| Description: | Charlize Theron Wallpaper |
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Charlize Theron (American English pronunciation:
/""r"li"s """r"n/; Afrikaans pronunciation: [""r"lis tron][1]; born 7 August 1975) is a South African actress and fashion model. She started her acting career in the United States and rose to fame in the late 1990s following roles in The Devil's Advocate (1997), Mighty Joe Young (1998), and The Cider House Rules (1999). Theron won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her portrayal of serial killer Aileen Wuornos in Monster (2003), becoming the first African to win an Academy Award in a major acting category. She received another Academy Award nomination for her performance in North Country (2005). Theron became a US citizen in 2007, while retaining her South African citizenship.
Theron was born in Benoni, in the then Transvaal Province of South Africa, the only child of Gerda Jacoba Aletta Maritz (who has also called herself Gerta)[2][3] and Charles Jacobus Theron (born 27 November 1947).[3] Her mother is of German descent and her father was of Occitan (French) and Dutch ancestry; Theron is descended from early Huguenot settlers, and Boer War figure Danie Theron was her great-great uncle.[4] "Theron" is an Occitan surname (originally spelled Théron) pronounced in Afrikaans as [tron], although she has said that the way she pronounces it in South Africa is ["ron].[5] She changed the pronunciation when she moved to the U.S. to give it a more "American" sound.
She grew up on her parents' farm in Benoni, near Johannesburg.[6] Her father died on 21 June 1991, after he was shot by Theron's mother. Theron's father, an alcoholic,[6] physically attacked her mother and threatened both women while drunk. The shooting was legally adjudged to have been self-defense and her mother faced no charges.[7]
Theron attended Putfontein Primary School (Laerskool Putfontein), a period she later characterised as not "fitting in".[8] At 13, Theron was sent to boarding school and began her studies at the National School of the Arts in Johannesburg.[6] Although Theron became fluent in English (which she speaks with a General American accent) around age nineteen, her first language is Afrikaans.[9][10]
Though seeing herself as a dancer,[11] Theron at 16 won a one-year modeling contract[6] at a local competition in Salerno [12],[11] and with her mother moved to Milan, Italy.[13] After Theron spent a year modeling throughout Europe, she and her mother moved to New York City and Miami, Florida.[13] In New York, she attended the Joffrey Ballet School, where she trained as a ballet dancer until a knee injury closed this career path[11] at 19.[14] As Theron recalled in 2008,
Intending now to work in movies, Theron flew to Los Angeles, California, on a one-way ticket her mother bought her.[11] During her early months there, she went to a Hollywood Boulevard bank to cash a cheque her mother had sent her to help with the rent.[15] When the teller refused to cash it, Theron engaged in a shouting match with her.[6] Upon seeing this, talent agent John Crosby,[15] in line behind her, handed her his business card and subsequently introduced her to casting agents and also an acting school.[15][16] She later fired him as her manager after he kept sending her scripts for films similar to Showgirls and Species.[17] After several months in the city, she was cast in her first film part, a non-speaking role in the direct-to-video film Children of the Corn III (1995).[6] Her first speaking role was a supporting but significant part in 2 Days in the Valley.[6] Larger roles in widely released Hollywood films followed, and her career expanded in the late 1990s with box-office successes like The Devil's Advocate (1997), Mighty Joe Young (1998), and The Cider House Rules (1999).[6] She was on the cover of the January 1999 issue of Vanity Fair as the "White Hot Venus".[18] AskMen named her the number one most desirable woman of 2003.[19]
After appearing in other films, Theron starred as serial killer Aileen Wuornos in Monster (2003).[6] Film critic Roger Ebert called it "one of the greatest performances in the history of the cinema".[20] For this role, Theron won the Academy Award for Best Actress at the 76th Academy Awards in February 2004,[21] as well as the SAG Award and the Golden Globe Award.[22] She is the first South African to win an Oscar for Best Actress.[23] The Oscar win pushed her to The Hollywood Reporter's 2006 list of highest-paid actresses in Hollywood; earning US$10 million for both her subsequent films, North Country and Æon Flux, she ranked seventh, behind Halle Berry, Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore, Renée Zellweger, Reese Witherspoon and Nicole Kidman.[24]
Source: Wikipedia
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