The Borneo Post

Angelina Jolie reveals Bell’s palsy diagnosis, her life after divorce

- By Bethonie Butler

ANGELINA Jolie is opening up about her life after fi ling for divorce from Brad Pitt last year. In an interview with Vanity Fair, the actress and fi lm director talks about focusing on her children in the wake of their highly-publicised split.

It’s decidedly less revealing than the interview Pitt gave to GQ earlier this year in which he revealed that he had quit drinking and been listening to a lot of Frank Ocean. But it does offer a glimpse into Jolie’s life as a single mother, who admits to taking cooking classes at her kids’ request.

Jolie recently directed “First They Killed My Father,” a fi lm adaptation of Loung Ung’s 2000 memoir about surviving the brutal Khmer Rouge regime, which was responsibl­e for the deaths of nearly two million Cambodians. Jolie and Ung cowrote the screenplay for the fi lm, arriving on Netfl ix later this year.

Here are some more revelation­s from the interview.

— She says she and Brad Pitt are “working towards the same goal.”

Jolie told contributi­ng editor Evgenia Peretz that in the summer of 2016, “things got bad” between her and Pitt, her partner of 12 years. “I didn’t want to use that word. ... Things became ‘difficult,’” she said.

Jolie wasn’t particular­ly forthcomin­g about their split, though she did hit back at rumours Pitt had grown wary of the family’s frequent travelling and wanted a more stable life for the children: “That was not the problem. That is and will remain one of the wonderful opportunit­ies we are able to give our children ...They’re six very strong-minded, thoughtful, worldly individual­s. I’m very proud of them.”

Asked if her relationsh­ip with Pitt had improved since their very public separation, Jolie offered a careful response: “We care for each other and care about our family, and we are both working towards the same goal.”

— She was diagnosed with Bell’s palsy

Jolie was diagnosed with hypertensi­on last year, as well as Bell’s palsy, a condition that disables the muscles on one side of the face due to nerve damage or acute infl ammation. The actress said acupunctur­e had helped her fully recover from the condition. “Sometimes women in families put themselves last until it manifests itself in their own health,” she told the magazine.

Jolie has been open about her health struggles in the past. In 2013, she wrote a New York Times op- ed about her decision to have a double mastectomy after learning she carried the BRCA1 gene mutation, putting her at high risk for breast and ovarian cancers. Two years later, she revealed that she had undergone preventati­ve surgery to remove her ovaries and fallopian tubes after a cancer scare.

— Her kids were involved with production on her upcoming fi lm.

“First They Killed My Father” is clearly a project Jolie feels passionate about. The actress recalls purchasing Ung’s memoir for US$ 2 in Cambodia, where she had fi lmed the 2001 blockbuste­r “Lara Croft: Tomb Raider.” Her experience­s in Cambodia inspired Jolie to learn more about internatio­nal issues, leading to many of the humanitari­an efforts she continues today.

Cambodia is also where she adopted her now 15-year- old son, Maddox, who is credited as a producer on “First They Killed My Father” and, as Jolie tells it, is largely the reason the fi lm got off the ground in the fi rst place. “He was the one who said, ‘ It’s time to do it.’”

Vanity Fair reports that Jolie’s son, Pax, did on- set still photograph­y, and her other kids “became close playmates with the child actors” in the fi lm. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Angelina Jolie Jolie, Maddox Jolie-Pitt and Loung Ung. — Courtesy of Pax Thien Jolie Pitt, Netflix
Angelina Jolie Jolie, Maddox Jolie-Pitt and Loung Ung. — Courtesy of Pax Thien Jolie Pitt, Netflix
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