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Angelina Jolie: Outstanding Performance of the Year

Angelina Jolie: Outstanding Performance of the Year

Academy Award and three-time Golden Globe winner Angelina Jolie will receive the Outstanding Performance of the Year Award for her performance in A Mighty Heart at The Santa Barbara International Film Festival early next year.

“We are honored to celebrate Ms. Jolie in what is arguably one of the most extraordinary female roles of the year,” said Festival executive director Roger Durling.

Angie will be honored on Feb. 2, 2008, the second-to-last day of the festival, which begins on Jan. 24, 2008.

Kate Winslet, Heath Ledger, and Helen Mirren have received this award in previous years.

Jolie-outstanding angelina jolie outstanding performance 08
Jolie-outstanding angelina jolie outstanding performance 09
Jolie-outstanding angelina jolie outstanding performance 10
Jolie-outstanding angelina jolie outstanding performance 11
Jolie-outstanding angelina jolie outstanding performance 12

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850 Comments

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samaniston @ 10/15/2007 at 5:19 pm

troll are angry and start name change change on troll/hater of BAMPZS
Angie go girl let the troll continue complainning until they complain no more.

to all the troll hater life is too short to hate

Angelina you are full of class and talent.

CONGRATS HOT MOMMA!

oh, please @ 10/15/2007 at 5:19 pm

Cate Blancette can play a man, why cann’t Angie play a mix-race woman? get a life please, haters.

So, who did Brad pay to make sure AJ got this because the movie was a flop! Please the woman is box office poison and from what I read all of their movies they play in since 05 have been the least desireables of us the public. Everyone is sick to death of these two and wish they would permanently disappear as they promised to after they bought all those kids! We (majority of public with morals, taste and intelligence) think these two are a disgrace and a joke and we have no desire to spend any more of our hard earned dollars on their egocentric movies or roles. BOX OFFICE POISON AND BY THE WAY JOLIE STRONGLY RESEMBLES JOAN CRAWFORD!

i´m so proud of her!!! that is my ANGIE!!! ;)

ANGIE is the best!!! CONGRATULATIONS

the real tita @ 10/15/2007 at 5:20 pm

#3: of course, you would think that. That is why you’re in a Cotillard thread right now, admiring the woman. We know you don’t frequent Angie’s thread because you like her, no. That can’t be.

You’re here everyday because anybody is better than Angie any day to you and you just like saying it. Great logic, Regina. You should be a philosopher…NOT!

Hope she’s got a good idea how she’s going to celebrate with Brad, in any case, congratulations.

thanks jared,congrats angie

12 ©-! : 10/15/2007 at 5:10 pm

********************************
I read that voting ends Monday. Not sure which Monday they meant. I think it’s still worth a try.

Congrats to Angie, I hope this is just the start, like Helen Mirren, who ended up winning all GG, SAG and Oscar best actress awards!

OSCARS here we come!

OSCARS here we come!

OSCARS here we come!

OSCARS here we come!

OSCARS here we come!

Angelina Jolie - Academy Award and Three Time Golden Globe Winning Actress!

… oh what a poetic sounding way to describe OUR ANGIE!!!

45 Regina : 10/15/2007 at 5:17 pm
41 shaki : 10/15/2007 at 5:16 pm
___________________________

If the Festival and the award doesn’t matter why are you trolls (rity girl, does it hurt much? :lol:) so pissed?

#3: of course, you would think that. That is why you’re in a Cotillard thread right now, admiring the woman. We know you don’t frequent Angie’s thread because you like her, no. That can’t be.

You’re here everyday because anybody is better than Angie any day to you and you just like saying it. Great logic, Regina. You should be a philosopher…NOT!

WTF! When did I say anything bad about Jolie. Once again, the fanboys are at it. Love to argue. I happen to think Cotillard’s powerful performance as Edith Piaf was better than Jolie’s. Jolie is not always the best, believe it or not!

Observer2 @ 10/15/2007 at 5:23 pm

55 blady02 : 10/15/2007 at 5:20 pm
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

We? Quit talking about the other voices in your head.

What’s the matter you? Pissed off, that once again, she’s getting great notices for playing Marianne? Sucks to be you and your figurative ‘we’. LMAO!

angie you will always be a winner,bampzs can we enjoy the thread in peace without jelous losers

I think sam, ritzygal and all those haters who infest our thread have been jarred by this recognition of Angelina’s work in AMH. All of a sudden, the very real possibility of Angelina being nominated for an Oscar has hit them in the face, and they are getting worried. They have been enjoying the fact that AMH’s box office numbers left something to be desired. But now, this award could be the beginning of more for Angie and suddenly they are scared doodooless!
I am enjoying myself laughing at their posts, name changes and obsolete articles.

one of x fans loser @ 10/15/2007 at 5:24 pm

55 bladyo2 :go tell your sad story to someone else,loser.

one of x fans loser @ 10/15/2007 at 5:24 pm

55 bladyo2 :go tell your sad story to someone else,loser.

45 Regina

Did you remember this chick come to Brangelina`s thread and said I love them and now after this awrad,she can`t hold herself anymore.

yes Hon it is not very big award.but excuse me,award season just began,wait and see,If she doesn`t get any other award for her performance,then come here and put your **** here.

Yeah… ok. She wouldn’t even have had the opportunity to get such an award if Brad wasn’t sticking her every other night. He used her in this film cause she gave him a child. Yes, it’s true… they started filming well after she gave birth. God, they must have more money than we thought to be able to buy herself such an award.

Oh please, Halle Beery couldn’t a ct her way out of a box

MARIANNE IS NOT BLACK

tina wrote

tina : 10/15/2007 at 5:10 pm
Angelina JolieThe casting of Angelina Jolie as the mixed-race wife of late journalist Daniel Pearl in A Mighty Heart has been heavily criticised by black rights groups. Make-up artists are believed to have used special cosmetics to darken the star’s skin to match that of Mariane Pearl - but campaigners believe a real-life mixed-race actress should have been given the part.

Blogs on BlackLooks.org read, “I had assumed that the days when white actors took on the roles of black people had long passed away… There are mixed-race or black actresses who could have done a damn good job in this role.

“You can’t tell me that Halle Berry or other women of African descent wouldn’t have been a better choice - what is taking place here is an act of arrogance and whitewashing by people who think that because they are super-rich they can be anything they want.”

*********************************************************************
Another perspective - too many people are ignoring the other ethnicities of MP.

http://www.swanshadow.com/blogarchive/2006_10_01_blogarchive.html
Thursday, October 12, 2006
The ink is black, the page is white
The entertainment biz has been abuzz of late with the news that Halle Berry has signed to star in the upcoming DreamWorks film Class Act. The movie is based on the real-life story of Nevada schoolteacher Tierney Cahill, who ran (unsuccessfully) for Congress in 2000 to give her sixth grade students firsthand insight into the inner workings of a political campaign.

I know, that doesn’t sound like earthshattering news. The reason for all the conversation, however, is the fact that Tierney Cahill is of the Caucasian persuasion…

while Halle Berry is… well… otherwise persuaded.

In the words of Lance the Intern in Undercover Brother, it’s about to get racial up in this piece.

So-called “colorblind” casting — the concept of casting the best available actor in a role, even if the actor’s ethnicity differs from the character as written — is a relatively recent phenomenon in Hollywood. A few examples that come immediately to mind:
Morgan Freeman as Red, a character conceived by author Stephen King as Irish-American, in The Shawshank Redemption.

Michael Clarke Duncan as Wilson “The Kingpin” Fisk, a character drawn as a white man throughout 40 years of comic book continuity, in Daredevil.

Louis Gossett Jr. playing characters originally written as Caucasian in both the film An Officer and a Gentleman and the television series Gideon Oliver.

Denzel Washington in the recent remake of Man On Fire — the lead character was played by Scott Glenn in the original film.

Will Smith reprising the role made famous by Robert Conrad in the film version of Wild Wild West.
I could cite a dozen more examples, but you get the idea.

The difference, however, in Class Act is that Tierney Cahill is an actual living person, where all of the instances noted above involve actors portraying fictional characters.

Historically, when producers and casting directors have selected actors to play recognizable real-life public figures, they’ve made an effort to cast people who at least passably resemble the public figures in question. (Often with an abundance of help from the makeup department.) On the other hand, when casting roles involving real-life people whose faces are less familiar to the general public, Hollywood many times throws doppelganger concerns out the window. Julia Roberts, for instance, looks nothing like the actual Erin Brockovich, nor does Tom Cruise resemble the real Ron Kovic (Born on the Fourth of July).

The case of Tierney Cahill would seem closer to the latter examples. Had I not just turned up the above photograph of Ms. Cahill on the Internet, I wouldn’t had known whether she looked more like Halle Berry, Holly Hunter, or Hilary Duff. Given that the story Class Act will tell about Cahill has nothing directly to do with her race, I doubt that the casting of Berry will make any difference in the way the movie presents its protagonist — as opposed to a film about, say, the life of Leni Riefenstahl.

Since Tierney Cahill appears to be all right with the choice, I don’t suppose anyone else has standing to argue. Hey, if Hollywood wants to make a movie about my life, and they decide to cast a tall, muscular, attractive actor to portray short, portly, moon-faced me, more power to ‘em. (My vote? Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson. Just in case they happen to be casting this week.)

But the most interesting point in the Class Act debate, at least from my perspective, has less to do with the fact that Halle Berry is playing a woman who in real life is white than with the common assumption that Berry is somehow inappropriately cast in a role that is ostensibly other than black.

Lest we forget, only one of Halle Berry’s parents, her father, is of African descent. Her mother is an English-born Caucasian woman from Liverpool. Assuming half her DNA derives from either parent, isn’t Halle as much white as she is black?

Not in America, she isn’t.

I note this because, like Halle Berry, I am what we today fashionably call “biracial.” (In case that’s a new word to you, it does not have sexual implications of any kind, thank you very much.)

Although I was raised in an adoptive family by two African American parents, my biological mother was a Caucasian of predominantly German heritage, while my biological father was black. I was conceived and born in 1961, at a time in our nation’s history when my biological parents committed what was by law a crime in many juridictions, in the very act that gave me life. In several of these United States, they could not have legitimized my parentage through marriage even had they been so inclined.

As I was growing up, I always identified myself as “black” — remember, kids, this was back in the day before we were “African American,” and when we only just beginning to get over being “Negro” — mostly because that’s what my adoptive parents were. (The story is actually much more complicated than that, but we’ll tell that lengthy tale another day.) This despite the fact that my ethno-external characteristics are slightly more vaguely defined than those of Ms. Berry, leading to a lifetime of oddly personal questions and interesting ethnic misidentifications. During my 44 years, I have been presumed, at various times, to be:
Black.

Mexican.

Native American.

Asian Indian.

Cuban.

Filipino.

Hawaiian.

Puerto Rican.

Korean.

Chinese.

Various flavors of Central or South American.

Jamaican or some other flavor of Caribbean Islander.

Samoan.

Tongan.

Guamanian.

Malaysian.

Australian Aboriginal.

Eskimo.

“Mixed,” whatever that means.
And those are just the ones people were brazen enough to voice aloud in my presence.

(True story: I actually had a buddy of mine in college get angry with me — albeit momentarily — when he discovered that I was not, in fact, Puerto Rican as was he. I think the primary reason he had befriended me was that he thought he had found a kindred soul in our lily-white university environment.)

Thankfully, my daughter — whose mother is Caucasian, but whose features and coloring are similar to her dad’s — is growing to adulthood in an environment where being ethnically indeterminate is at least somewhat less the stigma it was when I was her age. Indeed, it brings a smile to my face sometimes when I drop her at school in the morning and she’s greeted by her two best friends — a fair-complected European blonde and a dark-complected girl whose family came originally from India — and the three of them walk onto campus together as their own little human spectrum.

I hope that someday, all three will be able to play whatever roles they choose to play in life…

…and no one will question whether they’re right for the part.

**********************************************************************

oh, please @ 10/15/2007 at 5:26 pm

I can see Angie winning SAG, GG and all the way to Oscar.

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