Spotlight on Natalie Portman
At
first glance many may think that Natalie Portman
is just another typical Hollywood actress, but when
you look at the person behind the image, perceptions
immediately change.
Natalie Portman was born in Jerusalem,
Israel on June 9, 1981 to Avner (a fertility specialist)
and Shelley (a full time homemaker). At the age of
three she moved to Washington but soon relocated
to Syosset, New York, where she spent the rest of
her childhood. She concentrated on high school in
Syosset, where she was a straight-A student. In 2003
she graduated from Harvard, where she studied Psychology
and is currently pursuing graduate studies at Hebrew
University in Jerusalem.
At
the age of 11 she was spotted by an agent searching
for a child model, which started off her acting career.
Six months later at age 12, she debuted
in the critically acclaimed film Léon (1994),
directed by Luc
Besson. Portman became a leading lady when she
landed the role of Queen/Senator Amidala for Star
Wars Episode I, II, and III. This helped her win
roles in such films as Anywhere
But Here (1999), Where
the Heart Is (2000), Garden State (2003), and
Closer (2004).
Natalie
has been a strict vegetarian since she was 9, after
seeing a demonstration of laser surgery on a chicken
at a medical conference with her father. She does
not eat meat of any kind but does eat eggs and drinks
at least one glass of skim milk every day. She avoids
gelatin and cheeses that contain rennet (a milk-curdling
enzyme taken from the stomach of small farm animals
like calves or sheep). “I’ve been a vegetarian
since I was about nine. I just feel like you can’t
make a hierarchy among different beings in the value
of life. Obviously, I don’t take that too far.
If I had to decide between saving an ant and a person,
I’d certainly save the person.”
While
attending Harvard, Natalie discussed being a vegetarian
in college: “I definitely gained my Freshman
15. I didn’t mind weight so much as I did feeling
unhealthy. The dining hall was really messing with
me. The vegetarian option was usually, like, tofu
in oil sauce, and I really didn’t like anything,
so I’d ended up eating the vegetarian meal and the
pasta and the peanut butter and jelly. One
of the best things to come out of living off campus
is I can cook for myself. I’ve been working
out more regularly, too. My first two years I’d
get extremely depressed in the winter – such
bad weather, so much work. I usually run three or
four times a week now. Pretty boring, but it’s
so worth is. It’s done wonders for my mood.”
Aside
from acting, Natalie volunteers for the micro-finance
organization FINCA, which gives loans to females
in third-world countries, and she's visited Uganda
and Guatemala as part of her duties. She says, "There
are women my age with 10 kids on a dollar a day,
with inadequate food and water and medicine, and
everyone is dying of AIDS and malaria. Many of these
women are illiterate and have to sign their loan
checks with a fingerprint and yet they are running
successful businesses, paying their loans back on
time and sending their kids to university from the
money they make from their businesses. It's humbling." Natalie
also helped with the Democratic Presidential Campaign
for John Kerry in 2004, demonstrating her support
and involvement with American politics. From her
pure generosity to her obvious intelligence to her
love for animals, Natalie’s natural beauty
shines through and is a role model to us all.
>> See
more on Natalie Portman here
 Previous Spotlights:
Mr.
Rogers | Alicia
Silverstone | Tobey
Maguire | Natalie
Portman | Russell
Simmons | Joaquin
Phoenix | Brendan
Brazier | Carrie
Underwood | Steve
Vai | Prince
Fielder| Chris
Walla
|