Charlize Theron Measurements
:
Height 5'11
Weight : 135 lbs
Charlize's Measurements : 32 - 32 - 30
   
While it's hard to
imagine that anyone could have made the
disastrous T&A spectacle that was Showgirls
worth watching, moviegoers who got a charge out
of seeing actress Charlize Theron open a can of
whup-ass in Teri Hatcher's face in 2 Days in the
Valley may agree that it's a bit of a shame the
statuesque South African beauty didn't quite
beat out Elizabeth Berkley for the Showgirls
lead role.
Not that Theron
herself ever shed any tears over that particular
missed opportunity — as she later explained of
her failure to land the high-profile part, "It
was like I had some guardian angel." And though
it didn't exactly vault her onto Hollywood's
A-list overnight, Theron's energetic,
well-reviewed performance in 2 Days — her
feature-film debut and her very first
professional acting gig — ensured that Hollywood
casting directors would most definitely remember
her name.
The
only child of Afrikaaner parents who owned both a road
construction company and a farm, Theron was born and
raised in Benoni, South Africa, where she experienced a
thoroughly rural upbringing that included (naturally)
getting up at the crack of dawn to milk the cows. At age
6, young Charlize began studying ballet, a pursuit that
would command her attention throughout the next decade
of her life. Whenever she was out of toe-shoes, the
agile youngster devoted her free time to a consuming
passion for American movies: She first experienced them
at a drive-in located a 45-minute drive down the road
from the family farm, and later cajoled her parents into
purchasing a VCR. "I screamed and I yelled and we got
one," she later recalled. "And this little video store
opened in town with, like, 20 videos. I saw everything
about 50 times." A particular favorite was the Tom
Hanks-Daryl Hannah mermaid romance Splash, which caused
the wide-eyed Theron to develop a huge crush on the
hunky Hanks.
Eventually her study of ballet landed the talented teen
at a school for the performing arts in Johannesburg,
where she occasionally sat in on drama classes. As a
result of that casual interface, the striking
16-year-old stumbled upon a modeling contest, which she
entered and won. Just weeks before her wholly
serendipitous introduction to the world of modeling,
Theron's father had passed away, and when an Italian
fashion scout informed her that there was a modeling
contract awaiting her in Milan, the unassuming South
African farm girl was seized by a sudden ambition to
travel and try something new. Though a moderate success
on the runways, Theron was unable to land any major
modeling contracts or cover shots, and eventually the
newness of her latest endeavor wore thin. When an
American magazine flew her to New York for a photo
shoot, she decided to stick around and make a new life
for herself in the States. As she later told one
interviewer, "I went, did the job, and never made it
back to the airport. I was thrilled."
    
(Editor's Note: Charlize Theron spoke out about her
father's death on a 20/20 special recently (Jan 2004).
In the show, she explains how her father was shot by her
mother, as he threatened to kill them both.
Theron's father was an alcoholic, and violent at times.)
On her own in the Big Apple at age 18, Theron worked
modeling jobs whenever she could get them and swiped
bread from restaurants when she couldn't. The cold, wet
winters proved especially trying for the South African
expat, who was accustomed to much milder seasons, and
she found herself continually intimidated by the city's
maze of towering skyscrapers. New York's Joffrey Ballet
provided a respite from her woes, but the security of
taking up her childhood passion once again was abruptly
withdrawn in 1995, when a career-ending knee injury
forced her to fall back on modeling. She confided her
troubles to her mother, who recalled Theron's childhood
passion for cinema and suggested her intrepid daughter
go to Southern California and try to break into movies.
Mom sent her money for that one-way ticket to the big
city, and Theron booked a flight to "Hollywood," only to
discover, to her dismay, that her travel agent had put
her on a plane to "Los Angeles."
   
Once arrived at her destination, Theron checked into a
low-rent L.A. motel and spent the next two weeks
blundering around town attempting to make connections.
She eventually ended up in line at a bank with the final
check from her various employments in New York, and
threw an impressive tantrum when the teller refused to
cash the check because it was drawn on an out-of-state
bank. Hollywood talent manager John Crosby happened to
be standing in line behind her, and, after helpfully
explaining that she could cash her out-of-state check at
any post office, asked if she were, perchance, an
actress. Somewhat flustered, Theron replied that she
wasn't, but that she fully intended to become one.
Crosby, who earlier in his career had discovered Rene
Russo at a Rolling Stones concert, offered his card.
Friends told Theron she'd been taken in, but after
asking around and discovering that Crosby was entirely
reputable, she got in touch with him, and he agreed to
take her on as a client.
Thereafter, Theron underwent countless auditions for
television commercials, but was unable to land a single
gig; as she later put it to Interview magazine, "I
could've sooner gotten arrested." Her perseverance
eventually resulted in her 2 Days role, which was
immediately followed by a chance to work with childhood
crush Hanks on his directorial debut, 1996's That Thing
You Do! Hanks raved over her audition, blushed when told
of the bright young neophyte's youthful infatuation, and
eventually signed her for a small role as an
all-American everygirl who finds love with the dentist
of her dreams after her drummer boyfriend starts
spending too much time with his bandmates. The following
year, Theron logged prominent roles in decidedly
different lawyer flicks, the Michael Richards farce
Trial and Error and the Keanu Reeves-Al Pacino thriller
The Devil's Advocate. Though absent from theaters during
most of 1998, she turned heads with her bang-on
portrayal of a callow supermodel in Woody Allen's
Celebrity that fall, and made her debut in a starring
role, opposite Bill Paxton, in Disney's remake of Mighty
Joe Young.
No stranger to the ups and downs of celebrity romance,
Theron dated actor Craig Bierko for two years before
moving on to Third Eye Blind vocalist Stephan Jenkins.
Before 1999 was out, she starred opposite a trio of
Hollywood hotties: the New Line horror flick The
Astronaut's Wife paired her with Johnny Depp; she joined
Tobey Maguire in an adaptation of John Irving's The
Cider House Rules; and she wrapped the crime drama The
Yards which matched her with Joaquin Phoenix. |