Angelina
Jolie
wants
to
be
remembered
for
her
humanitarian
work,
not
as
an
actress.
The
Oscar-winning
'Girl
Interrupted'
star
says
acting
leaves
her
feeling
"empty" compared
to
the
pride
her
charity
work
instils
her
with.
Angelina,
32,
told
Esquire
magazine:
"I
have
no
animosity
toward
Hollywood
or
the
demands
of
the
red
carpet,
all
that
silliness.
That's
my
job,
and
I'm
happy
to
have
it.
But
when
I
die,
do
I
want
to
be
remembered
as
an
actress?
No.
"I
recently
had
a
column
published
in
a
newspaper
and
at
the
end
it
didn't
say
I
was
an
actress.
It
said
that
I
was
a
UN
Goodwill
Ambassador
-
that's
all.
And
I
was
really
proud.
"I
entered
this
business
before
I
had
focus
and
purpose
in
my
life.
"I
was
very
unhappy,
very
unhealthy,
and
when
I
sat
down
for
an
interview,
I
didn't
know
why.
I
felt
like
I
didn't
have
anything
to
share.
It
was
a
very
empty
time."
The
mother-of-four
also
spoke
again
of
the
problems
she
and
partner
Brad
Pitt
have
finding
time
to
be
alone
together.
She
said:
"I
try
to
make
sure
that
each
of
my
children
has
enough
of
my
attention
to
feel
equal.
I
try
to
make
sure
that
my
relationship
with
the
man
in
my
life
is
solid
and
complete
and
we're
very
connected
and
having
a
great
life
together
and
enjoying
our
children
and
being
part
of
the
world.
So
that's
my
life.
"We
don't
go
to
parties.
We
hardly
ever
leave
the
house.
We
try
to
schedule
time
when
we're
alone.
"Some
people
have
their
lives
together
and
then
they
have
their
children.
Brad
and
I
are
starting
with
the
children
and
are
planning
to
have
our
time
together
in
our
later
years."
The
couple
have
three
adopted
children,
Cambodian
son
Maddox,
five,
three-year-old
Vietnamese
son
Pax
Thien
and
Ethiopian
daughter
Zahara,
two,
and
one-year-old
biological
daughter
Shiloh.
Angelina
is
reportedly
planning
to
adopt
a
fifth
child
from
the
Czech
Republic
where
she
has
been
living
while
filming
thriller
'Wanted'.