle Berry overcame Hollywood
’s racial barriers when she was cast as the
first African-American to play the Queen of
Sheeba in Showtime’s movie "Solomon & Sheeba".
Halle’s other credits included two 1996 crime
thrillers — "The Rich Man’s Wife", and
"Executive Decision", which marked her first
leading role in a feature. She took a turn as
one of three wives laying claim to Frankie
Lyman’s estate in the 1998 biographical drama
"Why Do Fools Fall in Love", and played a
liberal urban youth in the political satire "Bulworth"
(1998), opposite Hollywood veteran Warren
Beatty.
Introducing Dorothy Dandridge
In 1999, Halle Berry released her most
passionate project to date, coproducing and
starring in "Introducing Dorothy Dandridge", an
HBO biopic. This marked the first time Halle
Berry produced a project. Dorothy Dandridge was
the first African-American woman to be nominated
for a Best Actress Academy Award for her work in
"Carmen Jones" (1955). Halle was noted for her
striking resemblance to the late Dandridge, and
for her engaging depiction of the actress’
struggle to succeed in the racially biased
industry of 1950s Hollywood . Halle earned both
a Golden Globe Award and an Emmy Award for Best
Actress in a Television Movie for her role.
Berry was featured in X-Men (2000), the
big-budget screen adaptation of the long-running
Marvel Comic. In the highly anticipated summer
release Berry ’s character, Storm, teamed with
fellow mutant heroes played by Anna Paquin and
Patrick Stewart. In the summer of 2001, she
costarred with John Travolta in the Joel Silver
produced action movie "Swordfish". A lot of
attention was focused on Halle's first nude
scene every. At the MTV Movie Awards Berry
played up the joke by having her costars John
Travolta and Hugh Jackman take their shirts off.
Monsters Ball
After such critical success with "Introducing
Dorothy Dandridge" the best was only yet to
come. Halle would later garner the most positive
critical notice of her film career in late 2001,
for her performance as Leticia Musgrove the wife
of a death row prisoner who becomes romantically
involved with a racist prison guard Hank
Grotowski in the dark drama "Monster's Ball".
The role earned Halle Berry a Golden Globe
nomination for Best Actress in a Drama and the
Academy Award for Leading Actress. Halle would
later go on to win the Academy Award. In her
emotional acceptance speech, Berry acknowledged
the honor of becoming the first African American
actress to win the Oscar for her lead role by
thanking all the performers who came before her.
Life After Oscar
After winning her Oscar Halle later returned to
the set of her next project, "Die Another Day".
In the blockbuster franchise Berry played Jinx
an NSA agent who joins hands with Bond for
spying on Zao and looking into his ties with
Gustav Graves. The film become the highest
grossing James Bond film of all time before
being surpassed by "Casino Royale" in 2006. Next
up for Halle was the sequel to the much
successful "X-Men" film, "X2". Following "X2"
Halle appeared as Miranda Grey in the
horror-thriller "Gothika" costarring Penelope
Cruz and Robert Downey Jr. After the fall
release of "Gothika" Halle found herself in a
media storm dealing with the separation from her
second husband Eric Benet. That summer Halle
appeared in her first action starring vehicle "Catwoman".
The film was critically panned and didn't fair
to well at the box officen. Halle earned one of
her highest salaries to date for the film a
reported $14 million. In 2005, she took the lead
in the TV adaptation of Zora Neale Hurston's
classic 1937 novel, "Their Eyes Were Watching
God". She also lent her voice for the CGI
cartoon project "Robots". In 2007, she switched
gears for the heart-racing thriller, Perfect
Stranger, co-starring Bruce Willis.
Gabriel Aubry
Halle and Gabriel Aubry met on the set of a
Versace photo shoot In November 2005. Gabriel
Aubry is a French-Canadian supermodel recognized
for his work with Hugo Boss and Calvin Klein.
Aubry is also ten years younger then
Halle. On September 5, 2007 Halle confirmed to
the world that she was three months pregnant
with Gabriel's baby. Halle has publicly stated
that she will never marry again, but proclaims
her new found and much deserved happiness with
Gabriel Aubry. "Gabriel and I are beyond
excited, and I've waited a long time for this
moment in life. Now the next seven months will
be the longest of my life!" Berry wrote in an
e-mail to the TV show “Access Hollywood.” Halle
appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show in September
and spoke of how hard she and Gabriel worked
to get pregnant. "There was a lot of staying
home and doing what you do. Like, all the time,
around the clock,"