Inside Mila Kunis’ Ukrainian heritage: she moved to Los Angeles at age 7, broke into Hollywood

Inside Mila Kunis’ Ukrainian heritage: she moved to Los Angeles at age 7, broke into Hollywood, and now she and husband Ashton Kutcher are raising US$30 million for Ukrainian refugees

 

Ukrainian-born actress Mila Kunis is showing her support for her homeland with a US$30 million fundraiser with her husband Ashton Kutcher. Photo: AP
  • Kunis’ family fled from Ukraine in 1991 to Los Angeles, where she found fame as an actress in her breakout role in That 70s Show, as well as in Black Swan and Family Guy
  • She’s dined with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky and his wife Olena Zelenska, and now she’s raising donations via GoFundMe, partnering with Flexport and Airbnb

Countless celebrities have used their platforms to raise awareness of the crisis in Ukraine and the difficulties facing Ukrainian refugees, but actress Mila Kunis and her husband Ashton Kutcher’s plea is more personal than most.

Kunis was born Milena Markovna Kunis in 1983 in Chernivtsi, Ukraine. Her family is of Jewish ancestry and her grandparents are Holocaust survivors. Anti-Semitism in the Soviet Union was reportedly one of the reasons that the Kunis family made the decision to leave Ukraine for the United States in search of better lives when she was seven years old, resettling in Los Angeles.

Here’s what we know about Kunis’ heritage and how she’s a proud Ukrainian today …

Kunis’ family moved to Los Angeles in 1991

Mila Kunis was born in Chernivtsi, Ukraine, in 1983. Photo: TNS
Mila Kunis was born in Chernivtsi, Ukraine, in 1983. Photo: TNS

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Kunis’ father, an engineer, and mother, a physics teacher, left their careers behind when they moved to the United States. Her father began taking odd jobs from delivering pizzas to painting houses, and her mother took up work in a pharmacy.

“My parents wanted my brother and me to have a future, and so they just dropped everything. They came with US$250,” Kunis told the Los Angeles Times in a 2008 interview.

The adjustment was difficult for young Kunis. “I cried every day. I didn’t understand the culture. I didn’t understand the people. I didn’t understand the language. My first sentence of my essay to get into college was like, ‘Imagine being blind and deaf at age seven.’ And that’s kind of what it felt like moving to the States. But I got over it pretty fast,” she told the Los Angeles Times.

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