National Legal Resource Center
National Shakespeare Festival, 1966
National Society for Human Rights (Namibia)
Natural Nylon
Neal, Julie Pitt
Neill, Sam
Neri, Adriane
Das Neue
Never Too Young to Die
Newell, Mike
Newhart, Bob
Newland, Charlie
Newland, John
Newsday
News of the World
New Statesman
The New Yorker
New York Post
The New York Times
Nice Matin
Nichols, Mike
Nicholson, Jack
Nine Million campaign
Norton, Ed
No Security tour
Notes from My Travels (Jolie)
Novocaine
Now
Noyce, Phillip
Nujoma, Sam
Oates, Joyce Carol
Oates, Warren
Obama, Barack
O’Brien, Pat
Ocean’s Thirteen
Ocean’s Twelve
The Odessa File
Olcott, Chauncey
Oliver, Jamie
Olivier, Laurence
O Oysters
Open Sky
The Oprah Winfrey Show
Original Sin
O’Toole, Peter
Out of Order
Owen, Clive
Pacino, Alfredo James “Al,”
Bertrand’s relationship with
career, early, of
Pakistan
Palance, Jack
Palin, Sarah
Palmer, Martyn
Paltrow, Gwyneth
Papas, Irene
Paradis, Vanessa
Parker, Trey
Paul, Bonnie
Paul, Dorothy
Paul, Hank
Paul, Steven
Paul, Stuart
Pearl, Daniel
Pearl, Mariane
Pelosi, Nancy
Pels, Laura
Penn, Sean
People
Jolie-Pitt children in
Perry, Richard
Pertwee, Sean
Perzow, Jen
Peter Pan
Peters, Don
Peters, Lauri
Petraeus, David
Pham Quang Sang. See Jolie-Pitt, Pax Thien
Pham Thu Dung
Pham Thu Trang
The Philadelphia Inquirer
Phillippe, Ryan
Pickren, Stacey
Pinter, Harold
Pitt, Bill
Pitt, Brad
adoption of children by
Aniston’s relationship with
background of
Bertrand’s death and
children’s births and
humanitarian work by
illnesses by
Jolie’s relationship with
piloting lessons by
Pitt, Doug
Pitt, Jane
Pitt, Julie. See Neal, Julie Pitt
A Place in Time
Plan B Entertainment
Playboy
Playing by Heart
Playing God
Plunkett & Macleane
Politte, Catherine
Powell, Colin
Prefontaine, Steve
Premiere
Preston, Kelly
Previn, Dory
Prime Suspect
Private Radio
Pulsar and Sullivan
Pushing Tin
Pye, Michael
Rand, Ayn
Rath Vibol. See Jolie-Pitt, Maddox
Ray, Johanna
The Reader
Redford, Robert
Redgrave, Vanessa
Redmond, Ron
Regeneration
Reid, John
Republican National Convention, 2008
Ressner, Jeffrey
Reuther, Steven
Reverse Heaven
The Revolutionary
Reynolds, Burt
Ribisi, Giovanni
Richard, Cliff
Richards, Keith
Richardson, John H.
Richardson, Natasha
Richmond, Anthony
Riding in Cars with Boys
Ritchie, Guy
A River Runs Through It
Robertson, Lisa
Robinson, Mark Edwin
Rodgers, Richard
Roeg, Nicolas
Rogers, Ginger
Rolling Stone
The Rolling Stones
Room Service
Rosenberg, Sarah
Rosewood
Rossdale, Gavin
Ross, Diana
Rothbart, Jason
Roth, Eli
Rothrock, Cynthia
Rowanchilde, Daemon
Rowlands, Gena
Rozdeba, Suzanne
Rudolph, Alan
Ruehl, Mercedes
Runaway Train
Rusoff, Jane
Ryan, Meg
Ryder, Winona
Sachs, Jeffrey
Sales, Nancy Jo
Salt
Salt, Jennifer
Salt, Waldo
Saltzman, Josh
Samuelsohn, Howard
Sarrazin, Michael
Sawyer, Diane
Scarpetta, Kay
Schaffel, Robert
Schalk, Ray
Schell, Maximilian
Schlesinger, John
Schröder, Gerhard
Schroeder, Michael
Schwartz, Al
Schwarzenegger, Arnold
Scott, Ridley
Scott, Tony
Scruggs, Randy
Se7en
Seacrest, Ryan
The Seagull
Seattle International Adoptions
Seltzer, David
September 11 attacks
Sessums, Kevin
Seven Years in Tibet
Shainberg, Steven
Shark Tale
Shatner, William
Shaw, Robert
Sheen, Charlie
Sheen, Martin
Sheperd, Karen
Shimizu, Jenny
Shipp, Michael
Shirley, Anastasia
The Shore
Shudy, Chris
Shuster, Skyler
Shuster, Stanley
Sierra Leone
Silverberg, Charles
Silver, Sheryl
Silverstein, Rob
Simmons, Joseph
A Simple Plan
Sine, Richard
Sinise, Gary
Slash
Sledge: The Untold Story
Sling Blade
Slorek, Hank
Smith, Mark Haskell
Snead, Elizabeth
Soderbergh, Steven
Solomon, Ed
Song of Norway
Sorenson, Ted
SOS Children’s Villages
The Sound of Music
Specter, Arlen
Spielberg, Steven
Stallone, Sylvester
Stark, John
The Star
Stefani, Gwen
The Stepford Wives
Sterling, Kent
Stevens, Patricia
Stewart, James
Stogel, Angelina
Stogel, Carlo
Stogel, Syd
Stone, Oliver
Strasberg, Anna
Strasberg, Lee
A Streetcar Named Desire
Streisand, Barbra
The Student Prince
Sudan
Summer Holiday
Sundance Film Festival
Sunday Mirror
Sussmann, Michel
Sutherland, Donald
Sutherland, Kiefer
Swank, Hilary
Table for Five
Taines, Lauren
Taking Liv
es
The Talented Mr. Ripley
Talk
Tarantino, Quentin
Tardiff, Hugo
Tarrant, Jan
Taylor, Chip (uncle of Jolie)
childhood of
Taylor, James
Taylor, Joan
Taylor, Roger
Temple of Angkor Wat, Cambodia
Teresa, Mother
Tesfaye, Dadnachew
That Summer—That Fall
Theatre World Awards
The Last of His Tribe
Thelma and Louise
Theron, Charlize
Thomas, George
Thornton, Billy Bob
adoption by
background of
Dern, Laura’s, relationship with
eating disorders and
illness by
Jolie’s relationship with
Thornton, Harry
Thornton, Jimmy Don
Thornton, Penny
Thornton, Pietra
Thornton, William
Thurman, Mipam
Thurman, Uma
Tiernan, Andy
Tilly, Jennifer
Time magazine
Times (London)
Ting, Rich
Today show
The Tonight Show
Toronto Sun
The Tourist
Trainspotting
Tredwell-Owen, Caspian
Troy
Trudell
Trudell, John
Bertrand’s relationship with
True Grit
True Women
Tsvangirai, Morgan
Tusher, Will
Tutu, Desmond
20/20
Tynan, Kenneth
Ung, Loung
Ungvari, Evelyn
UNHCR. See United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
UNICEF
United Nations
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
Jolie’s ambassadorship with
USA Today
Us Weekly
Van Damme, Jean-Claude
Vanity Fair
Van Meter, Jonathan
Variety
Venditti, Antonello
Vietnam
A View From the Bridge
Vogue
Voight, Barbara Kamp (grandmother of Jolie)
death of
Voight, Barry (uncle of Jolie)
Voight, Elmer (grandfather of Jolie)
Voight, James. See Taylor, Chip
Voight, James Haven. See Haven, James “Jamie”
Voight, Jon (father of Jolie)
awards won by
Bertrand’s illness/death and
career, early, of
career, later, of
childhood of
divorce of
estrangement of family from
marriage, first, of
marriage, second, of
Pickren, Stacey’s, relationship with
political leanings of
production company by
set design by
spiritual search by
Voight, Marcheline. See Bertrand, Marcheline
W (magazine)
“The Wabash Cannonball,”
Waking Up in Reno
Wallace, Amy
Wallace, Cornelia
Wallace, George
The Wall Street Journal
Waltz into Darkness (Woolrich)
Wanamaker, Sam
Wanted
Warhol, Andy
Washington, Denzel
The Washington Post
Watts, Charlie
Wayne, John
Weaver, Dennis
Weinstein, Harvey
Welch, Raquel
Welles, Orson
Welsh, Irvine
Westerman, Floyd “Red Crow,”
West, Simon
Wheeler, David
Whitmire, Odessa
Whitworth, Johnny
Wide Horizons for Children
Wiedemann, Kent
Wilder, Billy
Wilder, Gene
William Morris Agency
Williams, Heathcote
Williams, Tennessee
Willis, Bruce
Wilson, Andy
Windle, Janice Woods
Winfrey, Lee
Winfrey, Oprah
Winger, Debra
Winslet, Kate
Winterbottom, Michael
Without Evidence
Without Limits
Woods Road Productions
Woolrich, Cornell
World Economic Forum
World Refugee Day
World Summit
World War II
Worldwide Orphans Foundation
Wuthering Heights
Yéle Haiti
Yogandanda, Paramahansa
Yorn, Julie
Yorn, Rick
Young Miss
Young, Ric
Zafón, Carlos Ruiz
Zahn, Paula
Zane, Billy
Zeta-Jones, Catherine
Ziff, Karen
Zito, Chuck
Zophres, Mary
Shortly before her seventeenth birthday, Angelina was in contention to replace supermodel Cindy Crawford as the face and body of a swimwear brand. While the camera loved her, she decided to focus on her acting career instead. Sean McCall
The wedding of Angelina’s maternal grandparents, Rolland and Lois Bertrand, in 1949 was an elaborate affair with seven bridesmaids and groomsmen. Lois dreamed of making it in the movies or as a model, passing on her ambition to her eldest daughter, Marcia Lynne. Courtesy of Don Peters
Every Saturday, Angelina’s grandmother Lois took young Marcia Lynne from the small community of Riverdale, Illinois, into Chicago for dance, singing, and acting classes. It was her mother’s ambition to see her daughter’s name up in lights. Courtesy of Carl Durnavich
When she left Beverly Hills High School in 1969, Marcia Lynne, who called herself Marcheline as an adult, pursued a career in modeling. Beverly Hills High School Yearbook
Jon Voight and a heavily-pregnant Marcheline Bertrand seem the picture of mutual adoration and happiness after she watched him perform in a Los Angeles stage production of A Streetcar Named Desire in April 1973. A few weeks later she gave birth to their first son, James Haven Voight. Peter C. Borsari
Angelina Jolie Voight was born in Beverly Hills on June 4, 1975. Her far-seeing mother gave her a distinctive middle name so that she would have her own stage identity should she wish to pursue a career in acting. Lauren Taines
Shortly after Angelina was born, Jon Voight was asked to organize a student production of Hamlet at the University of California, Northridge. During rehearsals he spent as much time as he could with the new arrival. Here he is at home on Roxbury Drive, wrestling with his lines and cradling baby Angelina in his arm as family friend Lauren Taines looks on. Visitors were always struck by how simply this Hollywood star lived. The decoration is plain except for a Tiffany lamp and an antique trunk bought by Marcheline. Courtesy of Lauren Taines
The building on Roxbury Drive in Beverly Hills that provided an unconventional home life for Angelina. For a time after the breakup of her parents’ marriage, Angelina lived apart from her mother and brother, cared for by various babysitters. This episode provides many clues to Angelina’s future behavior. Author’s collection
Jon Voight’s passionate affair with college student Stacey Pickren ended his marriage, with dramatic consequences for his family, particularly infant Angelina. He met the budding actress when she played Ophelia to his Hamlet. Their wild affair is still referred to as “The Scandal of Northridge.” Peter C. Borsari
Jon Voight and Stacey Pickren enjoy a joke with Dustin Hoffman. Both he and Hoffman were nominated for Oscars for their performances in Midnight Cowboy, the first X-rated movie to win an Academy Award. Stacey was by Voight’s side when he won an Oscar for Coming H
ome in 1979. Marcheline, who used to love going to the Oscars with her husband, watched the ceremony on television. Her daughter has never seen the movie because of the painful family associations. Peter C. Borsari
Angelina appeared in her first movie, Lookin’ to Get Out, with her father and Ann-Margret when she was just five. It was a family affair; her mother, Marcheline, who had recently divorced Jon Voight, played a girl he tried to woo, while Stacey Pickren was cast as a prostitute. Everett Collection/Rex Features
Startled by lurking photographers, Angelina clutches her father’s legs for protection. Even though he was divorced from Marcheline, Jon Voight continued to see his children regularly. Ron Galella, Ltd./WireImage/Getty Images
Angelina’s mother loved to buy her expensively embroidered or delicate antique dresses. Her daughter loved to climb trees and slide down mud banks. Shortly after this picture was taken, in June 1980, Angelina was climbing a nearby tree. It was the beginning of the end for her long dress. Lauren Taines
Angelina was always protective of and maternal toward younger children. She took a special shine to Sean Stogel, then three, teaching him how to blow bubbles and, in later life, how to ditch his girlfriends. Lauren Taines
Bill Day, who was Marcheline's partner for eleven years, Marcheline, and young Angelina, aged six, celebrate Easter 1982 on the grounds of the Beverly Hills Hotel by dressing in Hawaiian regalia, in celebration of the family holiday they had enjoyed on the island. Courtesy of Bill Day
Jon Voight watches his son, James, practice hoops. Besides basketball training, Voight helped coach James and Angelina for the school soccer team. Ken Regan/Camera 5
Angelina, known as Angie as she grew older, with her mother at their apartment on Roxbury Drive in Beverly Hills in December 1987. Marcheline was an absolute perfectionist, spending hours carefully decorating the Christmas tree to her satisfaction. Lauren Taines
Angie and her friend Chris Landon, the son of Little House on the Prairie star Michael Landon, were voted the couple with the best legs by their fellow classmates at El Rodeo School in Beverly Hills. For a time the couple were inseparable friends, united in part by the fact that both had famous fathers. El Rodeo School Yearbook
During her final year at El Rodeo School, Angie was reluctantly taking acting classes, mainly to please her mother. Although she was not much interested in the profession at the time, it seems her friends believed in her. Her friend Evelyn Ungvari suggested to budding artist Windsor Lai that he sketch her. “One day she is going to be famous,” she told him. El Rodeo School Yearbook
When she was ten, Angie enjoyed her first walk down the red carpet, for the 1986 Oscars, where her father was nominated for his starring role in Runaway Train. Her startling white angel dress was clearly chosen by a mother who still thought she was in kindergarten. Rex Features
Two years later, Angie was wearing her favorite color, black, the twelve-year-old just entering her punk phase. She has no memory of the night she joined her father and brother at the 1988 Oscar awards ceremony. Eugene Adebari/Rex Features
Angelina: An Unauthorized Biography Page 41