Catherine Zeta-Jones (b. September 25, 1969) is a Welsh actress, born Catherine Jones (near Swansea in Wales) to a Welsh father and a mother of Irish Catholic extraction. She has 2 brothers. As a child she had a tracheotomy leaving a scar. Her stage career began in childhood, and by 1987 she was appearing in Forty-Second Street in the West End. Her exotic good looks, teamed with her singing and dancing ability, ensured her a bright future, but it was in a straight acting role, as Mariette in the successful television adaptation of H.E. Bates' The Darling Buds of May (1991), that she made her name. She had adopted her grandmother's name of Zeta to create her stage name, both Catherine and Jones being common names.
She is married to the actor
Michael Douglas, with whom she has 2 children. Her son, Dylan Michael
Douglas was born August 8, 2000. Her daughter, Carys Zeta Douglas was born
April 20, 2003. She is also an advertising spokesperson for the mobile phone
company T-Mobile. She is currently the global spokeswoman for cosmetics
giant, Elizabeth Arden.

Details: Catherine Zeta Jones (Catherine Fair and Zeta Jones being the names of her
grandmothers) was born in Swansea on the 25th of September, 1969, growing up
in the now-chic Mumbles area, a beautiful sweep of wooded coastline. Her
father, Dai, managed a confectionery factory, turning him, in young
Catherine's eyes, into something of a Willy Wonka figure. Her mother, Pat,
was Irish and a seamstress by trade. She commented, upon Catherine's birth,
that she looked like a frog. Catherine had one older brother, David A Jones,
and one younger, Lyndon, both of whom now aid her in her work with her
production company, Milkwood Films (Swansea also being the former home of
Dylan Thomas, author of Under Milk Wood).
As early at the age of 4, Catherine wanted to entertain, to be the centre of
attention. She'd prance around using the spout of her grandma's kettle as a
microphone. Very soon, she was onstage, performing with an amateur troupe
organised by the local Catholic Church. Her singing voice, though, was once
severely threatened. Falling sick with a viral infection that impaired her
breathing, she had to undergo a tracheotomy (the scar is still visible
today). Consequently, she missed a lot of school, and was sent to a small
private establishment to catch up.
But, though she was bright, academic work was not Catherine's calling.
Studying tap and ballet, she continued with the amateur troupe, starring in
Annie, then as Tallulah in Bugsy Malone. This latter part was wholly
appropriate, Catherine being perfect as the super-sexy vamp. She says that
even at 12 she looked 22, and would go to clubs with the blessing of her
trusting parents.
When she was 14, along came her first break. A production starring Mickey
Dolenz from The Monkees arrived in Swansea, one of its attractions being
that, wherever it went, it recruited local children to form the chorus.
Catherine auditioned successfully, so successfully that the producers
quickly cast her in a touring production of The Pyjama Game. By 15, she had
dropped out of school, received her Actor's Guild card, and moved to London.
Soon Catherine Zeta-Jones enjoyed a ludicrous slice of good luck. Signing on for the
chorus of 42nd Street, she became second understudy to the lead. One evening
both the lead and the first understudy were struck down by illness, leaving
the way open for Catherine, then aged 17, to star as Peggy Sawyer.
Coincidentally, her efforts were witnessed by the show's producer, David
Merrick, who'd never attended any of the previous performances. So impressed
was he that he gave her the lead full-time, and she reprised the role eight
times a week for nearly two years.
After 42nd Street, Catherine Zeta-Jones took a sabbatical in France, doing little work
other than starring in Philippe De Broca's Scheherazade. Here, in the title
role, aided by a genie from 1990's London, she met all the great heroes of
her legendary dreams (including Vitorio Gassman as Sinbad), as well as
engaging in a couple of nude scenes that have since made the film much
sought-after. Returning to the UK after a year, she found immediate fame for
her part as Mariette Larkin, David Jason's daughter in The Darling Buds Of
May. After Only Fools And Horses, Jason was perhaps the country's most
popular TV star and here, as loveable rogue Pop, with his rowdy family and
neat catchphrase "Perrrfic" he topped the ratings again with these warm,
Kent-set adaptations of the novels of H.E Bates.

With the show such a howling success, and Catherine its sexiest star by some
considerable distance, the tabloids went into a feeding frenzy. She was
hounded wherever she went, at one point driving her car into a lamp-post
while trying to escape their seedy attentions. Indeed, she was hounded even
if she didn't go anywhere, once calling the police to check out a van parked
outside her house and discovering it to be packed with surveillance
equipment. She was connected to every well-known man who wandered into
wide-angle lens distance of her, including Blue Peter presenter John Leslie,
actor Angus MacFayden (star of Braveheart and the excellent Titus), to whom
she was actually engaged in the mid-Nineties and, later, film producer Jon
Peters, ex-hubbie of Barbra Streisand.
While finding fame on TV with Darling Buds, Catherine also continued to seek
success in her other areas of expertise, onstage and in music. She appeared
in a production of Under Milk Wood, directed by Anthony Hopkins and
co-starring Tom Jones, and would also turn up (after Darling Buds) in a
English National Opera production of Kurt Weill's Street Scene (she's on the
CD, singing Moon Faced, Starry Eyed, if you can find it). There was also an
attempt at a solo singing career. Jeff Wayne, who'd had a massive hit in the
late Seventies with the concept LP War Of The Worlds, was making a comeback
with a similar take on the story of Spartacus. Catherine won the role of
Spartacus's wife Palene, both singing and narrating (though the main
narrator was Anthony Hopkins, popping up again as Marcus Crassus). Taken
from Spartacus, Catherine's first single was For All Time, and there were
high hopes. However, Spartacus was not a success and consequently the single
reached only Number 36. In 1994, Catherine followed this with True Love
Ways, a duet with David Essex (coincidentally the star of Wayne's War Of The
Worlds), which stalled at Number 38. Finally, and in desperation, Catherine
changed her image, bowing to tabloid demands and garbing herself in rubber
and fishnets. It didn't work. Neither In The Arms Of Love nor I Can't Help
Myself were hits.
Catherine Zeta-Jones's failure to achieve pop stardom mattered not a jot. By the time
she called it a day, she'd already sown the seeds of her later Hollywood
stardom by moving to America and scoring both experience and notable roles.
It was difficult when she first moved to Los Angeles. She knew no one but
film editor Petra Van Oelffen who was at the time in Europe. Thankfully,
Petra let Catherine live in her house in the Palisades, and the search for
work was on (sadly, her friendship with Van Oelffen would later be severely
strained when, having broken her ankle in an accident while Catherine was
driving, Petra sued for $1.6 million).
Having appeared in Eric Idle's profoundly unamusing Splitting Heirs, as well
as historical dramas Christopher Columbus (with
Marlon Brando and Benicio
Del Toro), The Return Of The Native and Catherine Cookson's The Cinder Path
(as the promiscuous and casually unfaithful Victoria Chapman) Catherine also
tried out contemporary drama with Blue Juice, a UK surfing flick co-starring
Sean Pertwee and Ewan McGregor. But it was the bigger American productions
that would break her. First she starred as Catherine The Great, the
notorious Russian Empress, plotter and seducer who rose to power in 1762.
Then came The Phantom, where she was Sala, sexy leader of a female fighter
squadron. And then there was Titanic.
Many careers were made by James Cameron's epic Titanic. Sadly, Catherine
wasn't in his version, starring instead (in the
Kate Winslet role) in a TV
version released a year earlier and starring George C. Scott and, er, Marilu
Henner. Yet amazingly, even this version of Titanic was good enough to have
a career-making effect, for Catherine's performance was seen and admired by
none other than Steven Spielberg. At that time, Spielberg was busying
himself in pre-production for The Mask Of Zorro, and recommended Catherine
to director Martin Campbell. He liked her - she was in.

Attending what she called the Zorro boot-camp, Catherine spent two hours per
day dancing, two hours learning to ride, two hours practising sword-fighting
and another two in dialect classes. The training paid off, as the critics
found her scintillating as Elena, the feisty long-lost daughter of Anthony
Hopkins' aged Zorro. It should be noted that, reintroduced to the woman he
directed in Under Milkwood and who had co-narrated Spartacus, Hopkins did
not remember her. After Mask Of Zorro, he'd not forget her in a hurry.
Made by Zorro, Catherine was summoned to Rome to be interviewed by Sean
Connery, then looking to cast his co-star in Entrapment. Charmed, he took
her on as Virginia Baker, the insurance fraud agent who tracks art thief
Connery, then aids him in his most audacious crime yet. One scene, where she
used all her balletic suppleness to creep through a pick-up-sticks mess of
laser alarms, sent millions of male pulses racing. After this, she starred
with Liam Neeson in a remake of The Haunting. The film was wretched, but
Catherine stood out again as Theo, the lesbian medium originally played by
Claire Bloom.
In the meantime, there was marriage. In August 1998, Catherine met Michael
Douglas, 25 years her senior, at the Deauville Film Festival. They began
dating seriously in March, 1999, with Catherine reportedly sticking to her
mother's advice of "Show them nothing!" by keeping him waiting for a full
nine months - good therapy for a fellow reputed to be a recovering sex
addict. Romantically, the couple were engaged on New Year's Eve at the turn
of the millennium, in Aspen, Colorado. A child, Dylan Michael (that Swansea
poet again!) would be born in August, 2000.
Plenty of controversy surrounded the couple's wedding in late 2000. They'd
been paid $900,000 by OK Magazine for exclusive pictures of the newly born
Dylan. Now they accepted a further $1.5 million for exclusive shots of the
wedding, a helpful amount as the proceedings at the New York Plaza would
cost $1.8 million, including $10,000 for the four-foot cake. Unfortunately,
Hello Magazine got hold of pictures and published, the Douglases attempting
to take out an immediate injunction. Eventually, they sued for damages and
the case stretched on till 2003, when they were awarded $23,000 (OK! got
$1.6 million). Even then it wasn't over, with Hello! deciding to appeal.
Now financially secure for life (it's said Catherine's pre-nup with Douglas
gives her $3.2 million for every year of the marriage), she continued to win
prime roles. In Traffic, which Douglas had turned down then accepted when
Catherine was sent a re-write, she was superb as Helena Ayala, the dealer's
wife who, innocent at first, comes to organise assassinations and negotiate
cocaine deals. Many wondered how she missed out on an Oscar nomination
(though she did get one for a Golden Globe). No worries for cat though, as
her next role was in the hit rom-com America's Sweethearts, as Gwen
Harrison, whose relationship with fellow superstar John Cusack breaks down,
leaving publicist Billy Crystal to control the story and Julia Roberts (as
Gwen's sister) to cause maximum confusion. The film was a huge hit in the
States, Catherine's fourth hit in three years, after Zorro, Entrapment and
Traffic. Catherine herself didn't help the cause much. In an incredible TV
botch-job, she went on the David Letterman Show to promote the movie and, in
a moment of unparalleled madness referred to David as Jay (the name of his
arch rival Jay Leno!)
Now a major Hollywood player, Catherine Zeta-Jones returned to her musical roots with
Chicago, high-kicking and seductively squirming as Velma Kelly, a 1920s
stage star in competition with newcomer Roxy Hart (Renee Zellweger). Having
killed her husband and sister, whom she caught in flagrante, she's followed
to Murderer's Row by Zellweger, who's topped a lover who failed to make her
a star. Both are represented by dodgy lawyer Richard Gere, and both need him
to make them media darlings to escape their plight. The movie, taking its
lead from Moulin Rouge, was flashy and sexy, with Catherine pulling out all
the stops to top Nicole Kidman's efforts, as well as those of Bebe Neuwirth,
who'd scored a huge hit as Velma in the latest Broadway production.
Glamorous, stylish and confident, she made full use of her stage experience,
winning a Best Supporting Actress Oscar for her efforts. The film itself was
a huge hit, taking $170 million at the US box office on a budget of $45
million.
As if to confirm her newfound status, Catherine added her voice to the
all-star animation Sinbad: Legend Of The Seven Seas, her name appearing on
the credits alongside such heavyweights as Brad Pitt and Michelle Pfeiffer.
And then - for all "real" stars must have this on their CV - she teamed up
with the Coen Brothers for Intolerable Cruelty, playing Marylin Rexroth, a
gold-digger who hopes to gain control of her rich and cheating husband's
fortune. Foiled by invincible divorce lawyer George Clooney, she then shocks
him by hiring him to forge an unbreakable pre-nup for her next marriage, to
bashful Texan oil billionaire Billy Bob Thornton. Clooney then looks on in
admiration as she reveals the magnificent scope of her deceit, and attempts
to win this dangerous woman for his own. Intolerable Cruelty was smart and
sassy, a real throwback to the Fifties, and it showed George and Catherine
to be one of the best-looking couples in recent memory.
Off-screen, 2003 would see Catherine co-host the Nobel Peace Prize concert,
and also give birth to her second child, daughter Carys. The next year would
see her back in court, this time giving evidence against one Dawnette Knight
who was accused of stalking and threatening Catherine over the previous two
years. The defence claimed that Knight simply had a "girlish crush" on
Michael Douglas. The prosecution, though, said Knight had threatened to chop
Catherine up "like Sharon Tate" and "feed her to the dogs". Bail was set at
$1 million as the case stretched into 2005.
Onscreen, 2004 saw Catherine Zeta-Jones appear in two major productions. First, her
Zorro benefactor Steven Spielberg signed her up for The Terminal. This saw
Tom Hanks as an Eastern European whose passport and visa become invalid
after a coup in his home country, leaving him stranded at JFK. Unable to
step onto American soil, unwilling to fly home, he's forced to make a life
for himself in the airport (as really happened to Merhan Nasseri in Paris in
1988), making a number of new friends, among them Catherine, an agreeably
neurotic, weak-willed flight attendant who's having an affair with a married
Michael Nouri and realises she can turn to the simple, unspoilt Hanks for
advice.
Next, having won acclaim in Steven Soderbergh's Traffic and co-starred with
Clooney in Intolerable Cruelty, she reunited with them both (as well as
Julia Roberts and Brad Pitt) for Ocean's Twelve. Here the new Rat Pack were
forced to carry out a daring robbery in Europe in order to pay back casino
boss Andy Garcia the money they stole from him in Ocean's Eleven. Catherine
would play Isabel Lahiri, an Interpol cop on their trail, who coincidentally
happens to be an old flame of Brad Pitt's character. The pair thus had the
chance to seriously smoulder.
Though she had usually played alngside major stars, Catherine could now
boast that (Intolerable Cruelty excepted) her last 9 movies had made money,
most of them a lot of money. She was now resolutely of the A-list and, in
order to cement that position, she returned to the scene of her first big
hit with The Legend Of Zorro for a paycheck of $10 million. Here she and
Antonio Banderas's Zorro are now married, but she leaves him and he descends
into drunkennss and conflict with a young son who does not know his
illustrious past. To redeem himself, he must both win Catherine back and
foil plotters who're trying to stop California from becoming a state of the
Union.
Many believed that now she'd reached the top Catherine would settle back in
Malibu and fight to maintain her position in the Hollywood hierarchy. They
were surprised when she set about building a new home back in Swansea and,
through her Milkwood production company, began to make films in Wales. The
first would be Coming Out, where gay West End performer Alan Cumming takes
over a near-bankrupt Welsh rugby club after his father, their coach dies.
Catherine herself would play a local hairdresser who falls for Cummings'
brother..
Catherine Zeta-Jones is sometimes referred to as a prima donna but, a hometown girl who
enjoys rugby, boxing and a few beers, she has her head screwed on far too
tightly to care about petty bickering. As well as sinking her money into
Milkwood, she also uses her fame and funds - like Douglas - to help worthy
causes, including young adults with cerebral palsy and the International
Centre For Missing And Exploited Children. With Douglas taking on a public
role as Hollywood Ambassador For Worldwide Decency, we can expect Catherine
to be right by his side - or perhaps right behind him, kicking his ass
forward. She's that kind of girl - both lucky and deserving, she gets things
done.

Les Mille et une nuits (1990)
Out of the Blue (1991)
The Darling Buds of May (1991) (TV)
Christopher Columbus: The Discovery (1992)
The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones (1992) (voice)
Splitting Heirs (1993)
The Return of the Native (1994) (TV)
The Cinder Path (1994) (TV)
Blue Juice (1995)
Katharina die Gro? (1995) (TV)
The Phantom (1996)''
Titanic (1996) (TV)
The Mask of Zorro (1998)
Entrapment (1999)
The Haunting (1999)
High Fidelity (2000)
Traffic (2000)
America's Sweethearts (2001)
Chicago (2002)
''Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas (2003) (voice)
Intolerable Cruelty (2003)
Terminal (2004)
This Catherine Zeta-Jones Biography Page is Copyright © 2004 - 2006 Chuck Ayoub