Charlize Theron (born August 7, 1975, Benoni, South Africa) is a South African-born actress who was noted for her versatility and earned an Academy Award for best actress for her performance as a real-life serial killer in Monster (2003).
Theron grew up on a farm near Benoni, South Africa. At age 13, wanting to continue her ballet studies, she began attending a boarding school that specialized in the arts. During a visit home when she was 15, her mother shot and killed her father in self-defense after being attacked by him while he was drunk. At age 16 Theron moved to Milan to work as a model. Two years later she settled in New York City, where she continued to model and began studying at the Joffrey Ballet School. A knee injury ended her chances of a career in dance, however, and she attempted, unsuccessfully, to pursue acting jobs.
Theron eventually moved to Hollywood, and, while making a loud scene after a bank refused to cash a check, she was discovered by an agent. She subsequently began landing some small parts, one of which—in 2 Days in the Valley (1996)—gained her favourable notice and paved the way for her first lead, in The Devil’s Advocate (1997). That film showcased her acting ability and versatility and led to further substantial roles, notably in Mighty Joe Young (1998), Celebrity (1998), The Cider House Rules (1999), and The Italian Job (2003). Her acting talent was further expressed in her award-winning performance as serial killer Aileen Wuornos in Monster. Theron’s immersion in the role—she became almost unrecognizable, thanks partly to a nearly 30-lb (14-kg) weight gain—helped her become the first African to win an acting Oscar.
Theron appeared in two movies in 2004, The Life and Death of Peter Sellers and Head in the Clouds. Her performance as a miner battling sexual harassment in North Country (2005) earned Theron an Academy Award nomination for best actress. She subsequently appeared in the drama In the Valley of Elah (2007), the superhero movie Hancock (2008), and The Road (2009), an adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s postapocalyptic novel of the same name. In the dramedy Young Adult (2011), Theron starred as a willfully immature woman who returns to her hometown in pursuit of her high-school sweetheart. She enlivened the screen as the evil queen in the dark fairy-tale adaptation Snow White and the Huntsman (2012) and its sequel, The Huntsman: Winter’s War (2016). Her character in the sci-fi thriller Prometheus (2012), the leader of a space expedition, was similarly icy and imperious.
Theron’s later roles included a gunslinger who assists a shepherd played by Seth MacFarlane in the spoof A Million Ways to Die in the West (2014); Imperator Furiosa, an intimidating warrior on a mission to save a group of enslaved women, in Mad Max: Fury Road (2015); and Libby Day, a woman investigating the brutal murder of her family in Dark Places (2015), an adaptation of the thriller novel by Gillian Flynn. In the animated Kubo and the Two Strings (2016), Theron provided the voice of a surly monkey. In 2017 she starred in the action thrillers The Fate of the Furious—the eighth film in the Fast and the Furious series—and Atomic Blonde, in which she played a British spy. Theron’s films in 2018 included the dark comedy Gringo, about a pharmaceutical company executive who is kidnapped by members of a drug cartel in Mexico, and Tully, for which she earned enthusiastic reviews for her uncompromising portrayal of an overwhelmed mother of three.
Theron later starred in the romantic comedy Long Shot (2019), playing a U.S. secretary of state who is planning on running for president. Her other credits from 2019 included Bombshell, a docudrama about the sexual harassment scandal that led Roger Ailes to resign as president of the Fox News Channel. For her performance as Megyn Kelly in that film, Theron received her third Oscar nomination. She then appeared in the action movies The Old Guard (2020), about a group of immortal mercenaries, and F9: The Fast Saga (2021), an installment in the Fast and Furious series. During this time she also voiced the matriarch, Morticia, in the animated comedy The Addams Family (2019) and its 2021 sequel.