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Birth name - Cameron
M. Diaz
Birth - 30 August
1972 , San Diego, California, USA
Height - 5'9"
Profession - Hollywood Actress
and Model
Model-turned-actress Cameron Diaz seemed to come out of nowhere when she
made her 1994 screen debut opposite Jim Carrey
in The Mask.
However, her unusual beauty -- the result of her Cuban-American and
Anglo-German-Native-American parentage -- helped to ensure that she
would not be soon forgotten.
Born in San Diego, CA, on August 30, 1972, Diaz left school at 16 to
become a model. For the next five years, she traveled the globe,
working in Japan, Australia, Mexico, Morocco, and Paris. As a model for
the Elite Agency, she did commercial work for such products as Coke,
Nivea, and L.A. Gear. She returned to California at the age of 21 and
was unknown in the film industry when cast in her breakthrough role as
the target of Jim Carrey's
hyper-animated lust in The Mask.
Following the hoopla surrounding her performance -- or, more
specifically, her physical appearance -- in the film, Diaz opted to take
acting lessons and appear in a series of small, independent films,
including The Last
Supper (1995), She's the One
(1996), and Feeling
Minnesota (1996).
After starring opposite Ewan
McGregor in Danny
Boyle's A Life
Less Ordinary (1997), Diaz further endeared herself to audiences and
critics with her performance in My
Best Friend's Wedding (1997). Proving herself an acceptable foil for
the film's star, Julia
Roberts, she went on to greater success in the Farrelly
brothers' There's
Something About Mary in 1998. Starring as the film's titular
heroine, Diaz turned in an audience-pleasing performance in the
cheerfully bawdy film, which proved to be one of the year's biggest
box-office successes. The same year, Diaz cameoed in Fear
and Loathing in Las Vegas and starred as Jon Favreau's
unhinged fiancée in the black comedy Very Bad
Things. Now fully established as one of Hollywood's hottest
properties, she accepted leads in 1999's Being
John Malkovich, in which she played puppeteer John Cusack's
wife, and Any Given
Sunday, in which she played the president and co-owner of a football
team in Oliver
Stone's paean to American football.
In 2000, Diaz joined Drew
Barrymore and Lucy Liu
in Charlie's
Angels, the much-hyped big-screen remake of the television classic.
A comically self-aware and fairly faithful adaptation of the original
series, Charlie's
Angels served up Matrix-style
action with retro-sensibilities, propelling the franchise into the new
millennium. The following year found Diaz endearing herself to younger
audiences as the voice of Princess Fiona in the animated box-office
smash Shrek,
as well as using her wide-eyed innocence to horrific effect in the Tom Cruise
mindbender Vanilla
Sky. Headlining the ill-fated comedy The Next
Best Thing in 2002, Diaz would take a historical trip to the
birthplace of America in director Martin
Scorsese's Gangs of
New York before becoming the second (after Julia
Roberts) actress to join the "20-Million-Dollar Club" with Charlie's
Angels: Full Throttle. Like its predecessor, the film performed
well at the box office, and Diaz further proved her box-office clout in
2004 when another sequel, Shrek 2,
became the third-highest grossing film of all time.
Diaz switched gears altogether in 2005 when she headed to the small
screen, hosting and producing the MTV reality show Trippin'.
With its focus on ecology and conservation, the program found the
actress and her celebrity pals traipsing the globe to explore various
natural environments. Diaz also remained a strong presence in Hollywood
during the Christmas season of 2005 in the well-received Curtis
Hanson film In Her Shoes.
In this picture -- adapted from the Jennifer
Weiner novel by Susannah
Grant -- Diaz plays the beautiful yet thoroughly harebrained and
irresponsible Maggie, sister of the prim, proper, and conservative
attorney Rose (Australian import Toni
Collette), with whom she comes to blows during their ill-advised
stint as roommates. As Maggie discovers a grandmother that she never
knew existed (Shirley
MacLaine) and travels to Florida to bond with the woman, Rose
experiences a significant romantic breakup and decides to change
careers. A long-buried and dormant secret from the past then comes to
light that reunites the women and forges a path to reconciliation. In Her Shoes
struck box-office gold and won the hearts of many critics. And though
it surprised just about everyone who foresaw a dopey, lame-brained
romantic comedy, assiduous devotees of Hanson's
career were perhaps less shocked given the director's keen intelligence
and marvelous track record.
Diaz maintained a relatively low profile throughout 2006, following
up the Hanson
film with yet another lightly comic dissection of contemporary
relationships, Nancy
Meyers' Holiday.
In this romantic comedy, released in December 2006, Diaz plays Amanda, a
City of Angels native who meets Briton Iris (Titanic star Kate
Winslet) on an Internet website that encourages its users to take
vacations by temporarily "swapping homes" with one another. Inevitably,
Amanda falls for an Englishman (Jude Law)
while Iris meets and falls for an American man (Jack Black).
Meanwhile, the actress signed on to voice Princess Fiona again for
Dreamworks' tertiary installment of the Shrek franchise, Shrek the
Third, which finds Prince Fiona and Shrek the Ogre married but not
planning to inherit the throne. When King Harold (the voice of John Cleese)
falls ill, Shrek, Puss in Boots, and Donkey foresee the need for a
scion, and set out to find Fiona's rebellious cousin, Artie, the
"rightful" heir to the kingdom. Pop idol Justin
Timberlake, Diaz's longtime boyfriend and suitor, provided the
voice for Artie.
Prior to her long-standing romantic relationship with Timberlake
(a constant source of tabloid fodder and speculation), Diaz was
alternately linked, offscreen, with actor Matt Dillon,
actor Jared
Leto (to whom she was engaged for a time), and video producer Carlos
De La Torre. She has never married, and according to some sources,
never has any intention of marrying. In August 2004, however, she caused
an enormous media stir when she turned up alongside Timberlake
at Disney's Magic Kingdom in Orlando -- wearing what appeared to be a
massive gold band with a diamond on her left hand; the couple denied
that it was an engagement ring. The very same situation recurred in
January 2005, when Diaz (sporting the same jewelry) and Timberlake
popped up at the Los Angeles restaurant Angelini Osteria. ~ Rebecca
Flint Marx, All Movie Guide |