Angelina Jolie
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Angelina Jolie[3] (/dʒoʊˈliː/ joh-LEE; born Angelina Jolie Voight,[4] /ˈvɔɪt/, June 4, 1975) is an American actress, filmmaker, and humanitarian. The recipient of numerous accolades, including an Academy Award, a Tony Award and three Golden Globe Awards, she has been named Hollywood's highest-paid actress multiple times.
Key Information
Jolie made her screen debut as a child alongside her father, Jon Voight, in Lookin' to Get Out (1982). Her film career began in earnest a decade later with the low-budget production Cyborg 2 (1993), followed by her first leading role in Hackers (1995). After starring in the television films George Wallace (1997) and Gia (1998), Jolie won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for the 1999 drama Girl, Interrupted. Her portrayal of the titular heroine in Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (2001) established her as a leading lady. Jolie's success continued with roles in the action films Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005), Wanted (2008), and Salt (2010), as well as in the fantasy film Maleficent (2014) and its 2019 sequel. She also had voice roles in the animated films Shark Tale (2004) and Kung Fu Panda franchise (2008–2016), and gained praise for her dramatic performances in A Mighty Heart (2007), Changeling (2008), which earned her a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress, and Maria (2024).
As a filmmaker, Jolie directed and wrote the war dramas In the Land of Blood and Honey (2011), Unbroken (2014), First They Killed My Father (2017) and Without Blood (2024). She also produced the musical The Outsiders (2024), winning the Tony Award for Best Musical.
Jolie is known for her humanitarian efforts. The causes she promotes include conservation, education, and women's rights. She has been noted for her advocacy on behalf of refugees as a Special Envoy for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. She has undertaken field missions to refugee camps and war zones worldwide. In addition to receiving a Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award among other honors, Jolie was made an honorary Dame Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George. As a public figure, Jolie has been cited as one of the most powerful and influential people in the American entertainment industry. She has been cited as the world's most beautiful woman by various publications. Her personal life, including her relationships and health, has been the subject of widespread attention. Jolie is divorced from actors Jonny Lee Miller, Billy Bob Thornton, and Brad Pitt. She has six children with Pitt.
Early life and background
[edit]Angelina Jolie Voight was born on June 4, 1975, at Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles, California, to actors Jon Voight and Marcheline Bertrand.[5][4][6] She is the sister of actor James Haven, and the niece of singer Chip Taylor[7] and geologist and volcanologist Barry Voight.[8] Her godparents are actors Jacqueline Bisset and Maximilian Schell.[9] On her father's side, Jolie is of German and Slovak descent,[10] while on her mother's side, she is of Dutch and French ancestry, and a descendant of Netherlands' former Finance Minister, and Prime Minister Wim Kok.[11][12][13] Jolie has claimed to have distant Indigenous (Iroquois) ancestry through her French-Canadian mother. However, her father says Jolie is "not seriously Iroquois", saying it is something he and Bertrand made up to make Bertrand seem more "exotic".[14]

Following her parents' separation in 1976, she and her brother lived with their mother, who had abandoned her acting ambitions to focus on raising her children.[15] Jolie's mother raised her as a Catholic but did not require her to go to church.[16] As a child, she often watched films with her mother and it was this, rather than her father's successful career, that inspired her interest in acting,[17] though she had a bit part in Voight's Lookin' to Get Out (1982) at age seven.[18] When Jolie was six years old, Bertrand and her live-in partner, filmmaker Bill Day, moved the family to Palisades, New York;[19] they returned to Los Angeles five years later.[15] Jolie then decided she wanted to act and enrolled at the Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute, where she trained for two years and appeared in several stage productions.[20]
Jolie first attended Beverly Hills High School, where she felt isolated among the children of some of the area's affluent families because her mother had a more modest income. She was teased by other students, who targeted her for being extremely thin and for wearing glasses and braces.[17] Her early attempts at modeling, at her mother's insistence, proved unsuccessful.[21][22] She transferred to Moreno High School, an alternative school, where she became a "punk outsider",[21] wearing all-black clothing, going out moshing, and engaging in knife play with her live-in boyfriend.[17] She dropped out of her acting classes and aspired to become a funeral director,[18] taking at-home courses on embalming.[23] At age 16, after the relationship had ended, Jolie graduated from high school and rented her own apartment before returning to theater studies,[15][21] though in 2004 she referred to this period with the observation, "I am still at heart—and always will be—just a punk kid with tattoos."[24]
As a teenager, Jolie found it difficult to emotionally connect with other people, and as a result she self-harmed,[25] later commenting, "For some reason, the ritual of having cut myself and feeling the pain, maybe feeling alive, feeling some kind of release, it was somehow therapeutic to me."[26] She also struggled with insomnia and an eating disorder[23] and began using drugs; by age 20, she had used "just about every drug possible," particularly heroin.[27] Jolie had episodes of depression and planned to commit suicide twice—at age 19 and again at 22, when she attempted to hire a hitman to kill her.[18] When she was 24, she experienced a nervous breakdown and was admitted for 72 hours to UCLA Medical Center's psychiatric ward.[18] Two years later, after adopting her first child, Jolie found stability, later stating, "I knew once I committed to Maddox, I would never be self-destructive again."[28]
Jolie has had a lifelong dysfunctional relationship with her father, which started when Voight left the family when she was less than a year old.[29] She has said that from then on their time together was sporadic and usually carried out in front of the press.[30] They reconciled when they appeared together in Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (2001), but their relationship again deteriorated.[15] Jolie petitioned the court to legally remove her surname, Voight, in favor of her middle name, which she had long used as a stage name; the name change was granted on September 12, 2002.[31] Voight then went public with their estrangement during an appearance on Access Hollywood, in which he claimed Jolie had "serious mental problems."[32] At that point, her mother and brother also broke off contact with him.[33] Jolie and Voight did not speak for six-and-a-half years,[34] eventually rebuilding their relationship in the wake of Bertrand's death from ovarian cancer on January 27, 2007,[33][35] and they both went public with their reconciliation three years later.[33]
Career
[edit]Early work (1991–1997)
[edit]Jolie committed to acting professionally at the age of 16, but initially found it difficult to pass auditions, often being told that her demeanor was "too dark."[18] She appeared in five of her brother's student films, made while he attended the USC School of Cinema-Television, as well as in several music videos, such as those for Lenny Kravitz's "Stand by My Woman" (1991), Antonello Venditti's "Alta Marea" (1991), The Lemonheads's "It's About Time" (1993), and Meat Loaf's "Rock and Roll Dreams Come Through" (1993). In 1993, she also appeared on the cover of the Widespread Panic album Everyday.[36] Jolie then learned from her father by noticing his method of observing people to become like them. Their relationship was less strained during this time, with Jolie realizing that they were both "drama queens".[17]
Jolie started her professional film career in 1993, when she played her first leading role in the direct-to-video science-fiction sequel Cyborg 2, as a near-human robot designed for corporate espionage and assassination. She was so disappointed with the film that she did not audition again for a year.[18] Following a supporting role in the independent film Without Evidence (1995), she starred in her first major studio film, Hackers (1995). The New York Times critic Janet Maslin wrote that Jolie's character "stands out ... because she scowls even more sourly than [her co-stars] and is that rare female hacker who sits intently at her keyboard in a see-through top."[37] Hackers failed to make a profit at the box office, but developed a cult following after its video release.[38] The role in Hackers is considered Jolie's breakthrough.[39][40][41]
After starring in the modern-day Romeo and Juliet adaptation Love Is All There Is (1996), Jolie appeared in the road movie Mojave Moon (1996). In Foxfire (1996) she played Legs, a drifter who unites four teenage girls against a teacher who has sexually harassed them. Jack Mathews of the Los Angeles Times wrote of her performance, "It took a lot of hogwash to develop this character, but Jolie, Jon Voight's knockout daughter, has the presence to overcome the stereotype. Though the story is narrated by Maddy, Legs is the subject and the catalyst."[42]
In 1997, Jolie starred with David Duchovny in the thriller Playing God, set in the Los Angeles underworld. The film was not well received by critics; Chicago Sun-Times critic Roger Ebert wrote that Jolie "finds a certain warmth in a kind of role that is usually hard and aggressive; she seems too nice to be [a mobster's] girlfriend, and maybe she is."[43] Her next work, as a frontierswoman in the CBS miniseries True Women (1997), was even less successful; writing for The Philadelphia Inquirer, Robert Strauss dismissed her as "horrid, a fourth-rate Scarlett O'Hara" who relies on "gnashed teeth and overly pouted lips."[44] Jolie also starred in the music video for the Rolling Stones's "Anybody Seen My Baby?" as a stripper who leaves mid-performance to wander New York City.[45]
Rise to prominence (1998–2000)
[edit]Jolie's career prospects improved after she won a Golden Globe Award for her performance in TNT's George Wallace (1997), a film about segregationist Alabama Governor and presidential candidate George Wallace, played by Gary Sinise. Jolie portrayed Wallace's second wife, Cornelia Wallace, a performance Lee Winfrey of The Philadelphia Inquirer considered a highlight of the film.[46] George Wallace was well received by critics, and Jolie received a nomination for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie for her performance.[47]
Jolie portrayed supermodel Gia Carangi in HBO's Gia (1998). The television film chronicles the destruction of Carangi's life and career as a result of her addiction to heroin, and her decline and death from AIDS in the mid-1980s. Vanessa Vance of Reel.com retrospectively noted, "Jolie gained wide recognition for her role as the titular Gia, and it's easy to see why. Jolie is fierce in her portrayal—filling the part with nerve, charm, and desperation—and her role in this film is quite possibly the most beautiful train wreck ever filmed."[48] For the second consecutive year, Jolie won a Golden Globe Award and received an Emmy Award nomination. She also won her first Screen Actors Guild Award.[49]
In accordance with Lee Strasberg's method acting, Jolie preferred to stay in character in between scenes during many of her early films. While shooting Gia, she told her husband, Jonny Lee Miller, that she would not be able to phone him: "I'd tell him: 'I'm alone; I'm dying; I'm gay; I'm not going to see you for weeks.'"[50] After Gia wrapped, she briefly gave up acting, because she felt that she had "nothing else to give."[18] She separated from Miller and moved to New York, where she took night classes at New York University to study directing and screenwriting.[15] Encouraged by her Golden Globe Award win for George Wallace and the positive critical reception of Gia, Jolie resumed her career.[18]
Following the previously filmed gangster film Hell's Kitchen (1998), Jolie returned to the screen in Playing by Heart (1998), part of an ensemble cast that included Sean Connery, Gillian Anderson, and Ryan Phillippe. The film received predominantly positive reviews, and Jolie was praised in particular; San Francisco Chronicle critic Peter Stack wrote, "Jolie, working through an overwritten part, is a sensation as the desperate club crawler learning truths about what she's willing to gamble."[51] She won the Breakthrough Performance Award from the National Board of Review.[52]
In 1999, Jolie starred in the comedy-drama Pushing Tin, alongside John Cusack, Billy Bob Thornton, and Cate Blanchett. The film met with mixed reception from critics, and Jolie's character—Thornton's seductive wife—was particularly criticized; writing for The Washington Post, Desson Howe dismissed her as "a completely ludicrous writer's creation of a free-spirited woman who weeps over hibiscus plants that die, wears lots of turquoise rings and gets real lonely when Russell spends entire nights away from home."[53] Jolie then co-starred with Denzel Washington in The Bone Collector (1999), playing a police officer who reluctantly helps Washington's quadriplegic detective track down a serial killer. The film grossed $151.5 million worldwide,[54] but was critically unsuccessful. Terry Lawson of the Detroit Free Press concluded, "Jolie, while always delicious to look at, is simply and woefully miscast."[55]
Jolie is emerging as one of the great wild spirits of current movies, a loose cannon who somehow has deadly aim.
Jolie next took the supporting role of Lisa, a sociopathic patient in a psychiatric hospital, in Girl, Interrupted (1999), an adaptation of Susanna Kaysen's 1993 memoir. For Variety, Emanuel Levy deemed her "excellent as the flamboyant, irresponsible girl who turns out to be far more instrumental than the doctors in Susanna's rehabilitation."[57] Jolie won the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture, the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role and the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in the film.
In 2000, Jolie appeared in her first summer blockbuster, Gone in 60 Seconds, which became her highest-grossing film to that point, earning $237.2 million internationally.[54] She had a minor role as the mechanic ex-girlfriend of a car thief played by Nicolas Cage; The Washington Post writer Stephen Hunter criticized that "all she does in this movie is stand around, cooling down, modeling those fleshy, pulsating muscle-tubes that nest so provocatively around her teeth."[58] Jolie later explained that the film had been a welcome relief after her emotionally demanding role in Girl, Interrupted.
Worldwide recognition (2001–2004)
[edit]Although widely praised for her acting and performances, Jolie had rarely found films that appealed to a wide audience, but 2001's Lara Croft: Tomb Raider made her an international superstar. An adaptation of the popular Tomb Raider video games, the film required her to learn an English accent and undergo extensive martial arts training to play the archaeologist-adventurer Lara Croft. Although the film generated mostly negative reviews, Jolie was generally praised for her physical performance; Newsday's John Anderson commented, "Jolie makes the title character a virtual icon of female competence and coolth."[59] The film was an international hit, earning $274.7 million worldwide,[54] and launched her global reputation as a female action star.
Jolie next starred opposite Antonio Banderas as his mail-order bride in Original Sin (2001), the first of a string of films that were poorly received by critics and audiences alike. The New York Times critic Elvis Mitchell questioned Jolie's decision to follow her Oscar-winning performance with "soft-core nonsense."[60] The romantic comedy Life or Something Like It (2002), though equally unsuccessful, marked an unusual choice for Jolie. Salon magazine's Allen Barra considered her ambitious newscaster character a rare attempt at playing a conventional women's role, noting that her performance "doesn't get off the ground until a scene where she goes punk and leads a group of striking bus workers in singing 'Satisfaction'".[61] Despite her lack of box office success, Jolie remained in demand as an actress;[24] in 2002, she established herself among Hollywood's highest-paid actresses, earning $10–15 million per film for the next five years.[62]

Jolie reprised her role as Lara Croft in Lara Croft: Tomb Raider – The Cradle of Life (2003), which was not as lucrative as the original, earning $156.5 million at the international box office.[54] She also starred in the music video for Korn's "Did My Time", which was used to promote the sequel. Her next film was Beyond Borders (2003), in which she portrayed a socialite who joins an aid worker played by Clive Owen. Though unsuccessful with audiences, the film stands as the first of several passion projects Jolie has made to bring attention to humanitarian causes.[63] Beyond Borders was a critical failure; Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times acknowledged Jolie's ability to "bring electricity and believability to roles," but wrote that "the limbo of a hybrid character, a badly written cardboard person in a fly-infested, blood-and-guts world, completely defeats her."[64]
In 2004, Jolie appeared in four films. She first starred in the thriller Taking Lives as an FBI profiler summoned to help Montreal law enforcement hunt down a serial killer. The film received mixed reviews; The Hollywood Reporter critic Kirk Honeycutt concluded, "Jolie plays a role that definitely feels like something she has already done, but she does add an unmistakable dash of excitement and glamour."[65] Jolie made a brief appearance as a fighter pilot in Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow, a science fiction adventure shot entirely with actors in front of a bluescreen, and voiced her first family film, the DreamWorks animation Shark Tale. Her supporting role as Queen Olympias in Oliver Stone's Alexander, about Alexander the Great, was met with mixed reception, particularly concerning her Slavic accent.[61] Commercially, the film failed in North America, which Stone attributed to disapproval of the depiction of Alexander's bisexuality,[66] but it succeeded internationally, grossing $167.3 million.[54]
Established actress (2005–2010)
[edit]In 2005, Jolie returned to major box office success with the action-comedy Mr. & Mrs. Smith, in which she starred opposite Brad Pitt as a bored married couple who find out that they are both secret assassins. The film received mixed reviews, but was generally lauded for the chemistry between the two leads; Star Tribune critic Colin Covert noted, "While the story feels haphazard, the movie gets by on gregarious charm, galloping energy and the stars' thermonuclear screen chemistry."[67] With box office takings of $478.2 million worldwide, Mr. & Mrs. Smith was the seventh-highest grossing picture of the year and remained Jolie's highest-grossing live-action film for the next decade.[54][68]
Following a supporting role as the neglected wife of a CIA officer in Robert De Niro's The Good Shepherd (2006), Jolie starred as Mariane Pearl in the documentary-style drama A Mighty Heart (2007). Based on Pearl's 2003 memoir, the film chronicles the kidnapping and murder of her husband, The Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl, in Pakistan. Although the multiracial Pearl had personally chosen Jolie for the role,[69] the casting drew racial criticism and accusations of blackface.[70] The resulting performance was widely praised; Ray Bennett of The Hollywood Reporter described it as "well-measured and moving," played "with respect and a firm grasp on a difficult accent."[71] She received nominations for the Golden Globe Award and the Screen Actors Guild Award. Jolie also played Grendel's mother in the epic Beowulf (2007), created through motion capture. The film was critically and commercially well-received, earning $196.4 million worldwide.[54]
In 2008, Jolie was the highest-paid actress, earning $15–$20 million per film.[72][73] While other actresses had taken salary cuts during the time, Jolie's perceived box office appeal allowed her to command as much as $20 million plus a percentage.[74] She starred alongside James McAvoy and Morgan Freeman in the action film Wanted (2008), which proved an international success, earning $341.4 million worldwide.[54] The film received predominantly favorable reviews; writing for The New York Times, Manohla Dargis noted that Jolie was "perfectly cast as a super-scary, seemingly amoral assassin," adding that "she cuts the kind of disciplinarian figure who can bring boys of all ages to their knees or at least into their theater seats."[75]

Jolie next took the lead role in Clint Eastwood's drama Changeling (2008).[76] Chicago Tribune critic Michael Phillips noted, "Jolie really shines in the calm before the storm, the scenes when one patronizing male authority figure after another belittles her at their peril."[77] She received nominations for a Golden Globe Award, a Screen Actors Guild Award, the BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role, and the Academy Award for Best Actress.[78][79][80][81] Jolie also voiced Tigress in the DreamWorks Kung Fu Panda film series.[82]
After her mother's death in 2007, Jolie appeared in fewer films, later explaining that her motivation to be an actress had stemmed from her mother's acting ambitions.[83] Her first film in two years was the 2010 thriller Salt, in which she starred as a CIA agent who goes on the run after she is accused of being a KGB sleeper agent. Originally written as a male character with Tom Cruise attached to star, agent Salt underwent a gender change after a Columbia Pictures executive suggested Jolie for the role. With revenues of $293.5 million, Salt became an international success.[54] The film received generally positive reviews, with Jolie's performance in particular earning praise.[84] Empire critic William Thomas remarked, "When it comes to selling incredible, crazy, death-defying antics, Jolie has few peers in the action business."[85]
Jolie starred opposite Johnny Depp in the thriller The Tourist (2010). The film was a critical failure.[86] Roger Ebert defended Jolie's performance, stating that she "does her darndest" and "plays her femme fatale with flat-out, drop-dead sexuality."[87] Despite commercially underperforming in the US, the film succeeded at the international box office,[88] cementing Jolie's appeal to international audiences.[89] She received a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Comedy or Musical nomination for her performance, which prompted speculation that it had been given merely to ensure her high-profile presence at the awards ceremony.[78][90]
Expansion to directing (2011–2017)
[edit]
After directing the documentary A Place in Time (2007), which was distributed through the National Education Association,[91] Jolie made her feature directorial debut with In the Land of Blood and Honey (2011), a love story between a Serb soldier and a Bosniak prisoner, set during the 1992–95 Bosnian War. She conceived the film to rekindle attention for the survivors, after twice visiting Bosnia and Herzegovina in her role as a UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador.[92] To ensure authenticity, she cast only actors from the former Yugoslavia—including stars Goran Kostić and Zana Marjanović—and incorporated their wartime experiences into her screenplay.[93] Upon release, the film received mixed reviews; Todd McCarthy of The Hollywood Reporter wrote, "Jolie deserves significant credit for creating such a powerfully oppressive atmosphere and staging the ghastly events so credibly, even if it is these very strengths that will make people not want to watch what's onscreen."[94] The film was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film, and Jolie was named an honorary citizen of Sarajevo for raising awareness of the war.[95]
After a three-and-a-half-year absence from the screen, Jolie starred in Maleficent (2014), a live-action re-imagining of Disney's 1959 animation Sleeping Beauty. Critical reception was mixed, but Jolie's performance in the titular role was singled out for praise;[96] The Hollywood Reporter critic Sherri Linden found her to be the "heart and soul" of the film, adding that she "doesn't chew the estimable scenery in Maleficent—she infuses it, wielding a magnetic and effortless power."[97] In its opening weekend, Maleficent earned nearly $70 million at the North American box office and over $100 million in other markets, marking Jolie's appeal to audiences of all demographics in both action and fantasy films, genres usually dominated by male actors.[98] The film went on to gross $757.8 million worldwide, becoming the fourth-highest-grossing film of the year and Jolie's highest-grossing film ever.[54][99]
Jolie next completed her second directorial venture, Unbroken (2014), a film about Louis Zamperini (1917–2014), a former Olympic track star and World War II soldier who survived a plane crash and spent two years in a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp. She also served as producer under her Jolie Pas banner.[100] Based on Laura Hillenbrand's book Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption, the film was scripted by the Coen brothers and starred Jack O'Connell.[101] After a positive early reception, Unbroken was considered a likely Best Picture and Best Director contender,[101][102] but it ultimately received mixed reviews and little award recognition,[103] though it was named one of the best films of the year by the National Board of Review and the American Film Institute.[104][105] Variety magazine's Justin Chang noted the film's "impeccable craftsmanship and sober restraint", but deemed it "an extraordinary story told in dutiful, unexceptional terms."[103][106] Financially, Unbroken was successful at the box office worldwide.[107]

Jolie's next directorial effort was the marital drama By the Sea (2015), in which she starred opposite her husband, Brad Pitt, marking their first collaboration since 2005's Mr. & Mrs. Smith. Based on her screenplay, the film was a deeply personal project for Jolie, who drew inspiration from her own mother's life. Critics, however, dismissed it as a "vanity project", as part of an overall poor reception.[108][109] Writing for The Washington Post, Stephanie Merry noted its dearth of genuine emotion, stating, "By the Sea is dazzlingly gorgeous, as are its stars. But peeling back layer upon layer of exquisite ennui reveals nothing but emptiness, sprinkled with stilted sentiments."[110] Despite starring two of Hollywood's leading actors, the film received only a limited release.[108]
As Jolie preferred to dedicate herself to her humanitarian work, her cinematic output remained infrequent. First They Killed My Father (2017), a drama set during Cambodia's Khmer Rouge era, again enabled her to combine both interests. In addition to directing the film, she co-wrote the screenplay with her longtime friend Loung Ung, whose memoirs about the regime's child labor camps served as its source material. Intended primarily for a Cambodian audience, the film was produced directly for Netflix, which allowed for the use of an exclusively Khmer cast and script.[111] Labeling Jolie as a "skilled and sensitive filmmaker", Rafer Guzmán of Newsday commended her for "convincingly depict[ing] the illogical hell of the Khmer Rouge era".[112] It received nominations for the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film and BAFTA Award for Best Film Not in the English Language.[113][114]
Limited work and varying critical reception (2019–present)
[edit]
Jolie reprised the role of Maleficent in the Disney fantasy sequel Maleficent: Mistress of Evil (2019), which received mixed reviews from critics but performed moderately well commercially, with a global gross of $490 million.[115][116][117] The following year, she appeared alongside David Oyelowo as grieving parents to the title characters of Alice in Wonderland and Peter Pan in the fantasy film Come Away.[118] Jolie starred as a smokejumper in Taylor Sheridan's action thriller Those Who Wish Me Dead. The film was released in May 2021, garnering moderate reviews.[119][120] The Independent's Clarisse Loughrey wrote Jolie's "bare-knuckled performance ... easily outclasses the film that contains it".[121] Jolie next played Thena, a warrior with post-traumatic stress disorder, in the Marvel Cinematic Universe superhero film Eternals. Released in November 2021, the film generated divergent responses from audiences and critics.[122][123] Reviewing the film for The Washington Post, Ann Hornaday highlighted the "touching naivete" in Jolie's portrayal.[124]
Jolie was a producer on the musical The Outsiders after it transferred to Broadway in 2024,[125] and won the Tony Award for Best Musical.[126] She wrote, produced and directed the 2024 war drama Without Blood, based on the novel by Alessandro Baricco, starring Salma Hayek and Demián Bichir.[127] Jolie also starred in Pablo Larraín's biographical film about the final days of opera singer Maria Callas, titled Maria, which premiered at the 81st Venice International Film Festival.[128] Terming it a "career-best performance", Tomris Laffly of RogerEbert.com opined, "In a queenly performance of poise and mystique, Angelina Jolie plays Callas with an ethereal presence, grasping the intense grief of the once-in-a-generation singer who's been losing her voice."[129] She received another Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress for her performance.[130]
Humanitarian work
[edit]UNHCR ambassadorship
[edit]We cannot close ourselves off to information and ignore the fact that millions of people are out there suffering. I honestly want to help. I don't believe I feel differently from other people. I think we all want justice and equality, a chance for a life with meaning. All of us would like to believe that if we were in a bad situation someone would help us.
Jolie first witnessed the effects of a humanitarian crisis while filming Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (2001) in war-torn Cambodia, an experience she later credited with having brought her a greater understanding of the world.[132] Upon her return home, Jolie contacted the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) for information on international trouble spots.[131] To learn more about the conditions in these areas, she began visiting refugee camps around the world.[24] In February 2001, she went on her first field visit, an 18-day mission to Sierra Leone and Tanzania; she later expressed her shock at what she had witnessed.[131]
In the following months, Jolie returned to Cambodia for two weeks and met with Afghan refugees in Pakistan, where she donated $1 million in response to an international UNHCR emergency appeal,[133][134] the largest donation UNHCR had ever received from a private individual.[135] She covered all costs related to her missions and shared the same rudimentary working and living conditions as UNHCR field staff on all of her visits.[131] Jolie was named a UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador at UNHCR headquarters in Geneva on August 27, 2001.[136]

Over the next decade, she went on more than 40 field missions, meeting with refugees and internally displaced persons in over 30 countries.[137] In 2002, when asked what she hoped to accomplish, she stated, "Awareness of the plight of these people. I think they should be commended for what they have survived, not looked down upon."[133] To that end, her 2001–02 field visits were chronicled in her book Notes from My Travels, which was published in October 2003 in conjunction with the release of her humanitarian drama Beyond Borders.
Jolie aimed to visit what she termed "forgotten emergencies", crises that media attention had shifted away from.[138] She became noted for traveling to war zones,[139] such as Sudan's Darfur region during the Darfur conflict,[140] the Syrian-Iraqi border during the Second Gulf War,[141] where she met privately with U.S. troops and other multi-national forces,[142] and the Afghan capital Kabul during the war in Afghanistan, where three aid workers were murdered in the midst of her first visit.[139] To aid her travels, she started to take flying lessons in 2004 with the aim of ferrying aid workers and food supplies around the world. Jolie acquired a pilot license in 2004; as of May 2014, she owns a Cirrus SR22 aircraft and a Cessna 208 Caravan aircraft.[143][144]
On April 17, 2012, after more than a decade of service as a UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador, Jolie was promoted to the rank of Special Envoy to High Commissioner António Guterres, the first to take on such a position within the organization. In her expanded role, she was given authority to represent Guterres and UNHCR at the diplomatic level, with a focus on major refugee crises.[145] In the months following her promotion, she made her first visit as Special Envoy—her third over all—to Ecuador, where she met with Colombian refugees,[146] and she accompanied Guterres on a week-long tour of Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey, and Iraq, to assess the situation of refugees from neighboring Syria.[147] Since then, Jolie has been on over a dozen field missions around the world to meet with refugees and undertake advocacy on their behalf.[137][148]
Jolie resigned from the ambassadorship in December 2022.[149] In her announcement, she pledged to continue to advocate for refugees.[150]
Conservation and community development
[edit]
In an effort to connect her Cambodian-born adopted son with his heritage, Jolie purchased a house in his country of birth in 2003. The traditional home sat on 39 hectares in the northwestern province Battambang, adjacent to Samlout national park in the Cardamom Mountains, which had become infiltrated with poachers who threatened endangered species. She purchased the park's 60,000 hectares and turned the area into a wildlife reserve named for her son, the Maddox Jolie Project.[151]
In November 2006, Jolie expanded the scope of the project—renamed the Maddox Jolie-Pitt Foundation (MJP)—to create Asia's first Millennium Village, in accordance with UN development goals.[152] She was inspired by a meeting with the founder of Millennium Promise, noted economist Jeffrey Sachs, at the World Economic Forum in Davos,[151] where she was an invited speaker in 2005 and 2006. Together they filmed a 2005 MTV special, The Diary of Angelina Jolie & Dr. Jeffrey Sachs in Africa, which followed them on a trip to a Millennium Village in western Kenya. By mid-2007, some 6,000 villagers and 72 employees—some of them former poachers employed as rangers—lived and worked at MJP, in ten villages previously isolated from one another. The compound includes schools, roads, and a soy milk factory, all funded by Jolie. Her home functions as the MJP field headquarters.[151]
After filming Beyond Borders (2003) in Namibia, Jolie became patron of the Harnas Wildlife Foundation, a wildlife orphanage and medical center in the Kalahari Desert. She first visited the Harnas farm during production of the film, which features vultures rescued by the foundation.[153] In December 2010, Jolie and her partner, Brad Pitt, established the Shiloh Jolie-Pitt Foundation to support conservation work by the Naankuse Wildlife Sanctuary, a nature reserve also located in the Kalahari.[154] In name of their Namibian-born daughter, they have funded large-animal conservation projects as well as a free health clinic, housing, and a school for the San Bushmen community at Naankuse.[155][156][157] Jolie and Pitt support other causes through the Jolie-Pitt Foundation, established in September 2006.[158]
Child immigration and education
[edit]Jolie has pushed for legislation to aid child immigrants and other vulnerable children in both the U.S. and developing nations, including the "Unaccompanied Alien Child Protection Act of 2005."[136][159] She lobbied for humanitarian interests in the U.S. capital from 2003 onwards, explaining, "As much as I would love to never have to visit Washington, that's the way to move the ball."[136] Since October 2008, she has co-chaired Kids in Need of Defense (KIND), a network of leading U.S. law firms that provide free legal aid to unaccompanied minors in immigration proceedings across the U.S.[160] Founded in a collaboration between Jolie and the Microsoft Corporation, by 2013, KIND had become the principal provider of pro bono lawyers for immigrant children.[161] Jolie had previously, from 2005 to 2007, funded the launch of a similar initiative, the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants' National Center for Refugee and Immigrant Children.[159][162]

Jolie has also advocated for children's education. Since its founding at the Clinton Global Initiative's annual meeting in September 2007, she has co-chaired the Education Partnership for Children of Conflict, which provides policy and funding to education programs for children in conflict-affected regions.[163] In its first year, the partnership supported education projects for Iraqi refugee children, youth affected by the Darfur conflict, and girls in rural Afghanistan, among other affected groups.[163] The partnership has worked closely with the Council on Foreign Relations' Center for Universal Education—founded by the partnership's co-chair, noted economist Gene Sperling—to establish education policies, which resulted in recommendations made to UN agencies, G8 development agencies, and the World Bank.[164] Since April 2013, all proceeds from Jolie's high-end jewelry collection, Style of Jolie, have benefited the partnership's work.[165] Jolie additionally launched the Malala Fund, a grant system established by Pakistani education activist Malala Yousafzai, at the 2013 Women in the World Summit;[166] she personally contributed over $200,000 to the cause.[167]
Jolie has funded a school and boarding facility for girls at Kakuma refugee camp in northwestern Kenya,[168] which opened in 2005,[169] and two primary schools for girls in the returnee settlements Tangi and Qalai Gudar in eastern Afghanistan, which opened in March 2010 and November 2012 respectively.[170][171] In addition to the facilities at the Millennium Village she established in Cambodia, Jolie had built at least ten other schools in the country by 2005.[172] In February 2006, she opened the Maddox Chivan Children's Center, a medical and educational facility for children affected by HIV, in the Cambodian capital Phnom Penh.[152] In Sebeta, Ethiopia, the birthplace of her eldest daughter, she funds a sister facility, the Zahara Children's Center, which treats and educates children who have HIV or tuberculosis. Both centers are run by the Global Health Committee.[173][174]
Jolie is the executive producer of the BBC program My World which aims to teach teenagers how to think critically about what they read and how to tell high-quality journalism from bad.[175] She and Amnesty International released a children's rights book titled Know Your Rights and Claim Them on September 2, 2021. She co-authored the book with British human rights lawyer Geraldine Van Bueren.[176]
Human rights and women's rights
[edit]
After Jolie joined the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) in June 2007,[177] she hosted a symposium on international law and justice at CFR headquarters and funded several CFR special reports, including "Intervention to Stop Genocide and Mass Atrocities."[148][160] In January 2011, she established the Jolie Legal Fellowship,[178] a network of lawyers and attorneys who are sponsored to advocate the development of human rights in their countries.[179] Its member attorneys, called Jolie Legal Fellows, have facilitated child protection efforts in Haiti in the wake of the 2010 earthquake and promoted the development of an inclusive democratic process in Libya following the 2011 revolution.[178][179][180]
Jolie has fronted a campaign against sexual violence in military conflict zones by the UK government, which made the issue a priority of its 2013 G8 presidency. In May 2012, she launched the Preventing Sexual Violence Initiative (PSVI) with Foreign Secretary William Hague,[181] who was inspired to campaign on the issue by her Bosnian war drama In the Land of Blood and Honey (2011).[182] PSVI was established to complement wider UK government work by raising awareness and promoting international co-operation.[181] Jolie spoke on the subject at the G8 foreign ministers meeting,[183] where the attending nations adopted a historic declaration,[181] and before the UN security council, which responded by adopting its broadest resolution on the issue to date.[184] In June 2014, she co-chaired the four-day Global Summit to End Sexual Violence in Conflict, the largest-ever meeting on the subject,[185] which resulted in a protocol endorsed by 151 nations.[186]
Through her work on the PSVI, Jolie met foreign policy experts Chloe Dalton and Arminka Helic, who served as special advisers to Hague. Their collaboration resulted in the 2015 founding of Jolie Pitt Dalton Helic, a partnership dedicated to women's rights and international justice, among other causes.[187] In May 2016, Jolie was appointed a visiting professor at the London School of Economics to contribute to a postgraduate degree program at the university's Centre on Women, Peace and Security,[188] which she had launched with Hague the previous year.[186] In February 2022, Jolie with her daughter Zahara visited Washington, D.C. for the Senate introduction of the Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act, a bill designed to prevent and respond to domestic violence, sexual assault, dating violence, and stalking.[189] She worked closely with the bill's sponsors and advocates.[189] She's also an advocate for Kayden's Law, a law focuses on trauma-informed court processes, legal standards and judicial training that minimizes the risk of harm to children.[190] Jolie is an advocate for the passage of the Justice for All Reauthorization Act of 2022, a law created to improve crime victims' right to evidence and agency reports, forensic science, end the rape kit backlog, and address racial disparities in wrongful convictions in America's criminal legal system.[191]
In September 2020, Jolie made a donation to two young boys who were running a lemonade stand in London to raise money for the people of Yemen, as the country was on the brink of humanitarian crisis caused by the Saudi-led coalition and Houthi rebels.[192] In March 2022, a month into the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Jolie visited Ukrainian children at the Vatican Children's Hospital Bambino Gesù. According to the clinic, Jolie commented, "I am praying for an end to the war. This is the only way to end the suffering and the flight from the conflict zone. It's terrifying to see children paying the price in lost lives, compromised health and trauma."[193] In May 2022, Jolie visited Lviv, Ukraine to meet with more displaced and hospitalized children.[194][195]
In 2023, Jolie voiced strong criticism of Israel for its military actions in Gaza during the 2023 Israel-Hamas war. In a statement posted on Instagram, Jolie condemned what she described as "the deliberate bombing of a trapped population" in the densely populated Palestinian enclave. She accused global leaders of "complicity in these crimes" for their silence and demanded a humanitarian ceasefire.[196][197]
Recognition and honors
[edit]
Jolie has received wide recognition for her humanitarian work. In August 2002, she received the inaugural Humanitarian Award from the Church World Service's Immigration and Refugee Program,[198] and in October 2003, she was the first recipient of the Citizen of the World Award by the United Nations Correspondents Association.[199] She was awarded the Global Humanitarian Award by the UNA-USA in October 2005,[200] and she received the Freedom Award from the International Rescue Committee in November 2007.[201] In October 2011, UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres presented Jolie with a gold pin reserved for the most long-serving staff, in recognition of her decade as a UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador.[202]
In November 2013, Jolie received the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award, an honorary Academy Award, from the Board of Governors of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.[203][204] In June 2014, she was appointed an Honorary Dame Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George (DCMG) for her services to the UK's foreign policy and campaigning to end sexual violence in war zones.[205][206] Queen Elizabeth II presented Jolie with the insignia of her honorary damehood during a private ceremony the following October.[207]
Personal life
[edit]Relationships and marriages
[edit]Jolie had a serious boyfriend for two years from the age of 14. Her mother allowed them to live together in her home, of which Jolie later said,
I was either going to be reckless on the streets with my boyfriend or he was going to be with me in my bedroom with my mom in the next room. She made the choice, and because of it, I continued to go to school every morning and explored my first relationship in a safe way.[208]
She has compared the relationship to a marriage in its emotional intensity, and said that the breakup compelled her to dedicate herself to her acting career at age 16.[209]
During filming of Hackers (1995), Jolie had a romance with actor Jonny Lee Miller, her first lover since the relationship in her early teens.[18] They were not in touch for months after production ended, but eventually reconnected and married soon after in March 1996. She attended her wedding in black rubber pants and a white T-shirt, upon which she had written the groom's name in her blood.[210] The relationship ended the following year, with Jolie saying her busy work schedule kept them apart too often.[211] Jolie remained on good terms with Miller, whom she called "a solid man and a solid friend".[23] Their divorce, initiated by Jolie in February 1999, was finalized shortly before she remarried the next year.[212][213]
Prior to her marriage to Miller, Jolie began a relationship with model and actress Jenny Shimizu on the set of Foxfire (1996). In 1997, she said, "I would probably have married Jenny if I hadn't married my husband. I fell in love with her the first second I saw her."[214] According to Shimizu, their relationship lasted several years and continued even while Jolie was romantically involved with other people.[215] In a 1997 interview with the lesbian magazine Girlfriends, she was asked how she felt about being a sex symbol to both men and women; she responded "It's great because I love men and women."[214] In 2003, when asked if she was bisexual, Jolie answered, "Of course. If I fell in love with a woman tomorrow, would I feel that it's okay to want to kiss and touch her? If I fell in love with her? Absolutely! Yes!"[216]

After a two-month courtship, Jolie married actor Billy Bob Thornton on May 5, 2000, in Las Vegas. They had met on the set of Pushing Tin (1999) but did not pursue a relationship at that time, as Thornton was engaged to actress Laura Dern, while Jolie was reportedly dating actor Timothy Hutton, her co-star in Playing God (1997).[213] As a result of their frequent public declarations of passion and gestures of love—most famously wearing one another's blood in vials around their necks—their marriage became a favorite topic of the entertainment media.[217] Jolie and Thornton announced the adoption of a child from Cambodia in March 2002 but abruptly separated three months later.[218] Thornton filed for divorce, saying their lifestyles were too different.[219] Their divorce was finalized on May 27, 2003. When asked about the sudden dissolution of their marriage, Jolie stated, "It took me by surprise, too, because overnight, we totally changed. I think one day we had just nothing in common. And it's scary but ... I think it can happen when you get involved and you don't know yourself yet."[24]
Jolie was involved in a prominent scandal when she was accused of causing the divorce of actors Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston in October 2005 (who had been living apart since January 2005).[220] She said she fell in love with Pitt during the filming of Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005), but dismissed allegations of an affair,[221] saying, "To be intimate with a married man, when my own father cheated on my mother, is not something I could forgive. I could not look at myself in the morning if I did that. I wouldn't be attracted to a man who would cheat on his wife."[216] Neither Jolie nor Pitt would publicly comment on the nature of their relationship until January 2006, when she confirmed they were expecting their first child together.[222]
During their 12-year relationship, the couple were dubbed "Brangelina"—a portmanteau coined by the media—and were the subject of worldwide media coverage.[223] They became known as one of Hollywood's most glamorous couples.[224] Their family grew to include six children, three of whom were adopted, before they announced their engagement in April 2012.[225] Jolie and Pitt were legally married on August 14, 2014, and had their wedding in a private ceremony at the Château Miraval, France on August 23, 2014.[226] She subsequently took the name "Angelina Jolie Pitt".[1] After two years of marriage, the couple separated on September 15, 2016. On September 19, Jolie filed for divorce citing irreconcilable differences.[227] They were declared legally single on April 12, 2019.[228] After Pitt sued Jolie for selling her share of a winery they owned to a third party, she filed a countersuit, in which she alleged that he physically and verbally abused her and their children on a plane in 2016.[229]
Children
[edit]Jolie has six children: three were adopted internationally, while three are biological.
On March 10, 2002, Jolie adopted her first child,[230] seven-month-old Maddox Chivan,[31] from an orphanage in Battambang, Cambodia.[231] He was born on August 5, 2001,[232] in a local village.[23] After twice visiting Cambodia, while filming Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (2001) and on a UNHCR field mission, Jolie returned in November 2001 with her then-husband, Billy Bob Thornton, where they met and subsequently applied to adopt Maddox.[233] The adoption process was halted the following month when the U.S. government banned adoptions from Cambodia amid allegations of child trafficking.[233] Although Jolie's adoption facilitator was later convicted of visa fraud and money laundering, her adoption of Maddox was deemed lawful.[234] Once the process was finalized, she took custody of Maddox in Namibia, where she was filming Beyond Borders (2003).[233] Jolie and Thornton announced the adoption together, but she adopted Maddox alone,[218][235] becoming a single parent following her separation from Thornton three months later.[218][236]
Jolie adopted her second child, six-month-old Zahara Marley, from an orphanage in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on July 6, 2005.[237][238] Zahara was born on January 8, 2005, in Awasa.[239][240] Jolie initially believed Zahara to be an AIDS orphan,[241] based on official testimony from her grandmother,[242] but Zahara's birth mother later came forward in the media. She explained that she had abandoned her family when Zahara became sick, and said she thought Zahara was "very fortunate" to have been adopted by Jolie.[239] Jolie was accompanied by her then-partner, Brad Pitt, when she traveled to Ethiopia to take custody of Zahara.[237] She later indicated that they had together made the decision to adopt from Ethiopia,[243] having first visited the country earlier that year.[244] After Pitt announced his intention to adopt her children,[245] she filed a petition to legally change their surname from Jolie to Jolie-Pitt, which was granted on January 19, 2006.[240] Pitt adopted Maddox and Zahara soon after.[246]

In an attempt to avoid the unprecedented media frenzy surrounding their relationship, Jolie and Pitt traveled to Namibia for the birth of their first biological child.[223] On May 27, 2006, she gave birth to Shiloh Nouvel, in Swakopmund.[247] Shiloh's middle name is homage to French architect Jean Nouvel.[248] During labor, Jolie had fits of hysteric laughter due to the administration of morphine.[249] They sold the first pictures of Shiloh through the distributor Getty Images with the aim of benefiting charity, rather than allowing paparazzi to take the photographs.[246] People and Hello! magazines purchased the North American and British rights to the images for $4.1 and $3.5 million, respectively, a record in celebrity photojournalism at that time,[250] with all proceeds donated to UNICEF.[251]
On March 15, 2007, Jolie adopted her fourth child, three-year-old Pax Thien, from an orphanage in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.[252] Pax had been born on November 29, 2003, in HCMC, and had been abandoned soon after birth.[253] After visiting the orphanage with Pitt in November 2006, Jolie applied for adoption as a single parent, because Vietnam's adoption regulations did not allow unmarried couples to co-adopt.[252] After their return to the United States, she petitioned the court to change Pax Thien's surname from Jolie to Jolie-Pitt, which was approved on May 31.[254] Pitt subsequently adopted Pax on February 21, 2008.[255]
At the 2008 Cannes Film Festival, Jolie confirmed that she was expecting twins. During the two weeks she spent in a seaside hospital in Nice, France, reporters and photographers camped on the promenade outside it.[256] She gave birth in July 2008 to Knox Léon Jolie-Pitt and Vivienne Marcheline Jolie-Pitt. They were born in Nice, France. The first pictures of the twins were jointly sold to People and Hello! for a reported $14 million—the most expensive celebrity photographs ever taken. All proceeds were donated to the Jolie-Pitt Foundation.[257]
Cambodian nationality
[edit]In 2004, then-Prime Minister Hun Sen offered the American actress Cambodian nationality due to her humanitarian work in the country.[258] Cambodia holds special significance for Jolie as the birthplace of her adopted son,[259] Maddox Chivan.[260] In 2005, the citizenship process was completed when King Norodom Sihamoni granted Jolie Cambodian citizenship through a royal decree.[2]
Cancer prevention treatment
[edit]On February 16, 2013, at age 37, Jolie underwent a preventive double mastectomy after learning she had an 87% risk of developing breast cancer due to a defective BRCA1 gene.[261] Her maternal family history warranted genetic testing for BRCA mutations: her mother had breast cancer and died of ovarian cancer, while her grandmother died of ovarian cancer.[262][263] Her aunt, who had the same BRCA1 defect, died of breast cancer three months after Jolie's operation.[264] Following the mastectomy, which lowered her chances of developing breast cancer to under five percent, Jolie had reconstructive surgery involving implants and allografts (transplantations from a donor).[262] Two years later, in March 2015, after annual test results indicated possible signs of early ovarian cancer, she underwent a preventive salpingo-oophorectomy (removal of an ovary and its fallopian tube), as she had a fifty percent risk of developing ovarian cancer due to the same genetic anomaly. Despite hormone replacement therapy, the surgery brought on premature menopause.[263]
I choose not to keep my story private because there are many women who do not know that they might be living under the shadow of cancer. It is my hope that they, too, will be able to get gene tested, and that if they have a high risk they, too, will know that they have strong options.
After completing each operation, Jolie discussed her mastectomy and oophorectomy in op-eds published by The New York Times, with the aim of helping other women make informed health choices. She detailed her diagnosis, surgeries, and personal experiences, and described her decision to undergo preventive surgery as a proactive measure for the sake of her six children.[261][263][265] Jolie further wrote: "On a personal note, I do not feel any less of a woman. I feel empowered that I made a strong choice that in no way diminishes my femininity."[261]
Jolie's announcement of her mastectomy attracted widespread publicity and discussion on BRCA mutations and genetic testing.[266] Her decision was met with praise from various public figures,[267] while health campaigners welcomed her raising awareness of the options available to at-risk women.[268] Dubbed "The Angelina Effect" by a Time cover story,[269] Jolie's influence led to a "global and long-lasting" increase in BRCA gene testing:[270] the number of referrals tripled in Australia and doubled in the United Kingdom, parts of Canada, and India,[270][271][272] as well as significantly increased in other European countries and the United States.[273][274][275] Researchers in Canada and the United Kingdom found that despite the large increase, the percentage of mutation carriers remained the same, meaning Jolie's message had reached those most at risk.[270] In her first op-ed, Jolie had advocated for wider accessibility of BRCA gene testing and acknowledged the high costs,[276] which were greatly reduced after a 2013 U.S. Supreme Court ruling invalidated BRCA gene patents held by Myriad Genetics.[277][278]
Reception
[edit]Public image
[edit]
As the daughter of actor Jon Voight, Jolie appeared in the media from an early age.[30] Early in her own career, she earned a reputation as a "wild child", which contributed to her success in the late 1990s and early 2000s.[279] Celebrity profiles routinely covered her fascination with blood and knives, experiences with drugs, and her sex life, particularly her bisexuality and interest in sadomasochism.[279][280] In 2000, when asked about her outspokenness, she stated: "I say things that other people might go through. That's what artists should do—throw things out there and not be perfect and not have answers for anything and see if people understand."[280] Another contributing factor to her controversial image were tabloid rumors of incest that emerged when Jolie, upon winning her Oscar for Girl, Interrupted, kissed her brother on the lips and said, "I'm so in love with my brother right now."[18] She dismissed the rumors, saying, "It was disappointing that something so beautiful and pure could be turned into a circus,"[281] and explained that, as children of divorced parents, she and James relied on one another for emotional support.[18]
Jolie's reputation started to change positively after she, at age 26, became a Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, later commenting, "In my early 20s I was fighting with myself. Now I take that punk in me to Washington, and I fight for something important."[136] Owing to her extensive activism, her Q Score—a marketing industry measure of celebrities' likability—nearly doubled to 25 between 2000 and 2006.[136] Her recognizability grew accordingly; by 2006, she was familiar to 81% of Americans, compared to 31% in 2000.[136] She became noted for her ability to positively influence her public image through the media, without employing a publicist or an agent.[282] Her Q Score remained above average even when, in 2005, she was accused of ending Brad Pitt's marriage to Jennifer Aniston,[283] at which point her public persona became an unlikely combination of alleged homewrecker, mother, sex symbol, and humanitarian.[284] Jolie was found to be the most admired woman in the world in global surveys conducted by YouGov in 2015 and 2016.[285][286]
Jolie's general influence and wealth are extensively documented. In a 2006 global industry survey by ACNielsen in 42 international markets, Jolie, together with Pitt, was found to be the favorite celebrity endorser for brands and products worldwide.[287] Jolie was the face of St. John and Shiseido from 2006 to 2008, and a decade later became a spokesmodel for Guerlain. Her 2011 endorsement deal with Louis Vuitton, reportedly worth $10 million, was a record for a single advertising campaign.[288][289] Jolie was among the Time 100, a list of the most influential people in the world as published by Time, in 2006 and 2008.[290][291] She was named the world's most powerful celebrity in Forbes's Celebrity 100 issue in 2009, and, though ranked lower overall, was listed as the most powerful actress from 2006 to 2008 and 2011 to 2013.[292][293][294][295][296][297][298] Forbes additionally cited her as Hollywood's highest-paid actress in 2009, 2011, and 2013, with estimated annual earnings of $27 million, $30 million, and $33 million respectively.[89][299][300]
Appearance
[edit]
Jolie's public image is strongly tied to her noted beauty and sex appeal.[301] Many media outlets, including Vogue, People, and Vanity Fair, have cited her as the world's most beautiful woman, while others such as Esquire, FHM, and Empire have named her the sexiest woman alive; both titles have often been based on public polls in which Jolie places far ahead of other celebrity women.[302] Her most recognizable physical features are her many tattoos, eyes, and in particular her full lips, which The New York Times considered as defining a feature as Kirk Douglas' chin or Bette Davis' eyes.[303] Among her estimated 20 tattoos are the Latin proverb quod me nutrit me destruit ("what nourishes me destroys me"), the quote "A prayer for the wild at heart, kept in cages" (from Stairs to the Roof by Tennessee Williams), four Buddhist Sanskrit prayers of protection,[304][305] a 12-inch tiger, and geographical coordinates of where she first met her adopted children.[306] Over time, she has covered or lasered several of her tattoos, including "Billy Bob", the name of her second husband.[304]
Professionally, Jolie's status as a sex symbol has been considered both an asset and a hindrance. Some of her most commercially successful films, including Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (2001) and Beowulf (2007), overtly relied at least in part on her sex appeal,[307][308] with Empire stating that her "pneumatic figure", "feline eyes", and "bee-stung lips" have greatly contributed to her appeal to audiences.[309] Conversely, Salon writer Allen Barra agreed with critics who suggested that Jolie's "dark and intense sexuality" has limited her in the types of roles she can be cast in, thus rendering her unconvincing in many conventional women's roles,[61] while Clint Eastwood, who directed her Oscar-nominated performance in Changeling (2008), opined that having "the most beautiful face on the planet" sometimes harmed her dramatic credibility with audiences.[310]

Jolie's appearance has been credited with influencing popular culture at large. In 2002, AfterEllen founder Sarah Warn observed that many women of all sexual orientations had publicly expressed their attraction to Jolie, which she considered a new development in American culture, adding that "there are many beautiful women in Hollywood, and few generate the same kind of overwhelming interest across genders and sexual orientations that she does".[311] Jolie's physical attributes became highly sought-after among western women seeking cosmetic surgery; by 2007, she was considered "the gold standard of beauty",[312] with her full lips remaining the most imitated celebrity feature well into the 2010s.[313] After a 2011 repeat survey by Allure found that Jolie most represented the American beauty ideal, compared to model Christie Brinkley in 1991, writer Elizabeth Angell credited society with having "branched out beyond the Barbie-doll ideal and embraced something quite different".[314][315] In 2013, Jeffrey Kluger of Time agreed that Jolie has for many years symbolized the feminine ideal, and opined that her frank discussion of her double mastectomy redefined beauty.[269]
Jolie is considered a style icon and trendsetter for celebrity fashion.[316][317][318][319][320] She began making red carpet appearances at age ten.[321] In the 1990s, she established an enduring partnership with Versace.[322] In her early film career, she became known for wearing gothic styles and leather, "coquette" looks;[321][323][324] her style was seen as dark, vampish, dramatic, and alluring.[322][325] Her sequined Randolph Duke gown at the 1999 Golden Globe Awards was regarded as her fashion debut.[326] Jolie wore a white satin dress by Marc Bouwer to the 76th Academy Awards, which drew critical praise and comparisons to the fashion of several classic film stars.[327][328][329] As she transitioned to directorial and humanitarian work, her style grew more sophisticated, minimalist, and glamorous, with looks associated with Old Hollywood.[330][323][331][321] In the 2010s, Jolie wore satin gowns, diamond jewelry, and Grecian silhouettes.[322][332] She attended the 84th Academy Awards in a black Versace gown, which has been deemed one of the most significant gowns in fashion history and pop culture, with Jolie's posing becoming the subject of Internet memes.[333][334] In the 2020s, Jolie adopted more sustainable fashion.[322][335]
Film credits and accolades
[edit]Jolie has appeared in over thirty film productions since 1982.[336][337] According to the review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes and infotainment website Screen Rant, her most critically acclaimed and commercially successful films are Playing by Heart (1998), Gone in 60 Seconds (2000), Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (2001), Lara Croft: Tomb Raider – The Cradle of Life (2003), Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow (2004), Alexander (2004), Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005), Beowulf (2007), A Mighty Heart (2007), Changeling (2008), Kung Fu Panda (2008), Wanted (2008), Salt (2010), The Tourist (2010), Maleficent (2014), and Maleficent: Mistress of Evil (2019).[338][339] Her television projects comprise the miniseries True Women (1997), and the films George Wallace (1997) and Gia (1998).[338]
Jolie has directed a number of films, such as In the Land of Blood and Honey (2011), Unbroken (2014), By the Sea (2015), First They Killed My Father (2017), and Without Blood (2024).[338]
Jolie has received several awards including an Academy Award, three Golden Globe Awards, two Screen Actors Guild Awards and a Tony Award as well as nominations for two British Academy Film Awards and two Primetime Emmy Awards. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences honored her with the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award in 2013.
Written works
[edit]Books
- Jolie, Angelina (2003). Notes from My Travels: Visits with Refugees in Africa, Cambodia, Pakistan and Ecuador. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781416592013.
- Amnesty International; Jolie, Angelina; Van Bueren, Geraldine (2021). Know Your Rights and Claim Them: A Guide for Youth. Zest Books. ISBN 9781728449654.
Articles
- Jolie, Angelina (May 14, 2013). "My medical choice". The New York Times. Retrieved July 2, 2023.
- Jolie, Angelina (March 2–9, 2020). "The price of inaction in Syria". Time. Vol. 195, no. 7–8 (International ed.). pp. 17–18. Retrieved February 13, 2023.[c]
See also
[edit]- Aptostichus angelinajolieae – Species of spider named after Jolie
- List of oldest and youngest Academy Award winners and nominees
- White Marc Bouwer dress of Angelina Jolie – White dress worn by Angelina Jolie
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b "Angelina Jolie: I had my ovaries removed, preventively". CBS News. March 24, 2015. Archived from the original on March 26, 2015. Retrieved March 24, 2015.
- ^ a b "Jolie given Cambodian citizenship". BBC News. August 12, 2005. Archived from the original on October 12, 2011. Retrieved December 30, 2014.
- ^ Respers France, Lisa (April 16, 2019). "Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt are legally single". CNN. Archived from the original on May 24, 2021. Retrieved February 8, 2022.
- ^ a b "Angelina Jolie: Hollywood's Child". CBS News. June 7, 2000. Archived from the original on February 21, 2020. Retrieved February 8, 2022.
- ^ Morton, Andrew Angelina: An Unauthorized Biography, p. 30, at Google Books
- ^ Shahid, Sharnaz (May 17, 2013). "Ten Things About... Angelina Jolie". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on February 8, 2022. Retrieved February 8, 2022.
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The British Vogue cover star has not only notched up a multitude of memorable screen performances over the decades, she's a devoted mother to her six children (Jolie recently set a new standard for eco-conscious red-carpet dressing with her kids at the LA premiere of The Eternals), and has built quite the reputation as a style icon both on and off the red carpet.
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Angelina Jolie's enchanting powers don't only exist on-screen. The actress and consistent style icon has a magical take on red-carpet dressing too. I
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Obviously, Angelina Jolie—excuse me—Dame Angelina Jolie is WAY more than a style icon.
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- ^ a b c Valenti, Lauren (June 4, 2015). "Angelina Jolie's Complete Red-Carpet Transformation". Marie Claire. Retrieved October 28, 2021.
- ^ a b c d Newbold, Alice (October 25, 2021). "Angelina Is an Eternal Versace Girl". Vogue. Retrieved October 28, 2021.
- ^ a b Harwood, Erika (September 29, 2016). "See Angelina Jolie's Transformation from Young Starlet to Global Humanitarian". Vanity Fair. Retrieved October 28, 2021.
- ^ Judkis, Maura. "Style Oscars 2012 fashion: Red carpet hits and misses". The Washington Post. Retrieved October 28, 2021.
- ^ "Angelina Jolie's Style File: Every Single One Of Angelina Jolie's Sophisticated And Stylish Looks". Elle. October 28, 2021. Retrieved October 28, 2021.
- ^ Cusumao, Kathryn. "Angelina Jolie's Best Red Carpet Looks are Simple and Straightforward". W. Retrieved October 28, 2021.
- ^ "Oscar's best-dressed friends: The most memorable fashion winners and". The Independent. February 16, 2009. Archived from the original on May 7, 2022. Retrieved September 29, 2017.
- ^ "Angelina Jolie's best red carpet moments". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on January 10, 2022. Retrieved September 29, 2017.
- ^ "Revisiting Angelina Jolie's Best Oscars Fashion—Including That Surprising Suit". Vogue. Retrieved September 29, 2017.
- ^ Okwodu, Janelle (July 26, 2021). "Angelina Jolie Packed a Minimalist Wardrobe for Her Trip to Paris". Vogue. Retrieved October 28, 2021.
- ^ Snead, Elizabeth (January 29, 2012). "SAG Awards Fashion: Angelina Jolie Plays It Safe In a Jenny Packham Black Halter Gown". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved October 28, 2021.
- ^ Nichols, Kristen (July 19, 2018). "6 Outfits That Prove Angelina Jolie Always Serves Up Old Hollywood Glamour". WhoWhatWear. Retrieved October 28, 2021.
- ^ Back, Grace (October 2, 2019). "Angelina Jolie Has Finally Given An Explanation Behind That Iconic Oscars Dress". Marie Claire Australia. Retrieved October 28, 2021.
- ^ Bennett, Alexis (April 23, 2021). "Black Slit Dresses to Shop in Honor of Angelina Jolie's Iconic Leg Dress". Vogue. Retrieved October 28, 2021.
- ^ Goldstone, Penny (October 28, 2021). "Here's how Angelina Jolie is teaching her daughters about sustainable fashion". Marie Claire UK. Retrieved October 28, 2021.
- ^ "Every Angelina Jolie film performance – ranked!". The Guardian. Retrieved April 6, 2021.
- ^ "All Angelina Jolie Movies Ranked By Tomatometer". Rotten Tomates. Retrieved April 6, 2021.
- ^ a b c "Angelina Jolie". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved April 6, 2021.
- ^ Harper, Stephanie (September 23, 2020). "Angelina Jolie's Best Movies Ranked By Box Office Success". Screen Rant. Retrieved April 6, 2021.
External links
[edit]- Angelina Jolie on Instagram
- A Special Envoy for Refugee Issues, Jolie's official homepage at UNHCR.org
- Angelina Jolie at IMDb
Angelina Jolie
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Formative Years
Family Background and Childhood
Angelina Jolie was born Angelina Jolie Voight on June 4, 1975, at Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles, California, to actors Jon Voight and Marcheline Bertrand.[2] Voight, born December 29, 1938, in Yonkers, New York, to a Slovak-American father and German-American mother, achieved prominence with an Academy Award for Best Actor for Midnight Cowboy (1969).[16] Bertrand, born Marcia Lynne Bertrand on January 9, 1950, in Beverly Hills, California, pursued acting and producing roles while claiming French-Canadian, Dutch, German, and Iroquois ancestry, though the Indigenous heritage was described by Voight as minimal and remote.[17] [18] Voight and Bertrand married in 1971 and had two children: son James Haven, born May 11, 1973, and daughter Jolie.[19] The couple separated in 1976, when Jolie was one year old, amid reports of Voight's infidelity, and divorced in 1978.[20] Following the split, Bertrand primarily raised the children in a modest apartment in New York City and later Los Angeles, prioritizing their stability over her own career ambitions, while maintaining limited contact with Voight.[2] Haven and Jolie developed a close sibling bond during this period, shaped by their mother's emphasis on family resilience amid the divorce's fallout.[19] Jolie's early childhood was immersed in the film industry through her parents' professions, yet marked by the instability of the divorce and Bertrand's decision to shield the children from Hollywood excess.[2] Bertrand, who later focused on humanitarian work, instilled values of empathy and independence, though she battled financial and emotional challenges as a single mother post-separation.[20] Voight's ongoing fame contrasted with the family's more grounded circumstances, contributing to early tensions; Jolie later cited her parents' marital breakdown, particularly Voight's absence and affairs, as influencing her views on relationships.[21] Bertrand died on January 27, 2007, at age 56 from ovarian and breast cancer after an eight-year battle, an event that profoundly affected Jolie.[20]Education, Early Rebellion, and Personal Struggles
Jolie attended Beverly Hills High School, where she felt alienated among affluent peers and endured severe bullying related to her thin frame, braces, and perceived lower socioeconomic status compared to classmates.[1] She transferred to the nearby Moreno High School, which provided a more inclusive setting amid ongoing personal turmoil.[1] Aspiring to act, she enrolled in the Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute around age 16, following her mother's prior studies there, and trained intensively for two years, honing skills through method acting techniques that emphasized emotional immersion.[22][23] This formal training supplemented sporadic homeschooling and her early modeling gigs, allowing her to forgo a conventional high school diploma in favor of a GED equivalent by age 18, prioritizing career entry over traditional academia.[1] In her early teens, Jolie exhibited pronounced rebellion, experimenting extensively with illicit substances including cocaine, heroin, ecstasy, and LSD, which she later described as encompassing "everything" available.[24] At age 14, amid familial instability following her parents' 1978 divorce, her mother Marcheline Bertrand permitted a live-in boyfriend, enabling Jolie to leave home temporarily and deepen her immersion in self-destructive patterns.[25] She engaged in self-mutilation by cutting herself with knives, a habit tied to emotional dysregulation and identity exploration, often wearing black clothing and collecting blades as symbols of her "goth" phase.[26] These behaviors stemmed partly from resentment toward her estranged father Jon Voight's infidelity and absence, exacerbating feelings of abandonment and fueling a deliberate provocation of Hollywood's underbelly.[24] Jolie's personal struggles intensified with profound depression and suicidal ideation during adolescence; she contemplated ending her life through a hired assassin to stage it as murder, reflecting a desire for dramatic finality rather than conventional self-harm.[27] This period overlapped with heroin addiction, which she characterized as a fascination rather than mere experimentation, leading to overdoses and institutionalization threats before quitting cold turkey in her early 20s upon recognizing its futility.[28] Familial discord, including Voight's public claims of her mental instability in the late 1990s—alleging borderline personality disorder—further strained relations, though Jolie attributed her recovery to motherhood's later onset and deliberate rejection of escapist vices.[24] These experiences, while self-reported in interviews, underscore a causal link between parental estrangement, unchecked autonomy, and adolescent risk-taking, absent countervailing structure from formal education or therapy.[29]Acting Career
Initial Roles and Breakthrough (1990s)
Jolie secured her first leading role in the 1993 direct-to-video science fiction film Cyborg 2, portraying Cash Reese, a replicant assassin created by a megacorporation. Directed by Michael Schroeder on a modest budget, the film featured co-stars Elias Koteas and Jack Palance but failed to achieve theatrical release in the United States and received largely negative reviews for its script and effects.[30] Her breakthrough to wider visibility occurred in 1995 with Hackers, directed by Iain Softley, where she played Kate "Acid Burn" Libby, a skilled teenage hacker entangled in a corporate conspiracy. The MGM-distributed film, co-starring Jonny Lee Miller, emphasized cyberpunk aesthetics and early internet culture but underperformed commercially, earning about $7.7 million worldwide against a $20 million budget. Despite critical pans for its implausible plot, Jolie's energetic performance and distinctive punk style contributed to the film's later cult status among tech enthusiasts.[31][32] Throughout the mid-1990s, Jolie took on supporting parts in independent features, including Without Evidence (1995) as a drug addict opposite Scott Plank, Foxfire (1996) as Legs Sadovsky in an adaptation of Joyce Carol Oates' novel about female friendship, and Mojave Moon (1996) alongside Danny Aiello. These roles honed her ability to portray complex, often troubled young women, though the films achieved limited box office or critical success.[5] Jolie transitioned to television with notable acclaim in biographical dramas. In the 1997 Hallmark miniseries True Women, she depicted Georgia Virginia Lawshe, a pioneer woman, in a production based on Harryette Kerr's novel. Her portrayal of Cornelia Wallace, wife of segregationist governor George Wallace, in the TNT film George Wallace that same year earned her the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Series, Miniseries, or Television Film on January 18, 1998, highlighting her capacity for historical depth.[5] Further momentum built with Playing God (1997), a crime thriller where she starred as Claire opposite David Duchovny's disgraced surgeon, which received mixed reviews upon its October release. The HBO biopic Gia (1998), directed by Michael Cristofer, marked a pivotal transformation as supermodel Gia Carangi, depicting her rise, heroin addiction, and death from AIDS-related complications in 1986. Airing January 18, 1998, the film drew praise for Jolie's physical emulation—including gaining and losing weight—and emotional intensity, securing her the Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Miniseries or Television Film.[33] Jolie's definitive 1990s breakthrough arrived with Girl, Interrupted (1999), directed by James Mangold and adapted from Susanna Kaysen's memoir. As the charismatic sociopath Lisa Rowe in a psychiatric institution, she contrasted Winona Ryder's lead role, delivering a performance that blended menace and vulnerability. Released December 8, 1999, the film grossed over $91 million worldwide and prompted widespread recognition; Jolie won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress on March 26, 2000, along with a Screen Actors Guild Award, establishing her as a leading dramatic talent beyond action or indie fare.[34]Rise to Stardom and Blockbuster Era (2000s)
Following her Academy Award-winning performance in Girl, Interrupted (1999), Jolie entered the blockbuster arena with the role of Sara "Sway" Wayland in Gone in 60 Seconds (2000), a high-octane car heist film co-starring Nicolas Cage. Released on June 9, 2000, the production grossed $237.2 million worldwide against a $90 million budget, ranking among the summer's top performers and marking Jolie's initial foray into wide-appeal commercial cinema.[35][36] Jolie's portrayal of the iconic video game heroine Lara Croft in Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (2001) propelled her to international superstardom, with the film earning $274.7 million globally on a $115 million budget despite predominantly negative critical reception. Directed by Simon West and released on June 15, 2001, it debuted at number one domestically with $47.7 million in its opening weekend, capitalizing on the franchise's gaming popularity to draw audiences.[37][38] Critics faulted the script and effects, but Jolie's commitment to the physically demanding role—including extensive training in martial arts, shooting, and climbing—was widely acknowledged as a highlight, solidifying her image as a capable action lead.[39] The 2003 sequel, Lara Croft: Tomb Raider – The Cradle of Life, generated $160.3 million worldwide but fell short of the original's returns, signaling diminishing franchise momentum. Interspersed with these were commercial setbacks, such as the erotic thriller Original Sin (2001) and romantic comedy Life or Something Like It (2002), both box-office disappointments that underscored the risks of diverging from action territory. In Alexander (2004), Jolie played Olympias opposite Colin Farrell's title character; the epic historical drama, budgeted at $155 million, recouped only $167.3 million globally, failing to meet financial expectations amid mixed reviews and multiple release versions.[40] A major career resurgence came with Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005), where Jolie starred as Jane Smith, a covert assassin married unknowingly to another spy (Brad Pitt). The action-comedy, directed by Doug Liman and released on June 10, 2005, amassed $487.2 million worldwide on a $110 million budget, becoming one of the decade's highest-grossing films and elevating Jolie's marketability through its blend of stylish action and on-screen chemistry.[41] Though critics were divided, its commercial dominance—fueled by strong international performance—reinforced her blockbuster draw. This success paved the way for further action vehicles, including Wanted (2008), in which she portrayed the enigmatic Fox; the film grossed $342.5 million against a $75 million budget, praised for its kinetic visuals and Jolie's commanding presence in a supporting yet pivotal role.[42][43] Throughout the 2000s, Jolie's pivot to high-profile action franchises and ensemble blockbusters transformed her from a critically acclaimed indie performer into a global box-office force, with her films collectively contributing to over $1.5 billion in worldwide earnings during the decade, though not without variability in critical and financial outcomes. Her willingness to embrace physically rigorous roles distinguished her amid Hollywood's action landscape, prioritizing spectacle and star power over consistent acclaim.Awards, Critical Roles, and Versatility (2000s–2010s)
In the 2000s, Angelina Jolie achieved commercial success with action-oriented roles that highlighted her physicality and screen presence, such as Evelyn Salt in Salt (2010), a CIA operative accused of treason, and Jane Smith in Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005), a spy in a combative marriage. These films demonstrated her appeal in high-stakes thrillers, earning her popularity-based accolades including People's Choice Awards for Favorite Female Action Movie Star in 2006 and 2015, reflecting audience preference over critical consensus.[4][44] Jolie's dramatic performances garnered critical recognition, particularly as Christine Collins in Changeling (2008), directed by Clint Eastwood, where she portrayed a mother fighting corruption after her son's abduction; the role earned her an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress in 2009, along with a Golden Globe nomination.[45][46] Similarly, in A Mighty Heart (2007), she played Mariane Pearl, the wife of murdered journalist Daniel Pearl, receiving praise for conveying restrained grief amid crisis, with reviewers like Roger Ebert noting her "riveting performance that relies on inner conviction."[47] These roles contrasted her earlier action work, underscoring versatility through shifts from adrenaline-fueled sequences to nuanced emotional depth.| Film | Award/Nomination | Year | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Changeling (2008) | Academy Award, Best Actress | 2009 | Nominated |
| Changeling (2008) | Golden Globe, Best Actress – Drama | 2009 | Nominated |
| Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005) | People's Choice, Favorite Female Action Star | 2006 | Won |
| Salt (2010) | MTV Movie Award, Best Female Performance | 2011 | Nominated |
Directing, Producing, and Career Shifts (2010s–Present)
Angelina Jolie made her feature-length directorial debut in 2011 with In the Land of Blood and Honey, a war drama she also wrote and produced, depicting a forbidden romance amid the Bosnian War between 1992 and 1995. The film premiered at the Sarajevo Film Festival and received a limited U.S. theatrical release on December 23, 2011, earning mixed critical reception with a 57% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 79 reviews.[50][51] In 2014, Jolie directed Unbroken, a biographical war film about Olympian and World War II prisoner of war Louis Zamperini, produced on a $65 million budget and grossing $161 million worldwide. The project, which she developed for seven years, garnered a 53% Rotten Tomatoes score from 230 reviews, praised for cinematography by Roger Deakins but critiqued for pacing. Her next directorial effort, By the Sea (2015), a marital drama starring Jolie and Brad Pitt set in 1970s France, received more negative reviews, holding a 35% Rotten Tomatoes rating from 155 reviews and underperforming commercially.[52][53][54] Jolie continued directing with First They Killed My Father (2017), a Khmer-language adaptation of Loung Ung's memoir about a child's survival under the Khmer Rouge regime, released exclusively on Netflix and earning an 88% Rotten Tomatoes approval from 74 reviews for its sensitive portrayal. In 2024, she directed Without Blood, a parable on war, revenge, and memory starring Salma Hayek and Demián Bichir, adapted from Alessandro Baricco's novel and premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival; it holds a 36% Rotten Tomatoes score from 14 reviews. Jolie has produced several of her directorial works and others addressing human rights, such as Difret (2014) on Ethiopian female genital mutilation and The Breadwinner (2017), an animated feature about an Afghan girl under Taliban rule.[55][7][56] Throughout the 2010s and into the present, Jolie shifted focus from acting in high-profile blockbusters to directing and producing, citing the form's capacity for in-depth storytelling on conflict and resilience, though noting its two-year-plus time demands compared to acting. In a 2014 interview, she expressed intent to prioritize directing over acting due to its creative fulfillment. Family circumstances, including her 2016 separation from Brad Pitt and ensuing custody disputes, prompted a temporary emphasis on shorter acting commitments to prioritize home life, but she has sustained directorial output, stating in 2024 that Without Blood marks her final war-themed film. In early 2026, Jolie starred in Couture, directed by Alice Winocour, attending its premiere on February 9 at Pathé Palace in Paris, where she wore a sheer, sequined Givenchy gown on the red carpet.[57][58] Through her production banner Jolie Pas, she has optioned projects like Catherine the Great & Potemkin for adaptation.[59][60][61]Box Office and Critical Failures
Original Sin (2001), an erotic thriller in which Jolie starred opposite Antonio Banderas, failed both commercially and critically; produced on a $42 million budget, it earned $16.5 million domestically and received a 12% Rotten Tomatoes score from 91 reviews.[62][63] Similarly, Life or Something Like It (2002), her romantic comedy vehicle, grossed $16.9 million worldwide against a $40 million budget and garnered a 28% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 120 reviews.[64][65] Beyond Borders (2003), portraying aid worker Nick Callahan's colleague, underperformed with $11.7 million in global earnings from an estimated $35 million budget and a 14% Rotten Tomatoes score from 102 critics.[66][67] The epic Alexander (2004), featuring Jolie as Olympias, incurred substantial losses despite a $167 million worldwide gross against its $155 million production budget—insufficient after marketing and distribution costs—and earned a 15% Rotten Tomatoes rating from 201 reviews, with critics citing its ponderous pacing and emotional distance.[68][69] The Tourist (2010), co-starring Johnny Depp, achieved profitability at $278 million worldwide from a roughly $100 million outlay but disappointed domestically with $67.6 million and faced critical disdain, scoring 21% on Rotten Tomatoes from 170 reviews for its perceived lack of tension and chemistry.[70][71] Jolie's directorial and writing debut By the Sea (2015), starring herself and Brad Pitt, was a box office disappointment, generating $3.3 million globally against a $10 million budget and receiving a 35% Rotten Tomatoes score from 155 reviews.[72][54] Come Away (2020), a fantasy drama, fared worse with under $1.7 million in worldwide receipts and a 29% critics' score on Rotten Tomatoes from 69 reviews, reflecting limited theatrical appeal amid pandemic constraints.[73][74] These projects highlight instances where high expectations, ambitious scopes, or niche appeals did not translate to audience or critical success, contrasting Jolie's more lucrative action and franchise roles.[75]Humanitarian Efforts and Activism
UNHCR Involvement and Refugee Advocacy
Angelina Jolie first engaged with UNHCR operations through personal visits to refugee camps in countries including Sierra Leone, Tanzania, and Pakistan in early 2001, which prompted her formal involvement with the organization.[76] On August 27, 2001, she was appointed as a UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador in Geneva, tasked with raising awareness about the plight of refugees worldwide.[77] In this role, spanning from 2001 to 2012, Jolie conducted over 40 field missions across more than 30 countries, meeting directly with millions of refugees and internally displaced persons to highlight their conditions and advocate for international support.[78] As Goodwill Ambassador, Jolie focused on amplifying refugee voices through public campaigns and media engagement, including UNHCR's 2012 World Refugee Day initiative "Dilemmas," which addressed xenophobia and intolerance toward refugees via social advocacy.[79] Her visits included high-profile trips to camps such as Jordan's Za'atri settlement in 2013, where she met Syrian refugees alongside UNHCR High Commissioner António Guterres, urging greater global responsibility sharing for the growing displacement crisis.[80] She also advocated for increased funding and policy reforms, emphasizing the need for host countries like Turkey, which sheltered millions of Syrians by 2015, to receive adequate international aid.[81] In April 2012, Jolie transitioned to the role of UNHCR Special Envoy to High Commissioner António Guterres, an elevated position enabling higher-level diplomatic engagement on global refugee issues.[82] This expansion allowed her to represent UNHCR in executive-level discussions, including visits to conflict zones like Yemen in 2022, where she met displaced families and called for conflict resolution to halt human suffering.[83] Other activities included trips to Iraq's Mosul in 2018 to assess post-liberation recovery for displaced populations and Pakistan in 2022 to spotlight flood-affected refugees amid climate challenges.[84][85] Through these efforts, spanning over two decades, Jolie has consistently pressed for systemic solutions to displacement, including better protection against gender-based violence in refugee settings.[86]Conservation, Education, and Global Causes
Jolie has supported wildlife conservation in Cambodia since the early 2000s, including the purchase of 60,000 hectares of land in Keo Seima district in 2003 to convert former hunting grounds into a protected area, fostering anti-poaching efforts and community involvement in preservation.[87] Her foundation has invested in environmental projects there for over 17 years, addressing deforestation and illegal logging through local partnerships.[88] In 2023, she endorsed Cambodia's "Zero Snaring" campaign on social media, promoting full participation in wildlife protection to halt poaching.[89] She has advocated for pollinator conservation, serving as "godmother" to UNESCO's Women for Bees program since 2021, which trains women beekeepers globally to bolster biodiversity and rural economies.[90] This includes backing Guerlain's decade-long bee conservation initiative and appearing in the 2025 documentary Bee Wild to highlight ecosystem threats.[91] [92] On elephant protection, Jolie planned to direct Africa in 2014, a film about anti-poaching efforts inspired by conservationists combating ivory trade, though the project did not materialize.[93] In education philanthropy, Jolie co-chairs the Education Partnership for Children of Conflict, funding programs for war-affected youth since its founding.[94] Through personal donations, she established a girls' boarding school in Kenya's Kakuma camp in 2005 and supported two primary schools for girls in Afghanistan, emphasizing access amid instability.[95] Her Maddox Jolie-Pitt Foundation, launched in 2003, targets poverty alleviation and educational infrastructure in Cambodia, including health and schooling for rural children.[96] In 2021, she collaborated with Amnesty International on Know Your Rights and Claim Them, a guide teaching children about legal protections, including education rights, distributed in multiple languages.[97] For broader global causes, Jolie co-launched the Preventing Sexual Violence Initiative (PSVI) in 2012 with UK Foreign Secretary William Hague, aiming to end wartime sexual abuse through policy advocacy, training, and prosecution support in conflict zones.[96] [98] The initiative hosted summits, including the 2014 Global Summit to End Sexual Violence in Conflict, attended by over 120 countries' representatives.[99] She has also backed the Jolie-Pitt Foundation's work on orphaned children's support via the 2007 Global Action for Children program, providing aid in developing nations.[100] In March 2017, as a visiting professor at the London School of Economics, Jolie delivered her inaugural lecture for the Women, Peace and Security course, addressing women's rights amid refugee crises and strategies to prevent sexual violence in conflict zones.[101]Effectiveness, Criticisms, and Unintended Consequences
Jolie's humanitarian advocacy with UNHCR, spanning over two decades, has centered on field visits to more than 60 crisis zones and public campaigns emphasizing refugee protection, education access, and prevention of gender-based violence.[102] These efforts, including appeals for increased funding during crises in Yemen and Pakistan, have been credited by UNHCR with amplifying global attention to underfunded responses, though direct causal links to funding surges or policy shifts remain unquantified in independent assessments.[83] [85] Her role as Special Envoy facilitated joint statements urging international action, such as prosecuting conflict-related sexual violence, potentially influencing diplomatic priorities.[86] However, UNHCR's endorsements, as a partner institution, may reflect institutional incentives to highlight celebrity contributions rather than rigorous outcome evaluations.[103] Criticisms of Jolie's work often portray it as emblematic of celebrity activism's limitations, where high-visibility endorsements risk trivializing complex geopolitical issues through personalized narratives and media spectacles.[104] Commentators have dismissed her engagements as extensions of personal vanity, citing instances like publicized emotional displays in magazines as performative rather than substantive, potentially diverting focus from local experts and systemic reforms.[104] Her initial appointment as Goodwill Ambassador in 2001 drew skepticism regarding her expertise, with detractors arguing that unelected celebrities undermine professional diplomacy.[105] Jolie's departure from UNHCR in December 2022, motivated by frustrations with institutional inertia, underscored her critiques of global responses but also highlighted tensions between celebrity influence and bureaucratic efficacy.[106] Unintended consequences of her activism include the overshadowing of refugee advocacy by personal scandals, such as her 2016-2019 divorce from Brad Pitt, which commentators argue tarnished UNHCR's credibility and shifted public discourse from humanitarian needs to tabloid drama.[105] High-profile visits, while boosting short-term media coverage, have been faulted for fostering dependency on transient celebrity attention rather than sustainable local capacity-building, with broader celebrity diplomacy critiques suggesting it oversimplifies causes and sidelines grassroots efforts.[104] Empirical evaluations of such interventions remain sparse, but analogous cases indicate risks of policy distortions favoring visible crises over structural prevention.[107]Personal Life
Relationships, Marriages, and Affairs
Angelina Jolie has been married three times, with each union marked by rapid developments and subsequent separations. Her first marriage was to British actor Jonny Lee Miller, whom she met while filming Hackers in 1995. The couple wed in a small civil ceremony on March 28, 1996, in Los Angeles, where Jolie wore black leather pants and Miller had her name written in her blood on his shirt. They separated after approximately 18 months due to conflicting acting schedules and divorced in 1999, maintaining an amicable relationship thereafter.[108][12][109] Jolie's second marriage, to actor Billy Bob Thornton, began after they met on the set of Pushing Tin in 1999. The pair announced their engagement unexpectedly at the 2000 Golden Globe Awards and married impulsively on May 5, 2000, in Las Vegas. Their relationship gained notoriety for its intensity, including wearing vials of each other's blood as necklaces, but ended amid personal differences; Thornton later attributed the 2003 divorce to his insecurities and Jolie's growing focus on humanitarian work. The divorce was finalized on May 27, 2003, after which both described the split as mutual and without acrimony.[109][110] Jolie's most publicized relationship was with actor Brad Pitt, which originated during the 2004 filming of Mr. & Mrs. Smith, while Pitt was still married to Jennifer Aniston. Although Pitt and Jolie insisted their romance did not begin until after Pitt's January 2005 separation from Aniston—with their divorce finalized in October 2005—the close timing fueled accusations of an affair and tabloid portrayals of Jolie as a marriage breaker, despite their denials. The couple, dubbed "Brangelina," went public in 2005 with photos from Kenya, became engaged in 2012, and married in two ceremonies on August 23, 2014, in France. They separated in September 2016, with Jolie filing for divorce citing irreconcilable differences; the contentious proceedings reached a settlement agreement on December 30, 2024, under which no alimony was awarded to Jolie, though litigation over the Miraval winery continued into 2026, including a January 2026 ruling on the release of 22 documents. Jolie described the process as "traumatic."[111][112][113][114][115][116]| Date | Event | Key Details | Sources |
|---|---|---|---|
| September 2016 | Separation and divorce filing | Jolie separates from Pitt and files for divorce citing irreconcilable differences, initiating contentious proceedings | [111][112] |
| December 30, 2024 | Settlement agreement | Agreement reached with no alimony awarded to Jolie; child custody and other terms resolved, but Miraval disputes persist | [114] |
| January 2026 | Miraval litigation ruling | Court orders release of 22 documents related to ongoing winery ownership dispute | [116] |
Children, Adoptions, and Family Dynamics
Angelina Jolie has six children: three adopted from Cambodia, Ethiopia, and Vietnam, and three biological children born during her relationship with actor Brad Pitt. The adoptions began prior to her marriage to Pitt, with Jolie initially acting as a single parent, reflecting her early humanitarian interests in supporting orphaned children from conflict zones.[11][121] Her eldest child, Maddox Chivan Jolie-Pitt, was born on August 5, 2001, in Cambodia and adopted by Jolie on March 10, 2002, while she was filming Lara Croft: Tomb Raider in the region; initial reports questioned the adoption's paperwork due to the biological father's brief claim of paternity, but Cambodian authorities finalized it legally.[121] Zahara Marley Jolie-Pitt, born January 8, 2005, in Ethiopia, was adopted by Jolie on July 6, 2005, at six months old, following a visit inspired by Maddox's interest in Africa; the process faced delays over HIV testing requirements but was completed without noted irregularities.[121][11] Pax Thien Jolie-Pitt, born November 29, 2003, in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, was adopted in 2007 at age three after spending time in a local orphanage; Vietnam's single-parent adoption ban at the time required Jolie's lawyer to argue her case successfully, amid broader scrutiny of celebrity international adoptions potentially incentivizing orphanages over family reunifications.[121][122] The biological children include Shiloh Nouvel Jolie-Pitt, born May 27, 2006, in Swakopmund, Namibia, where the couple sought privacy to avoid paparazzi; she was the first biological child for both.[121] Twins Knox Léon Jolie-Pitt and Vivienne Marcheline Jolie-Pitt were born on July 12, 2008, via cesarean section in Nice, France, weighing 2.51 kg and 2.49 kg respectively; Vivienne later collaborated with Jolie on the Broadway adaptation of The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind in 2021, and Knox has pursued modeling.[123][124]| Child | Type | Birth/Adoption Date | Origin/Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maddox Chivan | Adopted | March 10, 2002 | Cambodia; born August 5, 2001 |
| Zahara Marley | Adopted | July 6, 2005 | Ethiopia; born January 8, 2005 |
| Shiloh Nouvel | Biological | May 27, 2006 | Born in Namibia |
| Pax Thien | Adopted | 2007 | Vietnam; born November 29, 2003 |
| Knox Léon & Vivienne Marcheline | Biological | July 12, 2008 | Twins born in France |
Health Challenges and Preventive Surgeries
In 2013, Angelina Jolie disclosed that she carried a mutation in the BRCA1 gene, inherited from her family, which her physicians estimated conferred an 87 percent lifetime risk of breast cancer and a 50 percent risk of ovarian cancer.[133] This mutation was identified amid a family history marked by her mother Marcheline Bertrand's death from ovarian cancer in 2007 at age 56, as well as breast cancer deaths of her grandmother and aunt.[134] [15] On May 14, 2013, Jolie announced in a New York Times op-ed that she had undergone a preventive bilateral mastectomy over three months earlier, removing both breasts and replacing them with reconstructive implants to reduce her breast cancer risk to under 5 percent.[135] The procedure involved nipple-sparing techniques and immediate reconstruction, which she described as emotionally challenging but empowering given the genetic risks.[136] Her public revelation, termed the "Angelina Jolie effect," correlated with a temporary surge in BRCA testing and risk-reducing mastectomies among women, though long-term adherence to guidelines remained variable.[137] In March 2015, Jolie underwent a laparoscopic bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy to preempt ovarian cancer risk, prompted by elevated cancer antigen 125 (CA-125) levels detected in routine blood tests that initially raised concerns for early-stage malignancy.[138] The surgery removed her ovaries and fallopian tubes, revealing only a small benign tumor and no evidence of cancer, but it induced surgical menopause, causing symptoms such as hot flashes and necessitating hormone replacement therapy.[139] [140] This step further lowered her ovarian cancer risk, aligning with medical recommendations for BRCA1 carriers post-childbearing age, though it accelerated risks associated with estrogen deprivation, including bone density loss.[141]Recent Divorce, Custody Battles, and Lifestyle Changes
Angelina Jolie filed for divorce from Brad Pitt on September 20, 2016, citing irreconcilable differences, shortly after an alleged altercation on a private jet involving Pitt and their eldest son, Maddox; the FBI investigated but brought no charges.[142][143] The couple, married in 2014 after a decade-long relationship, share six children: Maddox (adopted 2002), Pax (adopted 2007), Zahara (adopted 2005), Shiloh (born 2006), and twins Knox and Vivienne (born 2008).[144] Pitt countersued for joint custody, but a temporary 2016 ruling granted Jolie primary physical custody with supervised visitation for Pitt amid abuse allegations he denied; disputes over child welfare evaluations and Pitt's winery assets at Château Miraval prolonged proceedings. In March 2024, Pitt abandoned his push for shared custody of the minors, and the divorce finalized on December 30, 2024, restoring single status without public terms on assets or custody, though joint legal custody persisted for the twins.[145][146][147] Custody battles intensified with Jolie's claims of Pitt's abusive behavior, including the 2016 plane incident, leading adult children Maddox, Pax, and Zahara to publicly distance themselves from Pitt by 2024, with reports of strained relations and some dropping his surname.[148][149] Shiloh petitioned to legally remove "Pitt" from her name upon turning 18 in May 2024, citing personal reasons, while twins Knox and Vivienne maintained lower profiles.[148] Pitt reportedly ceased financial support to two adult children in June 2025, viewing reconciliation as unlikely amid litigation.[149] Separate winery litigation continued into 2025, with Jolie seeking $33,000 in legal fees from Pitt in October over NDA disputes tied to the property sale; a trial over breach of contract allegations is scheduled for February 1, 2027.[150][151] Post-divorce, Jolie described the process as "traumatic" and emotionally difficult, forgoing alimony and relinquishing claims to family homes in Los Angeles and Miraval to prioritize child stability, crediting them with urging her public defense.[150][152] She shifted to shorter-term acting roles for home focus, emphasizing family healing, and sold the Los Angeles residence in 2024.[153][154] With twins Knox and Vivienne turning 18 on July 12, 2026, lifting custody restrictions, Jolie plans relocation abroad, potentially to Cambodia or Europe, citing desire for privacy and an "unrecognizable" America, as her children pursue independent paths including Shiloh's move out in late 2024.[155]Controversies and Public Scrutiny
Early Self-Destructive Behaviors and Mental Health
In her teenage years, Angelina Jolie experimented extensively with drugs, including cocaine and heroin, which she later attributed to underlying depression that began during adolescence.[24][25] At age 14, her mother permitted her boyfriend to move into their home, reflecting a permissive environment amid the ongoing estrangement from her father, Jon Voight, following their parents' divorce.[25] Jolie dropped out of Beverly Hills High School due to bullying and social alienation, subsequently attending the Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute and an alternative high school for at-risk youth, where her self-destructive patterns intensified.[156] Jolie has publicly described engaging in self-harm by cutting herself with knives during her teens and early twenties as a means to cope with emotional numbness and prove she could feel pain, often linked to an obsession with death and mortality.[157][156] These behaviors were compounded by severe depression, which she connected to familial instability and personal identity struggles, leading to periods of isolation and risky actions beyond substance abuse.[24][29] By age 22, Jolie's mental health deteriorated to the point of suicidal ideation, prompting her to attempt hiring a hitman to stage her death as a murder, reasoning that it would spare her family grief and allow them insurance benefits; the individual she approached instead dissuaded her from proceeding.[158][159] This incident, which she later recounted in interviews, marked a low point before she sought therapy and quit drugs, though she has noted that depression recurred episodically into adulthood.[160][161] Despite these admissions, Jolie has emphasized personal agency in overcoming such challenges without formal diagnoses publicized beyond self-reported depression.[162]High-Profile Feuds and Legal Disputes
Angelina Jolie's relationship with her father, actor Jon Voight, deteriorated publicly in the early 2000s following her divorce from Billy Bob Thornton in 2003. Voight publicly suggested Jolie might have mental health issues, including possible bipolar disorder, prompting her to legally drop "Voight" from her name and return the Academy Award statuette he had given her as a child.[163][164] The feud stemmed partly from Voight's infidelity, which led to his 1976 separation and 1980 divorce from Jolie's mother, Marcheline Bertrand, causing lasting family rift.[131] Despite a partial reconciliation in 2010 facilitated by then-husband Brad Pitt, their relationship remained strained, with Jolie reportedly never fully forgiving Voight for breaking her mother's heart, and sources indicating they were not on good terms as of 2024.[165][166] Jolie's most protracted legal disputes arose from her 2016 divorce from Brad Pitt. She filed for divorce on September 20, 2016, citing irreconcilable differences, shortly after an alleged altercation on a private plane involving Pitt and their son Maddox, which prompted child services investigations but resulted in no criminal charges against Pitt.[142][167] A temporary custody agreement granted Jolie primary physical custody with Pitt receiving visitation, while both underwent counseling; the custody battle extended over years amid mutual accusations.[142] The couple's asset division fueled further litigation centered on their co-owned French winery, Château Miraval. Jolie sold her 50% stake in 2021 to Tenute del Mondo, a subsidiary of the Stoli Group, for approximately $164 million; Pitt sued in February 2022, alleging breach of contract and violation of an informal right of first refusal, seeking to invalidate the sale or damages exceeding $500 million.[144][150] Jolie countered that no binding agreement prevented the sale and described the divorce period as "traumatic" due to "painful events," including claims of Pitt's abusive behavior, though she has not returned to the property since.[168][169] While the divorce was finalized on December 30, 2024, after eight years, the winery dispute persisted into 2025, with Pitt seeking access to Jolie's private emails and Jolie requesting reimbursement for $33,000 in legal fees related to a non-disclosure agreement dispute.[150][170]Accusations of Performative Activism and Cultural Insensitivity
Critics have accused Angelina Jolie of engaging in performative activism, portraying her humanitarian efforts—such as her role as a UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador since 2001 and subsequent visits to refugee camps in over 40 countries—as publicity-driven endeavors that prioritize personal branding over substantive impact.[171] Academic analyses describe her advocacy as emblematic of "celebrity humanitarianism," where high-profile interventions, including adoptions and policy op-eds, amplify a white savior narrative that reinforces Western paternalism rather than addressing root causes like systemic poverty or conflict.[172][173] For instance, her 2005 adoption of Zahara from Ethiopia was cited as sparking a trend among Western celebrities and affluent parents, potentially inflating demand in vulnerable adoption systems without equivalent scrutiny of local family preservation efforts.[174] These accusations extend to cultural insensitivity, particularly in Jolie's adoptions from Cambodia, Ethiopia, and Vietnam, which detractors argue commodify children from conflict-affected regions while overlooking cultural disconnection and ethical lapses in international processes. Her 2002 adoption of Maddox from a Cambodian orphanage occurred amid widespread child trafficking concerns, prompting Cambodia to suspend foreign adoptions multiple times in the 2000s; a 2017 scandal revealed that an aid worker had falsified documents by listing himself as Maddox's father to facilitate the process, raising questions about due diligence.[175][176] Similarly, the 2007 adoption of Pax from Vietnam followed a visit where ethical sourcing was scrutinized, with critics labeling such practices as insensitive to the children's heritage and prone to exploitation.[177] Jolie's directorial projects have drawn further charges of insensitivity. During the 2010 filming of In the Land of Blood and Honey, which depicts the Bosnian War including scenes of mass rape, Bosnian women's groups protested the production for mishandling survivor testimonies and cultural nuances, leading to a temporary halt in shooting after accusations of exploiting trauma for Hollywood narrative.[178][179] In 2017, a Vanity Fair profile of her film First They Killed My Father—about the Khmer Rouge era—detailed casting methods involving Cambodian orphans reenacting distress to select actors, described as a "disturbing" game-like process; Jolie rejected the account as "false and upsetting," but it fueled perceptions of retraumatizing vulnerable children for artistic ends.[180][181] Such incidents underscore broader critiques that her global causes, while raising awareness, risk superficial engagement with non-Western traumas.Reception and Legacy
Evolving Public Image and Media Portrayal
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, media outlets frequently portrayed Angelina Jolie as a provocative and self-destructive figure, emphasizing scandals such as her 2000 on-stage kiss with brother James Haven at the Academy Awards and her admission of wearing a vial of his blood as a necklace.[182] This coverage reinforced her "wild child" image from roles in films like Gia (1998), where she depicted a heroin-addicted model, contributing to perceptions of her as a hedonistic rebel rather than a serious actress.[183] Jolie's public image began shifting with her casting as Lara Croft in Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (2001), transforming her into a global sex symbol and action heroine, which media highlighted through focus on her physicality and glamorous style, including form-fitting outfits and adventurous persona.[184] This phase marked a commercial peak but still carried echoes of earlier edginess, with outlets like Page Six chronicling her evolving looks from retro curls to caramel highlights as emblematic of assertive modernity.[185][186] A pivotal evolution occurred in 2001 when Jolie was appointed UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador on February 27, prompting media narratives to pivot toward her humanitarian commitments, including visits to over 20 refugee-impacted countries like Sierra Leone amid its civil war.[8][187] Outlets such as TIME described this as a "public-image turnaround" from "laughing stock" to lauded activist, crediting her field missions and advocacy for refugees as authentic drivers of the change, though some coverage noted the strategic timing amid personal controversies.[182] By 2012, her promotion to Special Envoy further solidified this portrayal, with emphasis on initiatives against sexual violence in conflict zones.[9] In the 2010s, Jolie's image matured into that of a maternal advocate and director, influenced by her 2013 preventive double mastectomy due to BRCA1 mutation, which media framed as empowering and humanizing, shifting focus from sex appeal to resilience and health awareness.[188] Post-2016 divorce from Brad Pitt, coverage turned toward her as a protective mother amid custody battles, with Grazia quoting her on prioritizing family over likability, reflecting a more private, introspective persona less reliant on Hollywood glamour.[189] Recent analyses, including at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival, highlight a style evolution to understated elegance, symbolizing her departure from "shock factor" tactics.[190] This progression has drawn admiration from women for her activist-mother archetype, though earlier male-centric appeal waned as humanitarian efforts dominated her narrative.[191]Critical and Commercial Evaluation
Angelina Jolie's acting career has generated substantial commercial success, with her films collectively grossing over $6.4 billion worldwide as of 2023.[192] Her portrayal of Maleficent in the 2014 fantasy film of the same name marked her highest-grossing project, earning $758.5 million globally and establishing her as a draw for family-oriented blockbusters.[193] Other major earners include Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005) at $478 million and Maleficent: Mistress of Evil (2019) at approximately $491 million, reflecting her appeal in action and fantasy genres that prioritize spectacle over narrative depth.[194] Voice roles in the Kung Fu Panda series further boosted her box office totals, contributing hundreds of millions from animated features.[195] Critically, Jolie's reception has been uneven, with acclaim concentrated in dramatic roles showcasing emotional intensity rather than action-heavy leads. She won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her portrayal of Lisa Rowe in Girl, Interrupted (1999), a performance lauded for its raw depiction of mental instability.[3] Nominations followed for Changeling (2008), where her role as a mother fighting institutional corruption earned praise for vulnerability, though the film itself divided reviewers.[4] Action vehicles like Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (2001) and Salt (2010) often received middling reviews, with critics noting physical prowess but critiquing limited character development.[194] Jolie's three Golden Globe wins— for George Wallace (1998), Girl, Interrupted, and Beowulf (2007)—underscore her versatility in television, drama, and voice work, yet sustained critical consensus on her as a leading dramatic actress remains elusive.[196] Recent projects, such as Maria (2024), have prompted early praise for a "career-best" performance as Maria Callas, suggesting potential resurgence in prestige roles amid a shift from commercial blockbusters.[197] Overall, her commercial dominance has outpaced consistent critical elevation, positioning her as a bankable star whose humanitarian profile often amplifies media coverage beyond artistic merit.[198]| Film | Worldwide Gross (USD) | Critical Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Maleficent (2014) | $758.5 million | Commercial hit; mixed reviews for reimagining.[193] |
| Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005) | $478 million | Box office success; chemistry praised over depth.[194] |
| Girl, Interrupted (1999) | $46 million (modest) | Oscar win; strong critical acclaim for performance.[3] |