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CNN Spotlight

CNN SPOTLIGHT: Angelina Jolie

Aired May 09, 2014 - 22:00   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

NISCHELLE TURNER, CNN ANCHOR (voice-over): We know her as the red-hot movie star and sultry sex symbol.

KRISTA SMITH, SENIOR WEST COAST EDITOR, "VANITY FAIR": She is one of the most beautiful women on the planet. Let's face it.

TURNER: A former wild child with a dark side.

Carlos Greer, "PEOPLE": She was very into embalming dead bodies.

TURNER: And bizarre love life, turned megawatt actress and action hero.

ANGELINA JOLIE, ACTRESS: Still alive, baby?

TURNER: She sizzled on the screen with future flame Brad Pitt, Mr. and Mrs. Smith now one of Hollywood's most powerful couples.

GREER: They are the real deal.

TURNER: So much of her passion plays off the screen.

JOLIE: You see these people who have so much pain and loss.

Your sister got shot?

It just changed everything.

TURNER: A global humanitarian and mom of six, and after a bold decision...

JOLIE: Oh, it was definitely shocking.

TURNER: ... a real-life heroine.

JOLIE: I have been very happy just to see the discussion about women's health expanded.

TURNER: We shin the CNN SPOTLIGHT on Angelina Jolie.

Late February, Angelina Jolie makes a surprise visit to Syrian refugee children in Lebanon.

JOLIE: Lebanon, as you know, has the highest concentration of refugees of any country in the world in recent history. And we must do all that we can to support them.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Hala (ph) and her five siblings arrived here as orphans.

TURNER: While she was there, Angelina together with the U.N. filmed a mini-documentary at one of Lebanon's refugee camps. The poignant short film features five children living on their own after their mother was killed in an airstrike in Syria.

JOLIE: Was she like you?

It's a bittersweet evening.

TURNER: In November, Jolie was honored with the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award.

JOLIE: There is a lot more to do.

TURNER: In an emotional speech, she credited her late mother for teaching the importance of compassion.

JOLIE: I will do the best I can with this life to be of use. And to stand here today means that I did as she asked. And if she were alive, she would be very proud. So thank you for that.

(APPLAUSE)

TURNER: Jolie trekked to Lebanon after spending months in Australia with her own children.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: As a kid, was always in trouble.

TURNER: She was filming "Unbroken," the true story of an Olympic runner taken prisoner by Japanese forces during World War II. It's the A-lister's second stab at directing.

And this month, the movie star, director and U.N. hero is taking an evil turn on the big screen. Jolie plays one of Disney's most notorious villains in "Maleficent," a wicked twist on "Sleeping Beauty."

ELLE FANNING, ACTRESS: Then come out.

JOLIE: Then you will be afraid.

TURNER: Perhaps Jolie at her most vicious.

Yet her own life is as full of gripping drama as any of her films.

JOLIE: I feel very deeply connected to all those women.

TURNER: It's been a year since she made a startling confession.

JOLIE: I get moved to talk about it. SMITH: I think that the reason why it resonated and was so shocking to everybody was because here you have this woman identified as a sex goddess, and here she is saying, I have had a double mastectomy.

TURNER: Last February, 38-year-old Jolie, humanitarian, Oscar winner, fiancee of Hollywood hunk Brad Pitt and doting mom of six, underwent a preventative double mastectomy.

Angelina chose surgery after learning that she carries a mutation of the BRCA1 gene, which dramatically increases her risk of developing breast and ovarian cancer. Her mother died of ovarian cancer in 2007, and a year ago, her aunt died after battling breast cancer. The surgery reduces her chances of developing breast cancer from 87 to under 5 percent.

She delivered the news about her surgery in a candid "New York Times" op-ed. She wrote: "Once I knew that this was my reality, I decided to be proactive and to minimize the risk as much as I could," adding, "I do not feel any less of a woman. I made a strong choice that in no way diminishes my femininity."

(on camera): What was the reaction you heard after that op-ed?

SMITH: People were just cheering. It's empowerment. Suddenly, if Angelina is saying it, it's in "The New York Times," maybe I don't have to be so scared anymore. I can ask these questions.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Has Brad supported you a lot through this, what must have been such a difficult decision?

JOLIE: Oh, he has been extraordinary.

TURNER (voice-over): Just a few weeks after her announcement, Angelina stunned fans when she showed up with Brad at his "World War Z" premiere in London.

JOLIE: I have been very happy just to see the discussion about women's health expanded. And that means the world to me. And after losing my mom to these issues, I'm very grateful for it.

GREER: A lot of people did not expect her to talk to reporters on that red carpet. But it didn't faze Angelina.

TURNER: And it didn't faze Brad Pitt.

(on camera): How do you feel about her as a woman now that she has made this decision?

BRAD PITT, ACTOR: She's this brave, bold individual that I fell for in the beginning, and sexy as ever. That's what I tell you.

TURNER (voice-over): That brave decision elevated Angelina beyond the bright lights of Hollywood. The former wild child has become a role model for the fight against breast cancer, as well as a global crusader for refugees in war-torn countries. GREER: She went from this self-destructive teenager to this Hollywood bad girl that had everyone kind of scared at some moments in her life to just being this huge sort of Mother Teresa figure.

TURNER: A daughter of Hollywood royalty, Angelina Jolie Voight was born in Los Angeles on June 4 of 1975. Her mother, Marcheline Bertrand, was an actress and homemaker. Her father is best known for his iconic roles in "Midnight Cowboy."

DUSTIN HOFFMAN, ACTOR: I'm walking here! I'm walking here!

TURNER: And "Coming Home."

JON VOIGHT, ACTOR: This isn't "have a gimp over for dinner night," is it?

GREER: Her dad, Jon Voight, who she has had a very up-and-down, sort of rocky relationship throughout the years.

VOIGHT: This is Angie.

GREER: He left her when she was six months old. And she has spoken about how she has dealt with abandonment issues as a very young child.

VOIGHT: She was a baby when we were divorced. So it surprised me when she said it affected her as severely as it did. But, looking back, I can see that there were times when perhaps she expressed her anger in different ways.

GREER: Growing up, Jolie seemed to be following in the footsteps of her mom and dad.

JOLIE: You OK?

TURNER: At 7 years old, she made her film debut, starring with both parents in "Looking to Get Out."

VOIGHT: Where are you from, honey?

JOLIE: Las Vegas, Nevada.

TURNER: Angelina caught the acting bug. She modeled for a bit and attended Beverly Hills High School, but she wasn't like most Hollywood kids.

NEELY MARGO, DRAMA TEACHER: She was very dark, very goth. I always remember her wearing black lipstick.

TURNER: When we come back, Angelina's dark days.

JOLIE: The ritual of having cut myself and feeling pain, maybe, was somehow therapeutic to me.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR: You know how they say some day a girl is going to come along and change your world forever?

TURNER (voice-over): Before Angelina Jolie took the world by storm as a movie star in films like "Wanted," her teenage years weren't quite so glamorous.

MARGO: She was very dark, very goth. I always remember her wearing black lipstick.

GREER: She was very into embalming dead bodies and self- mutilation.

JOLIE: I collected knives, and I always had certain things around. For some reason, the ritual of having cut myself and feeling -- like, feeling pain, maybe, feeling alive, feeling some kind of release, it was somehow therapeutic to me.

That's not bad.

TURNER: Eventually, Angelina's dark nature spilled over into her career. Her roles became edgier.

JOLIE: Are you challenging me?

TURNER: By the time she hit 19, Angelina had appeared in five films.

JOLIE: Never send a boy to do a woman's job.

TURNER: Her biggest role to date in 1995's "Hackers," a thriller about computer geeks. Months later, the 21-year-old married her co- star Jonny Lee Miller. The marriage was short-lived, but it gave way to a much racier relationship.

JOLIE: I'm going to tickle you to death. Do you understand me?

TURNER: This time with actress Jenny Shimizu, female co-star from the film "Foxfire."

Angelina was matter-of-fact about the relationship.

JOLIE: I thought she was the greatest woman. I had so much fun with her and found myself loving her and wanting to express that physically.

Call me Gia. Do you think you can remember that?

TURNER: In what would become a common theme of Angelina's art imitating life, she channeled her affinity for experimentation into one of the most captivating roles of her career, as the heroin- addicted lesbian Gia.

SMITH: It was this kind of story this small town girl, great face, became a supermodel, but then lost her way and turned to drugs.

GREER: Angelina said that heroin was so close to her life at one point that, if she wasn't careful, she could have ended up like Gia.

JOLIE: Well, now I don't know what to say.

SMITH: When Angelina played her, it was like, who is this girl, this actress?

TURNER: This actress garnered a Golden Globe for her performance. But Angelina's next role took her to the pinnacle of her craft. In 1999, she played a mental patient in "Girl, Interrupted," alongside Winona Ryder.

JOLIE: You lie down, you confess your secrets, and you're saved.

GREER: "Girl, Interrupted" was the movie that said, wow, this is a movie star. That's when you knew she was here to stay.

TURNER: Angelina took home an Oscar for the role. But, in the end, it wasn't her win that grabbed national headlines.

(on camera): The tabloids found her then, too, more so maybe for the kiss with her brother?

GREER: Yes, right on the lips. And it was the butt of a lot of late-night jokes.

TURNER (voice-over): The kiss with brother James Haven raised many eyebrows. But Angelina promptly played it down.

JOLIE: There is nothing at all bizarre or sexual or strange going on. My brother and I are very, very good friends. We're -- we deeply love and care about each other.

TURNER: It turned out she was in a serious relationship -- with actor Billy Bob Thornton.

JOLIE: Your husband has a beautiful voice.

TURNER: Her co-star in the comedy "Pushing Tin."

(on camera): He was 44. She was, what, 20 years younger than him. But they were theater.

GREER: You didn't know whether it was real, if it wasn't real, what was real.

TURNER (voice-over): The relationship was real, and in 2000, the couple eloped in Vegas. Billy Bob and Angelina were one of Tinseltown's quirkiest couples.

GREER: They walked around with each other's blood around their necks. For their one-year anniversary, they bought each other burial plots next to each other.

SMITH: It was almost like performance art.

TURNER: Angelina's relationship was front and center. But it took a back seat as she was primed for superstardom.

GREER: "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider" is when we saw a different side of Angelina as an actress. She was this major female action figure.

TURNER (on camera): Butt-kicker.

GREER: She did her own stunts, and she was kicking butt.

TURNER (voice-over): But off-screen, her marriage was crumbling. She and Billy Bob divorced shortly after her filming in Cambodia. While the sunset on one romance, another was on the horizon.

PITT: Sweetheart?

JOLIE: You still alive, baby?

GREER: She met Brad Pitt filming "Mr. and Mrs. Smith." They were friends on set, and they just got to know each other.

TURNER: Brad and Angelina's steamy on-camera relationship had the entertainment magazines buzzing. The media quickly dubbed them Brangelina.

PITT: You think this story is going to have a happy ending?

TURNER: But talks of romance between the two ignited a firestorm of bad press.

(on camera): Angelina took some hits at first for this relationship.

GREER: Around the time that Angelina met Brad Pitt, you know, he was married to Jennifer Aniston. They had this fairy tale wedding, and they were Hollywood's it-couple.

TURNER (voice-over): But after months of rumors about Mr. and Mrs. Smith, Hollywood's it-couple split. Although Brad and Angelina denied dating during his marriage, they debuted as a couple in 2005, and, in 2012, they announced their engagement.

GREER: They have been together for nearly 10 years. So they are the real deal.

TURNER: Brad and Angelina defied the odds, changing the narrative around their relationship. Angelina's transformation didn't stop there.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Hey, Angie.

TURNER: Coming up: Angelina's 180 from wild child to supermom.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

TURNER (voice-over): As action hero Lara Croft, Angelina Jolie's mission is to save the world against all evil. Angelina had no idea how much that role would change her own life.

GREER: She went around the world shooting "Tomb Raider." And she was exposed to international refugees. And it was sort of like her call to action.

JOLIE: My eyes were opened through meeting people of other countries and seeing what life was like for them in countries like Cambodia and Sierra Leone.

What are you going to do when the food runs out?

UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR: Oh, we usually find a way.

TURNER: Then while researching her role in the film "Beyond Borders," Jolie travelled to Africa and Asia as part of a United Nations refugee mission.

JOLIE: They said, what was this kind of strange creature that was coming to the middle of place that seemed not to fit at all?

TURNER: She was such a perfect fit that, in August of 2001, she became a goodwill ambassador for the U.N. Refugee Agency.

JOLIE: I was very focused on myself, on my career, on my life. I had done things, you know, like most teenagers, hurting myself. And then suddenly you see these people who have so much pain and loss, and you just feel like your whole life, you have just been so sheltered and so spoiled with so much. And it just changed everything.

TURNER: Her first visit to a refugee camp in Africa shook her to the core.

JOLIE: The first child I saw die, I saw him dying. My thought was well, we will just airlift him and take him to the hospital. That can solve this in a second.

It was that moment where you look around and realize that there are hundreds of thousands of people in the exact same situation, and that a lot of these kids were going to die. And then -- and then I went home and I thought that I should have at least taken one. And then -- and I will always kick myself for not trying with just that one.

TURNER: A year later, she did. In March of 2002, Angelina adopted 7-month-old Maddox from a Cambodian orphanage.

(on camera): Was that a turning point in her life?

GREER: Yes, you have her really paying attention to international humanitarian relief efforts, and becoming a mom, and that really changed her. That's when she found her calling.

TURNER (voice-over): The woman once fascinated with death and the dark side was now on a mission to save lives.

JOLIE: If I don't decide that today, then what may be happened to that kid, what maybe would have happened to Mad? If I didn't wake up and make that decision, where would my -- where would he be?

TURNER: In 2005, Angelina adopted again, a baby girl from Ethiopia she named Zahara. As Jolie's family grew, so did her passion for humanitarian work.

GREER: You really saw her influence on Brad Pitt. Before Angelina Jolie, we didn't know Brad Pitt as this huge humanitarian. And after Angelina, they shared that. It became a common bond. And then they started having children together.

TURNER: In 2006, Angelina gave birth to daughter Shiloh in Namibia. Less than a year later, the couple adopted Pax from a village in Vietnam. Then the power couple added two more to the brood, twins, Vivienne and Knox.

By 2008, Angelina and Brad had six kids from all over the world. Jolie had emerged as a global crusader with a global family. Her roles on screen changed too.

JOLIE: In his journalism, I had never seen anything so honest.

TURNER: She played the widow of assassinated journalist Daniel Pearl.

(on camera): She went from making the "Girl, Interrupted"s, the "Gia"s to taking roles like playing Mariane Pearl in "A Mighty Heart" and directing films like "In the Land of Blood and Honey."

GREER: She is very careful about the characters that she portrays now, and also the films that she directs. She really believes in bringing attention to the causes that she cares about.

TURNER (voice-over): In 2003, Angelina launched the Maddox Jolie-Pitt Foundation, which raises big bucks for community development in Cambodia and the rest of the world.

GREER: She also puts her money where her mouth is. She makes this incredible, insane amount of money. She is not going to miss giving away $5 million to whatever cause.

TURNER: But no cause or project takes priority over her children.

GREER: This has become a huge part of who Angelina Jolie is. She is a very hand-on mom, and she is all about her family. Even the roles that she takes, she considers her family first.

TURNER: A devoted mother who plans to be there for her children, no matter what it takes, including a radical double mastectomy. GREER: Angelina took this measure because she wanted to protect herself, and she also wanted to protect her children.

TURNER (on camera): Or have to worry about them living life without her, like she has had to live life without her mother.

GREER: Exactly.

TURNER (voice-over): That decision makes Angelina even more appealing to her biggest supporter.

PITT: That's really her decision to undertake that, and then to go beyond that and share that with others, because she realizes that this is not available for everyone, and that it should be.

TURNER: Dedicated mom, movie star, global humanitarian, and now real-life heroine, the evolution of Angelina continues.

(END VIDEOTAPE)