
Actress Halle Berry may have won an Oscar, but she says she is frustrated at still having to convince movie studios of her ability because she is black.
"It doesn't matter that I have an Oscar, an Emmy, a Golden Globe and a Silver [Berlin] Bear," Berry, who is pregnant with her first child, said during an interview at a Manhattan hotel to promote her new movie Things We Lost in the Fire.
"I shouldn't have had to try so hard to be considered. I should have to stop convincing studios I am right for it - it should be on my acting merit," she said.
Berry was the first black woman to win an Academy Award for best actress, winning the 2002 Oscar for Monster's Ball.
In her latest film she plays Audrey Burke, a widowed mother of two who asks her husband's friend, Jerry Sunborne, to live with them.
She helps him overcome heroin addiction while Sunborne, played by Benicio Del Toro, helps her come to terms with her husband's death.
Berry says her first question when she met the film's Danish director, Susanne Bier, was: "Do you care that I am black because this wasn't written for a black woman ... I think this might be my problem here."
She says that Bier's response was: "To hell with what colour you are, it doesn't matter."
But Bier was an exception. In the movie industry, Berry says race is "always an issue".
"Slowly it's changing, [but] not having a chance is what I can't live with at this point in my career. I think I have earned that." © 2007 Australian Broadcasting Corporation
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