From trials and tribulations to triumph: Halle Berry’s journey to success
While she’s been crowned the most beautiful person in the world, named the sexiest woman alive, and won both an Emmy and an Oscar, life hasn’t always been so sweet for Halle Berry.
Starting from childhood she endured abuse and racism, yet as time went on she prevailed, making a name for herself and inspiring others.
Keep reading to learn about Halle Berry’s path to stardom.
Born Maria Halle Berry on August 14, 1966 to a white woman and a Black man, Berry and her older sister were raised by their mother after they escaped an abusive situation involving her father.
Berry, whose named was legally changed to Halle Maria Berry when she was five, recalled a horrific domestic violence incident she experienced when she was only a child.
“I wasn’t married to a man that beat me up, but my mother was,” she said during a gala in 2015.
The actress recalled watching her mother get beaten up “day after day after day” by her father who was an alcoholic.
One incident that stuck with her was when her mother was “kicked down stairs” and hit in the head with a wine bottle.
“Knowing that she wanted nothing more then for her little girls to see her be empowered and be a woman of strength, but having no way to make that happen was heartbreaking for me,” Berry said.
“She stayed for too long and her children, my sister and I, saw far too much and I’ve suffered the damage of being a child of domestic violence.”
Berry’s mother took her daughters and moved them to an all-white neighborhood and school.
Not only was growing up in an all-white neighborhood a challenge, but raising two biracial children was difficult as well.
But Berry saw her mother as a “super strong, warrior woman” who was capable of anything, and her praise for her mother showed no bounds.
When it was time for Berry to leave the nest, she initially tried her hand at broadcast journalism before realizing her dream was to act. So, in 1989 she moved to New York to pursue her dream.
Her first big film credit came in 1991 when she was cast as Samuel L. Jackson’s drug-addicted girlfriend in Jungle Fever. For the next 20 years Berry spent playing more offbeat roles.
In 1995 she broke through Hollywood’s racial barriers when she became the first Black American cast as the Queen of Sheba in Solomon & Sheba. Throughout the years she continued challenging racial barriers.
Most notably in 2001 when she portrayed the wife of a prisoner on death row in Monster’s Ball. Her role earned her a Golden Globe nomination and the Oscar for best actress.
Her win marked the first time a Black woman won the Academy award for Best Actress.