Halle Berry: Gavin Newsom still hasn’t reached out, ‘he can’t sleep on women’

Here are some photos of Halle Berry at the London premiere of her latest film, Crime 101, in which she costars with Chris Hemsworth. Halle looked amazing in The New Arrivals (the dress) and it’s difficult to remember that the woman is nearly 60 years old. To promote Crime 101, she gave a lengthy interview to The Cut about ageing, menopause, her divorces, her relationship with Van Hunt and her war with California’s Governor Newsom. Last year, Newsom vetoed a bill which would have helped menopausal women significantly. Halle made so much news when she said publicly that Newsom will never be president if he consistently “devalues women in midlife.” Well, she talks about that with the Cut as well. Some highlights:

Menopausal women get “dry”: “Look, it happens to more than 60 percent of women as we get older. Everything gets dry! If we talk about it and laugh about it, there’s no more shame or embarrassment. I’m almost 60. Fighting for women’s health feels like a formidable cause for my second act.”

A Scene in Crime 101 where her character spreads YSL’s Touche Éclat concealer all over her face: “Her character rang so true for me. You get to this age where you feel like you’re being marginalized, devalued. You feel it at work. You feel it from society. But I have adamantly decided I am not going to allow myself to be erased. That’s why I’m on my menopause mission. I’m going to be louder than I have ever been.” Part of that mission involves telling more onscreen stories, including comedies, about middle-aged women and poking fun at herself along the way. “When you get older, you stop getting sized up like a pork chop.”

Her third divorce from Olivier Martinez: “After my third divorce, people started to say, ‘What’s wrong with her? She’s crazy. She can’t keep a man.’ And I would always argue, ‘Who says I want to keep a man if he’s not the right man?’ I pretty much stopped doing interviews for a decade because I got tired of the same old story. It was always: ‘Poor Halle — Unlucky in Love Again.’” When I ask her to come up with her own headline to set the record straight, she closes her eyes. “Hmm. ‘Halle Berry Is Not a Damsel in Distress.’” Pause. “‘Halle Berry Is Not a Victim of Failed Relationships.’” Longer pause. “‘Halle Berry Never Said It’s Anyone Else’s Fault.’”

The stigma of beauty. “Another thing nobody really gets about me is that I’ve been a fighter my whole life — fighting to be seen for who I really am, fighting to be taken seriously as an artist, fighting the stigma of beauty.”

Winning the Best Actress Oscar: Winning the trophy was a career highlight, but “that Oscar didn’t necessarily change the course of my career. After I won it, I thought there was going to be, like, a script truck showing up outside my front door,” she says. “While I was wildly proud of it, I was still Black that next morning. Directors were still saying, ‘If we put a Black woman in this role, what does this mean for the whole story? Do I have to cast a Black man? Then it’s a Black movie. Black movies don’t sell overseas.’” Berry once told three-time Oscar nominee Cynthia Erivo, “You goddamn deserve it, but I don’t know that it’s going to change your life. It cannot be the validation for what you do, right?”

She’s winning: “As a Black woman, now almost 60, I still get to work in movies and do what I love. I’m winning.”

Her war against Gov. Newsom: In November, she co-wrote an opinion piece in Time magazine criticizing California governor Gavin Newsom for vetoing the Menopause Care Act, a bipartisan bill designed to secure insurance coverage for proven treatments. Then, in December, she doubled down by scorching Newsom at a New York Times “DealBook” summit — even calling out his credibility as a future presidential candidate. “The way he’s overlooked women, half the population, by devaluing us in midlife, he probably should not be our next president either. Just saying,” she announced onstage moments before he was scheduled to speak. Newsom responded through TMZ at an airport the next day: “We’re reconciling this.” But over a month later, he still has not reached out as promised. “It’s disturbing when people say they’re going to do things and then they don’t,” Berry tells me. “But he heard what I said. If he is going to run to be our next president, he can’t sleep on women. Wake up, Gavin.”

Her relationship with Van Hunt: “I’m in the best relationship I have ever had,” she says. This past June, Hunt proposed. And? She leans in. “I haven’t said ‘yes.’ I don’t think we need to be married to have a meaningful relationship. I don’t know if we will ever get married,” she adds, citing “health reasons,” or the access and right to make crucial medical decisions as a legal spouse, as one of her exceptions to the rule.

[From The Cut]

The only time I rolled my eyes was with the “stigma of beauty.” I genuinely wish women who have lived their entire lives with pretty privilege would stop for a moment and understand that the “stigma of beauty” is not a real thing, especially if you have more to offer than looks. The rest of this interview is great though – I can’t believe Newsom still hasn’t reached out to Halle, and I hope she continues to use her platform to advocate for women over 50. It’s interesting as well that Van Hunt proposed and she took some time to make up her mind about it. After three divorces, she had every right to feel ambivalent towards marriage, although soon after this interview was published, Halle did accept Hunt’s proposal!

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red.

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11 Responses to “Halle Berry: Gavin Newsom still hasn’t reached out, ‘he can’t sleep on women’”

  1. Thinking says:

    I get the general gist of what she’s saying, but I cringed at the “stigma of beauty” comment haha.

  2. Jais says:

    Congrats on the engagement. It’s always wild to me that she won an Oscar but was still not given access to more scripts. If Gavin newsome said he was going reconcile it publicly then he needs to do that.

  3. Mumster says:

    “the stigma of beauty” is certainly a choice. While I understand that “pretty” people can feel that they aren’t taken seriously or considered smart because of their looks, I would think the privilege they DO get makes up for it. Not so pretty people often can’t get the attention they need to get a job or get people to listen at all.

    Also, she needs to stop screaming from the rooftops that Gavin Newsom should not president. This pursuit of a “perfect” candidate by Democrats is what got us into this mess. The republicans could nominate a literal goat and all of them would line up behind the nomination and tell us 24/7 how great the goat is. It is now giving “he didn’t pay attention to me, so I’m going to destroy him” as opposed to a legitimate concern. By all means, articulate all the reasons his veto was wrong and how/why the law would benefit all women (who will eventually enter menopause), without equating his refusal to call/meet you with his viability as a presidential candidate. Talk about entitled pretty privilege.

    • Brassy Rebel says:

      Two things can be true. If Newsom is the nominee in 2028, we all should vote for him. And Newsom should not and probably won’t be the nominee in 2028. Most Dems do not yet know the weight of the baggage he carries but will find out if he runs.

    • ChillinginDC says:

      No she shouldn’t. He would be a terrible President for transpeople. Also he’s totally right wing coded and keeps saying that the Dems have done too much. Newsom isn’t going to go in there and hold anyone to account on anything.

  4. Brassy Rebel says:

    Was she throwing shade with “he can’t sleep on women”? Because GN has totally been known to sleep on women. 😜

  5. Thinking says:

    I was thinking that the way she speaks about Newsom isn’t as articulate as it could be haha. On other issues, she gets her point across well. But when she talks about him, it does come across as kind of annoying, even though I can’t really put my finger on why (and even though she might not be wrong). To be fair, celebrities in general sound annoying when they speak about politicians ( even when I actually agree with them 100 percent. Maybe it’s their phrasing…).

  6. Gerry says:

    What she neglects to say is that she is heavily invested in a company that a lot of these funds would be going to. She cries bitter tears now that Newsom vetoed the bill.

  7. Jamie42 says:

    When Newsom said “We’re reconciling this,” surely he meant that the bill was being rewritten, not that he was going to call her up.

  8. ChillinginDC says:

    Man. Best wishes I guess. I think she’s cool with men until they marry. I don’t even want to know what happens after that. At least she’s honest that I never said the problem wasn’t with me. LOL

  9. Side Eye says:

    Beauty has definitely opened a lot of doors for her. But if I can play devil’s advocate for a second, I think it leads to a ton of problems for women – one of them being, it attracts men who are abusive, who want to take you down a peg, who cheat (part of taking you down a peg), who resent you for your looks, who are controlling, etc. I’d say every woman has dealt with those type of men, but it’s magnified when you have a certain look that people covet.

    Elizabeth Wurtzel wrote a great book titled “Bitch” where she points out that the same qualities that attact men to women, they then use against them because those qualities are the source of contempt and distrust. I’m not saying she bears no responsibility in her failed relationships, what I am saying is that she navigated a tougher road in choosing the right partner than the average person. Men were obsessed with her and pursued her relentlessly. Look at Dave Justice, 30 years later, bro still won’t stop talking about her with so much contempt and downright hate.

    I am finally aging out of beauty. I can’t tell you what a relief that is to me – to go places and blend in, not be stared at and just be invisible. I can’t imagine adding fame to this equation in my youth and I don’t have Halle’s level of beauty. Angelina is another example – look what she goes through with Brad who is jealous of her. Some men (and women) will deeply resent you over looks. I could give you a long list of women who are beautiful who went through hell with men or even with women and were not taken seriously in their careers (despite being brilliant) and it’s no coincidence. Even having larger breasts makes it hard to be taken seriously in careers like science, tech, law, etc. When is the last time you saw a young, large breasted person portrayed as smart or even solution oriented on TV or in a movie? The general perception is you’re a bimbo regardless of your capabilities.

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