“It didn’t open the door,” Berry observes in a new interview with The Times. “The fact that there’s no one standing next to me is heartbreaking.”
Berry took big career risk when she accepted the role of Leticia Musgrove in Mark Forster’s 2001 drama. After her husband (hip-hop star Sean Combs) is convicted of murder and executed in a Georgia penitentiary, Leticia embarks on an affair with one of the corrections officers, played by Billy Bob Thornton.
Halle Berry: Topless Twice in the Same Year
Monster’s Ball made headlines at the time of its release for an extended sex scene that required Berry to go topless for the second time that year, after the actioner Swordfish.
“Everybody told me when I said yes to that part that it was not a good move,” Berry told Yahoo last year, while discussing her directorial debut, Bruised. “Because of the nature of the sex scene and just the nature of the movie … many people said, ‘You could ruin your career.’
Speaking with The N.Y. Times now, Berry says she didn’t expect that she’d be up on the Oscar stage accepting a statue, especially since she had just missed out on winning a Golden Globe for the role. “Back in those days, if you didn’t win the Globe, you really didn’t get the Academy Award. So I’d pretty much resigned myself to believing, ‘It’s great to be here, but I’m not going to win.'”
In her emotional speech, Berry dedicated her award to pioneering Black performer Dorothy Dandridge, who she had recently played in a 1999 HBO film, as well as past nominees like Diahann Carroll and Angela Bassett. “This moment is so much bigger than me,” she remarked. “It’s for every nameless, faceless woman of color that now has a chance because this door tonight has been opened.”
Unfortunately, that door has largely remained shut since Berry’s Oscar night win. In the past 20 years, six Black actresses have been nominated for Best Actress — including Gabourey Sidibe, Quvenzhané Wallis, Ruth Negga, Cynthia Erivo, Andra Day and two nods for Viola Davis — but those statues have gone to other performers. (Davis did win a Best Supporting Actress Oscar in 2016 for her commanding role in Fences.)
Still, Berry prefers to focus on her peers’ achievements outside of awards shows. “We can’t always judge success or progress by how many awards we have,” she says. “Awards are the icing on the cake … but does that mean that if we don’t get the exceptionally excellent nod, that we were not great, and we’re not successful, and we’re not changing the world with our art, and our opportunities aren’t growing?”
The 94th Academy Awards air Sunday, Mar. 27 at 8 p.m. on ABC