Never-before-seen photos and letters reveal intimate details of Angelina Jolie‘s life before she became Hollywood’s most iconic actress.
The exclusive images and correspondence obtained by DailyMail.com offer a rare glimpse into the Oscar winner’s wild teenage years in Beverly Hills.
The Maleficent star can be seen at age 14 in the pictures drinking with friends, eating pizza, lounging in bed and even posing in front of a cemetery.
The actress, now 45, wrote about her hangovers, the men she was attracted to and her dysfunctional relationship with her family in letters and postcards to her closest friends in her teenage years.
DailyMail.com has obtained never-before-seen photos of actress Angelina Jolie in her teenage years along with letters she wrote her closest friends
A source close to Angie in her youth said she was a rebellious youngster who was ‘anti-Beverly Hills’
‘We partied. We drank and smoked cigarettes and took acid,’ and old friend of Angie’s told DailyMail.com. ‘We roamed about wherever we could get on the bus’
The source, who provided the images and letters on condition anonymity, first met Angie when they both attended El Rodeo Middle School in Los Angeles, California.
The source, who provided the images and letters and has asked to remain anonymous, first met Angie when they both attended El Rodeo Middle School in Los Angeles, California
The pair became close, and the source described Angie as ‘eccentric and beautiful’ with an interest in the ‘dark side.’
The source claimed that the young Angie was a wild 𝘤𝘩𝘪𝘭𝘥, drinking alcohol, taking acid and smoking weed in her early teens.
But Angie was always generous, they said, frequently lending friends money and giving to the homeless.
They said: ‘She was always a wonderful person and we had a wonderful friendship. People don’t realize that she was always charitable, wild but charitable. I hadn’t seen her one time for six months and she gave me money.
‘As she was better funded than us, Angie would always be generous in sharing with me and other friends. She could not walk by a homeless person without offering food or money and remarking that homelessness is awful.
‘That was when she was 14. It’s not a surprise that she has become so important in giving a voice to refugees around the globe.’
The source added that Angie was a rebellious youngster who was ‘anti-Beverly Hills.’
‘We partied. We drank and smoked cigarettes and took acid,’ they said. ‘We roamed about wherever we could get on the bus.
‘She tried to do the things that were wild, that were anti-Beverly Hills. We dressed in black and thought we were anarchists.
‘We didn’t want to drive fancy cars and we would stick up for people who were being bullied at school.’
In one letter she wrote that she had met ‘Mr Perfect.’ ‘I met Mr Perfect. I don’t know his name, he’s a great kisser, I’ll never see him again!’ she wrote. ‘When I get back we’ll have another one of those nights’
In a series of postcards sent in 1989, 14-year-old Angie wrote to her friend about men she was attracted to. ‘Nobody knows I like him but he said he wants to work with me,’ she wrote. ‘He’s perfect, tall, thin, black hair, lives in a studio!’
Angie wrote about her 𝐛𝐢𝐫𝐭𝐡day and how she was looking forward to spend time with her friend. ‘Well another 𝐛𝐢𝐫𝐭𝐡day. One for me…on for you. Are you 17 already? Where does the time go?’ she wrote
She discussed her dysfunctional relationship with her family, writing ‘I wish I was going somewhere. New York doesn’t count. I’d rather lay nɑƙeɗ in a pit full of red ants than go visit my relatives’
In another post card to her friends in August 1989, she wrote about being on an airplane. ‘Hello I just got my period can you believe this. It’s just my luck,’ she wrote. ‘Ive been on this plane now for 3 hours and going mad!’
Angie pondered about the meaning of life in one letter from 1991, written when she was 16. ‘Nothing much ever changes!!,’ she wrote. ‘When you think about it nothing stays the same. Thank God!’
In a series of postcards sent in 1989, 14-year-old Angie wrote to her friend about men she was attracted to.
She wrote: ‘He’s a photographer I met today, nobody knows I like him but, he said he wants to work with me, I hope so because I want him.
‘He’s perfect, tall, thin, black hair, lives in a studio! But I think he’s gay! Oh well!’
In another letter, she wrote that she had met ‘Mr Perfect.’
‘I met Mr Perfect. I don’t know his name, he’s a great kisser, I’ll never see him again!’
In one letter, also written when she was 14, Angie complained of a hangover.
She wrote: ‘My plane flight was a bi**h, especially with a hangover!’
The source claimed that Angie’s mother Marcheline Bertrand, who passed away at the age of 56 of breast cancer, arranged for her daughter to take 𝐛𝐢𝐫𝐭𝐡 control at 15, to Angie’s annoyance.
‘She was annoyed when her mom gave her 𝐛𝐢𝐫𝐭𝐡 control pills and granted permission for Angie’s boyfriend to sleep in her room.
‘Angie rebelled and did the opposite by not sleeping with him at all and flushing the pills. She was always strong-willed and resilient from the time we met at the age of 13.’
The source claimed that Angie’s mother Marcheline Bertrand, who passed away at the age of 56, arranged for her daughter to take 𝐛𝐢𝐫𝐭𝐡 control at 15, to Angie’s annoyance. Angie’s relationship with her famous dad Jon Voight, now 81, was very strained after he cheated on Marcheline
The source said, ‘She was always a wonderful person and we had a wonderful friendship. People don’t realize that she was always charitable, wild but charitable. I hadn’t seen her one time for six months and she gave me money’
The source added that Angie was attracted to the dark side and dreamed of becoming a funeral director and even took a course in embalming
Angie is seen posing in front of a cemetery as a teen. Her 𝘤𝘩𝘪𝘭𝘥hood friend said she was always interested in death and suicide
The source was full of praise for Marcheline, who they described as ‘a cool mom.’
‘Her mom was really cool and would let us do what we wanted. She let us hang out and drink at their home because she preferred to know where we were.’
But the source said that Angie’s relationship with her famous actor dad Jon Voight, now 81, was very strained after he cheated on Marcheline.
The source claimed that Angie once even threw a computer Voight had given her out of her bedroom window.
‘At the time, Angie was very angry and disgusted by him. He brought a brand new computer for Angie and her brother James at a time when computers were expensive and scarce.
‘Right after he left Angie threw it out of her bedroom window. Marcheline didn’t even get mad because she understood Angie’s anger was on her behalf.’
In one letter, Angie complained about visiting family in New York. She wrote: ‘I’d rather lay nɑƙeɗ in a pit full of red ants than go visit my relatives.’
The future actress is seen as a teen lounging on a couch surrounded by friends as they ate pizza and drank beers
‘She tried to do the things that were wild, that were anti-Beverly Hills. We dressed in black and thought we were anarchists,’ the source said
Angie is seen in the right corner of this photo sitting at a table full of beer bottles with friends
Angie went on to become an award-winning and world famous actress and a mother to six 𝘤𝘩𝘪𝘭𝘥ren. But the star never turned her back on her unconventional upbringing
The source added that Angie was attracted to the dark side – the actress dreamed of becoming a funeral director and even took a study-at-home course in embalming.
She enjoyed hanging out at cemeteries and in one picture she poses in front of a graveyard in LA.
‘Angelina was kind of obsessed with suicide and darkness – she was interested in the darker side of life if you will,’ they said.
Angie pondered on the meaning of life in one letter from 1991, written when she was 16.
‘Well, I’m alive and still looking for the reason,’ she wrote.
The source also lifted the lid on Angie’s modeling career and claimed that the beauty was asked to lose weight.
‘She was so thin and so beautiful but she told me that her agency wanted her to lose five to ten pounds.It was crazy,’ the source said.
Angie went on to become an award-winning and world famous actress and a mother to six 𝘤𝘩𝘪𝘭𝘥ren. But the star never turned her back on her unconventional upbringing.
She once told Vogue magazine: ‘I am still at heart – and always will be – just a punk kid with tattoos.’