LONDON (AP) – Angelina Jolie can add royal recognition to Hollywood stardom.
The Oscar-winning actress has been named an honorary dame – the female version of a knight – by Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II.
Jolie, a United Nations special envoy, received the honour yesterday for her work combating sexual violence in war zones.
Jolie, who won a supporting actress Academy Award in 2000 for Girl, Interrupted, has spoken of scaling back her movie roles to focus on humanitarian work. She said that “to receive an honour related to foreign policy means a great deal to me, as it is what I wish to dedicate my working life to”.
Because she is not a British or Commonwealth citizen, Jolie won’t be entitled to use the title Dame before her name. Previous U.S recipients of honorary knighthoods include director Steven Spielberg, Microsoft founder Bill Gates and former President Ronald Reagan.
Jolie, who was in London this week to co-host an international summit on sexual violence, was among hundreds of people recognised in the queen’s annual Birthday Honours List for services to their community or national life.
Most of the honours go to people who are not in the limelight – from soldiers and civil servants to academics and entrepreneurs – but there is always a sprinkling of famous names.
Three-time Oscar winner Daniel Day-Lewis was made a knight “for services to drama” and can now call himself Sir Daniel. The actor, who won Academy Awards for My Left Foot, ‘There Will Be Blood and Lincoln, said he was “entirely amazed and utterly delighted in equal measure”.
There were damehoods for novelist Hilary Mantel, author of the prize-winning Tudor page-turners Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies, and for fashion designer Zandra Rhodes.
Actress Maggie Smith, who plays the imperious Dowager Countess of Grantham on TV’s Downton Abbey, was made a Companion of Honour, an award limited to 65 people “of distinction”.
Homeland star Damian Lewis was named an Officer of the Order of the British Empire, or OBE.
The British actor said he was “very surprised but very happy” with the honour.
“I decided to do the very un-British thing of accepting the compliment,” Lewis said.
OBEs also went to Beatles expert and author Hunter Davies, musician Talvin Singh, and John Simpson, long time editor of the Oxford English Dictionary.