Cameron Michelle Diaz was born on August 30, 1972, in San Diego, California, to a Cuban-American father and a mother of English, German, and Cherokee descent. She grew up in Long Beach, California, where she was a tomboy who played competitive sports and later recalled feeling distinctly different from the conventional femininity that surrounded her. She was discovered at sixteen by a modeling agent at a party and began working as a model for Elite Model Management, a career that took her to Japan, Australia, Mexico, and Morocco during her teenage years and gave her a precocious independence and worldliness that would later manifest in her screen presence as someone who had genuinely been places and done things before the cameras found her.
Her transition into acting came through an audition for The Mask (1993) that she secured without professional acting experience, having been selected for her physical presence and natural comedic instincts. That she held her own opposite Jim Carrey at the peak of his powers, generating genuine on-screen chemistry with a performance of considerable physical and comedic energy, established immediately that she had something beyond mere looks. The film was a massive commercial success and launched her career from an unusually strong position. She spent the following years making a variety of films that ranged widely in quality, demonstrating both the willingness to take risks and the occasional poor judgment in material selection that characterized much of her 1990s output.
There's Something About Mary (1998) was the film that revealed her as one of the most naturally gifted comedic actresses of her generation. The Farrelly Brothers' comedy required her to participate in humor that was potentially humiliating to the character she was playing, and to remain genuinely lovable throughout — a combination of generosity, physical commitment, and emotional grounding that established her as someone willing to do whatever the comedy required. Being John Malkovich (1999) and Any Given Sunday (1999) demonstrated her serious dramatic range in the same year, and Charlie's Angels (2000) her capacity for the kind of physically demanding, self-aware action work that requires a particular combination of athletic ability, screen charisma, and willingness to be seen enjoying yourself. She became one of the highest-paid actresses in Hollywood during the 2000s.
Diaz's semi-retirement from acting, which she announced in 2018 and which she described as having emerged from a desire for a quieter life focused on personal wellbeing, marriage (to musician Benji Madden in 2015), and eventually motherhood (daughter Raddix was born in 2019), was unusual in an industry where careers require constant maintenance. Her return to acting in Back in Action (2022, released 2024) suggested that the retirement was genuine rather than strategic — a person who had genuinely found that what she wanted from life had changed. Her interviews about the retirement period have a quality of directness and self-awareness about what acting cost her in terms of presence and personal resource that is more candid than most Hollywood conversations about career transitions, and reflects a Virgo practicality about the actual conditions of her own happiness.