Halle Berry Makes History with Oscar Win
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Best
Actress Halle Berry and Denzel Washington became the
first blacks to win both the best actor and best actress
awards at the Academy Awards. |
A weeping, shaking Halle Berry became the
first black woman to win a best actress Oscar on Sunday
night, sending crashing a color bar that has stood for 74
years.
She was swiftly joined by Denzel Washington,
making them the first blacks to win both the best actor
and best actress awards at the Academy Awards.
Berry, 33, a rising star but hardly a household
name, won for her role as a woman overtaken by rage and
frustration in the racially charged movie "Monster's
Ball" that is considered her best performance in a
10-year career.
With tears rolling down her face, and gasping
for breath, Berry dedicated her award to all the African-American
women who had struggled before her to make their way in
Hollywood.
"This moment is so much bigger than me.
It's for every nameless, faceless woman of color that now
has a chance because this door tonight has been opened,"
she said.
"I am so honored, I'm so honored, and
I thank the Academy for choosing me to be the vessel for
which this blessing might flow," Berry added.
She emerged as a late favorite in a race that
had been dominated by Nicole Kidman and Sissy Spacek until
Berry proved the surprise winner of the Screen Actor's Guild
two weeks ago.
BEAUTY QUEEN, MODEL AND ACTRESS
A former pageant beauty queen, Berry was a
model before getting into television in 1989 and is currently
the face of Revlon cosmetics.
Her big screen breakthrough came in 1991 when
she was cast as a crack addict in Spike Lee's "Jungle
Fever," and she went on to supporting roles
in "The Flintstones" and the 1998 political satire
"Bulworth".
Her biggest acclaim came for her role in the
1999 television movie "Introducing Dorothy Dandridge",
in which she played 1950s black movie star Dandridge whose
struggles to be accepted in racist Hollywood paved the way
for actresses like Berry today.
Berry, who also served as one of the executive
producers, won an Emmy and a Golden Globe for her performance.
"Dandridge" served as Berry's entree
into the acting A list, while her model looks and intuitive
fashion sense made her a natural on the red carpets of premieres
and award shows.
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Halle
Berry in "Monster's Ball" |
In "Monster's Ball" she played a
down-and-out waitress who strikes up a love
affair with a white racist prison guard (Billy Bob
Thornton) working on death row. The guard was one
of the men responsible for executing the woman's husband.
The movie was praised by critics and Berry
in particular has been singled out for a performance that
is brave both in its realism and its use of one explicit
sex scene.
The complexity of its themes, and its relatively
limited release schedule have made it only a modest performer
at the box office.
The Academy Awards are the U.S. film industry's
top honors and are given out each year by the Academy of
Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences in a ceremony televised
live around the globe.