Revision as of 13:52, 22 December 2006 editHalaqah (talk | contribs)7,742 edits Reference to her Jewish Blood line, it isnt a myth it is real, now look at her politics← Previous edit | Revision as of 22:55, 22 December 2006 edit undoStephen (talk | contribs)Administrators49,551 editsm rv, nndb ranks alongside imdb as a trustworthy source. Also not lead para material unless you are trying to make a political point.Next edit → | ||
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'''Nicole Mary Kidman''' ] (born ], ]) is an ]-winning ], and one of ]'s leading actresses. She has also ventured into ]. Kidman holds ] as both an ] and an ]. |
'''Nicole Mary Kidman''' ] (born ], ]) is an ]-winning ], and one of ]'s leading actresses. She has also ventured into ]. Kidman holds ] as both an ] and an ]. In 2006 she became the highest paid female actor in the film industry.<ref>{{cite web | author=UPI | title=Nicole Kidman highest paid female actor in film industry | publisher=UPI | year=November 30th, 2006 | url=http://www.upi.com/NewsTrack/view.php?StoryID=20061130-102317-3656r}}</ref> | ||
==Biography== | ==Biography== |
Revision as of 22:55, 22 December 2006
Nicole Kidman | |
---|---|
Kidman at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival | |
Born | Nicole Mary Kidman |
Height | 5 ft 10½ in (179 cm) |
Spouse(s) | Tom Cruise (1990-2001) Keith Urban (2006 - present) |
Nicole Mary Kidman AC (born June 20, 1967) is an Academy Award-winning actress, and one of Hollywood's leading actresses. She has also ventured into singing. Kidman holds dual citizenship as both an Australian and an American. In 2006 she became the highest paid female actor in the film industry.
Biography
Early life and education
Nicole Kidman was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, to Dr. Anthony David Kidman, who was involved with the labor movement and progressive causes, and Janelle Ann MacNeille, who edited her husband's books. Her mother is of Scottish descent and her father a descendant of an immigrant farmer. At the time she was born, her father was a cancer research specialist in Washington, D.C. The family returned to Australia when Kidman was four years old, when her father took on a lectureship at the University of Technology, Sydney.
Kidman has a younger sister, Antonia, born in 1970. Kidman's parents and sister both reside in Greenwich, a suburb on Sydney's North Shore. Kidman, a Catholic, attended Mary Mackillop Chapel in North Sydney with her sister.
Kidman started taking ballet lessons when she was four. This led to studies at Sydney's Australian Theatre for Young People, where she is now Patron, then at the Philip Street Theatre, where she majored in voice production and theatre history. Living in Longueville, New South Wales, she studied at North Sydney Girls High School, but dropped out when her mother was diagnosed with breast cancer; Kidman concentrated on her family responsibilities until her mother's recovery.
Early career
Her first appearance on film came in 1983 when, as a fifteen year-old, she appeared in the Pat Wilson music video for the song Bop Girl. By the end of the year she had secured a supporting role in the television series Five Mile Creek and four film roles, including BMX Bandits and Bush Christmas. During the 1980s she appeared in several Australian movies and TV series, notably including the soap opera A Country Practice, the mini-series Vietnam (1986), Emerald City (1988), and Bangkok Hilton (1989).
In 1989, she appeared in the thriller Dead Calm as Rae, the wife of naval officer John Ingram (Sam Neill), held captive on a Pacific Ocean yacht trip by the psychotic Hughie Warriner (Billy Zane). In 1990 she appeared opposite Tom Cruise in Days of Thunder, a stock car racing movie. After this, Kidman starred with Cruise in Ron Howard's Far and Away (1992). In 1995, Kidman featured in the ensemble cast of Batman Forever.
Critical success
Her second film in 1995, To Die For was a satirical comedy that earned her praise from critics. She won a Golden Globe Award, and five other best actress awards for her portrayal of the murderous newscaster Suzanne Stone Maretto. Kidman and Cruise portrayed a married couple in Eyes Wide Shut in 1999, Stanley Kubrick's final film.
In 2002, Kidman received an Academy Award nomination for her performance in the 2001 film Moulin Rouge!, in which she played the courtesan Satine opposite Ewan McGregor. The same year she had a well-received starring role in the horror film The Others. While in Australia filming Moulin Rouge!, Kidman injured her knee, so that Jodie Foster had to replace her in the film Panic Room.
The following year, Kidman won critical praise for her portrayal of Virginia Woolf in The Hours, in which the prosthetics applied to her made her almost unrecognizable. She won the Academy Award for Best Actress for this role, along with a Golden Globe Award, a BAFTA, and numerous critics awards. In the same year she took a hand at film production for the film In the Cut. In 2003, Kidman starred in three very different films. Dogville, by Danish director Lars von Trier, an experimental film set on a bare soundstage. Secondly, she co-starred alongside Anthony Hopkins in the film adaptation of Philip Roth's novel The Human Stain. Many critics felt that both Kidman and Hopkins were miscast. Cold Mountain, a love story of two Southerners separated by the Civil War, was her final release that year, and garnered her a Golden Globe Award nomination.
In 2004, Kidman appeared in the critically panned remake of The Stepford Wives alongside Glenn Close, Faith Hill and Bette Midler. In September of the same year, Birth, in which the 37-year-old actress' character has an encounter with a 10-year-old boy (played by Cameron Bright) who attempts to convince her that he is a reincarnation of her dead husband, was met with a mixed reception primarily due to a scene where the boy strips and joins Kidman in the bathtub. Despite this, the film was nominated for the Golden Lion Award at the Venice Film Festival, and Kidman was nominated for another Golden Globe Award. Kidman's two movies in 2005 were The Interpreter, directed by Sydney Pollack, and Bewitched, co-starring Will Ferrell, based on the 1960s TV sitcom of the same name; the latter fared abysmally with critics and at the box office.
In conjunction with her success in the film industry, Kidman became the face of the Chanel No. 5 perfume brand. She starred in a campaign of television and print ads with Rodrigo Santoro, directed by Moulin Rouge! director Baz Luhrmann to promote the fragrance during the holiday season in 2004, 2005, and 2006. The three-minute commercial produced for Chanel No. 5 perfume made Kidman the record holder for the most money paid per minute to an actor after she reportedly earned $US3.71 million. During this time, Kidman was also listed as the 45th Most Powerful Celebrity on the 2005 Forbes Celebrity 100 List. She made a reported US$14.5 million in 2004-2005. On People magazine's list of 2005's highest paid actresses, Kidman was second behind Julia Roberts with a US$16 million to US$17 million per-film price tag. She has since passed Roberts as the highest paid actress, due in no small part to Roberts's recent devotion to parenting and broadway theatre acting rather than film work.
Kidman has at least five movies in production over the next two years. She has completed filming the Diane Arbus bio-pic Fur, director Oliver Hirschbiegel's science fiction movie The Visiting and Noah Baumbach's as-yet-untitled comedy-drama. She has also provided her voice for the animated movie Happy Feet. She is currently working on the film adaptation of the first part of the His Dark Materials trilogy in which she plays the villainous Mrs. Coulter. She is also set to star in director Wong Kar-wai's next film, The Lady from Shanghai and Baz Luhrmann's yet-to-be titled Australian period film, which has been delayed due to schedule conflicts.
Singing
Not known as a singer prior to Moulin Rouge!, Kidman had several well received vocal performances in the film. Her collaboration with Ewan McGregor on the song "Come What May" from the film's soundtrack debuted and peaked at 27 in the UK Singles Chart. Later she collaborated with Robbie Williams on the song "Somethin' Stupid", a cover of the old swing song on Williams' swing covers album Swing When You're Winning. It debuted and peaked at 8 in the Australian ARIAnet Singles Chart, and at number 1 for three weeks in the UK. It was the UK Christmas number 1 Single for 2001.
In 2006, she provided her voice for the animated movie Happy Feet, along with her vocals for her character Norma Jean's 'heartsong', which was a slightly altered version of "Kiss" by Prince.
Personal life
Relationships
Kidman met Tom Cruise on the set of their 1990 movie, Days of Thunder. Cruise was married to actress Mimi Rogers at the time, and later divorced her. Kidman and Cruise were married on Christmas Eve 1990 in Telluride, Colorado. The couple adopted two children, daughter Isabella Jane (b. December 22, 1993) and son Connor Anthony (b. January 17, 1995), and lived in Los Angeles, Australia, Colorado, and New York City. Cruise left Kidman while she was three months pregnant, just before their 10th wedding anniversary. She subsequently had a miscarriage.. The marriage was dissolved in 2001. The reasons for the dissolution have never been made public.
The 2003 film Cold Mountain was plagued by rumors that an on-set affair between Kidman and co-star Jude Law was responsible for the breakup of his marriage. Both vehemently denied the allegations, and Kidman eventually won an undisclosed sum from the British tabloids that pushed the story. She donated the money to a Romanian orphanage in the town where the movie was filmed. Shortly after her Oscar win, there were rumours of a relationship between her and fellow Oscar winner Adrien Brody. There was no confirmation or denial. She met musician Lenny Kravitz in 2003 and dated him into 2004.
Kidman met country singer Keith Urban at a Hollywood event honouring Australians in January 2005. Kidman and Urban were married on Sunday June 25, 2006, at the Cardinal Cerretti Memorial Chapel in the grounds of St Patrick's Estate, Manly in Sydney.
Politics
Kidman took out an advertisement in the Los Angeles Times (August 17 2006) that condemned organizations Hamas and Hezbollah, and supported Israel's efforts in the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict. The full-page advertisement was signed by 84 other Hollywood professionals and reads "We the undersigned are pained and devastated by the civilian casualties in Israel and Lebanon caused by terrorist actions initiated by terrorist organisations such as Hezbollah and Hamas. If we do not succeed in stopping terrorism around the world, chaos will rule and innocent people will continue to die. We need to support democratic societies and stop terrorism at all costs." Others who signed include actors Michael Douglas, Dennis Hopper, Sylvester Stallone, Bruce Willis, Danny DeVito, Don Johnson, James Woods, Kelly Preston, Patricia Heaton and William Hurt; directors Ridley Scott, Tony Scott, Michael Mann, Richard Donner and Sam Raimi; as well as tennis player Serena Williams.
Kidman has made numerous donations to U.S. Democratic party candidates.
Charitable work
Kidman publicly supports a variety of charities and causes. She has been a Goodwill Ambassador for UNICEF Australia since 1994. She has worked to help raise money for and draw attention to the plight of the most disadvantaged children in Australia and around the world. In 2004, she was honoured as a "Citizen of the World" by the United Nations.
On January 26, 2006 Kidman received Australia's highest civilian honour when she was made a Companion of the Order of Australia, both for her service to performing arts and for her charitable work. She was also nominated goodwill ambassador for UNIFEM.
Kidman joined the 'Little Tee Campaign' for Breast Cancer Care to design T-shirts or vests to raise money for breast cancer. Kidman's mother, Janelle, is a breast cancer survivor who was diagnosed in 1984.
Trivia
- In January 2005, Kidman won interim restraining orders against two Sydney-based paparazzi photographers.
- Kidman is an avid supporter of the Sydney Swans Australian rules football club in the Australian Football League and attends many live matches. Her favourite player is Barry Hall.
- Kidman's natural hair colour is light red.
- The song "BMX Bandits" by pop/rock group Wheatus is about her movie of the same name. The video features a cartoon drawing that resembles her.
Filmography
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1983 | BMX Bandits | Judy | |
Bush Christmas | Helen | ||
Skin Deep | Sheena Henderson | TV movie | |
Chase Through the Night | Petra | TV movie | |
1984 | Matthew and Son | Bridget Elliot | TV movie |
1985 | Wills & Burke | Julia Matthews | |
Archer's Adventure | Catherine | ||
Winners | Carol Trig | TV series - episode 1 | |
1986 | Windrider | Jade | |
1987 | Watch the Shadows Dance | Amy Gabriel | |
The Bit Part | Mary McAllister | ||
Room to Move | Carol Trig | TV miniseries | |
An Australian in Rome | Jill | TV movie | |
Vietnam | Megan Goddard | TV miniseries | |
1988 | Emerald City | Helen | |
1989 | Dead Calm | Rae Ingram | |
Bangkok Hilton | Katrina Stanton | TV miniseries | |
1990 | Days of Thunder | Dr. Claire Lewicki | |
1991 | Flirting | Nicola | |
Billy Bathgate | Drew Preston | ||
1992 | Far and Away | Shannon Christie | |
1993 | Malice | Tracy Kennsinger | |
My Life | Gail Jones | ||
1995 | To Die For | Suzanne Stone Maretto | |
Batman Forever | Dr. Chase Meridian | ||
1996 | The Leading Man | Academy Awards presenter | |
The Portrait of a Lady | Isabel Archer | ||
1997 | The Peacemaker | Dr. Julia Kelly | |
1998 | Practical Magic | Gillian Owens | |
1999 | Eyes Wide Shut | Alice Harford | |
2001 | Moulin Rouge! | Satine | |
The Others | Grace Stewart | ||
Birthday Girl | Sophia/Nadia | ||
2002 | The Hours | Virginia Woolf | |
2003 | Dogville | Grace Margaret Mulligan | |
The Human Stain | Faunia Farley | ||
Cold Mountain | Ada Monroe | ||
2004 | The Stepford Wives | Joanna Eberhart | |
Birth | Anna | ||
2005 | The Interpreter | Silvia Broome | |
Bewitched | Isabel Bigelow/Samantha | ||
2006 | Fur | Diane Arbus | |
Happy Feet | Norma Jean | voice | |
2007 | The Invasion | Carol | completed |
Untitled Noah Baumbach Movie | Margot | post-production | |
His Dark Materials: Northern Lights | Marisa Coulter | filming | |
2008 | Australia | pre-production | |
The Lady from Shanghai | pre-production | ||
Headhunters | announced |
Discography
- "Come What May" Single (Duet with Ewan McGregor - October 2001) UK #27
- "Somethin' Stupid" Single (Duet with Robbie Williams - December 2001) UK #1
- "Kiss" / "Heartbreak Hotel" - Nicole Kidman / Hugh Jackman - November 2006 (Happy Feet Soundtrack)
Preceded byBob the Builder Can We Fix It | UK Christmas Number One single | Succeeded byGirls Aloud Sound Of The Underground |
Awards
- 2003 - Best Actress in a Leading Role for The Hours
Berlin International Film Festival
- 2003 - Silver Berlin Bear for Best Actress for The Hours
Boston Society of Film Critics
- 1995 - Best Actress for To Die For
British Academy of Film and Television Arts:
- 2003 - Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role for The Hours
Broadcast Film Critics Association
- 1996 - Best Actress for To Die For
- 2003 - Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama for The Hours
- 2002 - Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy for Moulin Rouge!
- 1996 - Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy for To Die For
Kansas City Film Critics Circle
- 2002 - Best Actress for The Others
Las Vegas Film Critics Society
- 2003 - Best Actress for The Hours
- 2002 - Best Female Performance for Moulin Rouge!
- 2002 - Best Musical Sequence for Moulin Rouge!
Prestige Academy of Motion Pictures
- 2004 - Best Ensemble Cast Performance for Dogville *(shared with the rest of the cast)
- 2003 - Best Ensemble Cast Performance for Cold Mountain *(shared with the rest of the cast)
- 2003 - Distinguished Decade in Film
- 2002 - Best Actress for The Hours
- 2001 - Best Actress for Moulin Rouge!
- 2001 - Best Musical Sequence for Moulin Rouge!
- 1995 - Best Actress for To Die For
Seattle International Film Festival
- 1995 - Best Actress for To Die For
- 2002 - Distinguished Decade of Achievement in Film
- 1992 - Female Star of Tomorrow
In 2003, Kidman received her Star on the Walk of Fame in Hollywood, California. In addition to those accolades, Kidman has received Best Actress awards from the following critics' groups or award giving organizations: Australian Film Institute, Blockbuster Entertainment Awards, Empire Awards, Golden Satellite Awards, Hollywood Film Festival, London Critics Circle, Russian Guild of Film Critics, and the Southeastern Film Critics Association. In 2003, Kidman was given the American Cinematheque Award.
Awards nominated for
- Best Actress in a Leading Role Moulin Rouge! (2002)
- Best Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama Birth (2005)
- Best Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama Cold Mountain (2004)
- Best Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama The Others (2002)
- Best Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture Billy Bathgate (1992)
- Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role The Others (2002)
- Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role To Die For (1996)
- Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role The Hours (2003)
- Best Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture The Hours (2003)
- Best Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture Moulin Rouge! (2002)
References
- UPI (November 30th, 2006). "Nicole Kidman highest paid female actor in film industry". UPI.
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(help)CS1 maint: year (link) - Associated Press (November 30, 2005). "Julia Roberts again tops list of highest-paid actresses". The San Diego Union-Tribune.
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(help)CS1 maint: year (link) - "Kidman condemns Hamas, Hezbollah" Herald Sun. August 17, 2006. Retrieved on October 22, 2006.
- Nicole Kidman's Federal Compaign Contribution Report NewsMeat.com. October 16, 2006. Retrieved on October 22, 2006.
- "Kidman becomes ambassador for UN" BBC News. January 26, 2006. Retrieved on October 22, 2006.
- "Kidman joins the Breast Cancer Care crusade" NewKerala.com July 2, 2006. Retrieved on October 22, 2006.
- "Nicole Kidman fashions fight against women’s cancers" USA Today. March 3, 2004. Retrieved on October 22, 2006.
- "Kidman heads army of Swans 'true believers'" Sydney Morning Herald March 27, 2005. Retrieved on October 22, 2006.
Additional reading
- Thomson, David (2006). Nicole Kidman. Knopf. ISBN 1-4000-4273-9.
See also
External links
Preceded byHalle Berry for Monster's Ball |
Academy Award for Best Actress 2002 for The Hours |
Succeeded byCharlize Theron for Monster |
- 1967 births
- American adoptive parents
- American Australians
- Australian adoptive parents
- Australian Americans
- Australian child actors
- Australian film actors
- Australian female singers
- Australian Roman Catholics
- Australian television actors
- BAFTA winners
- Bewitched actors
- Best Actress Academy Award nominees
- Best Actress Academy Award winners
- Breast cancer activists
- Companions of the Order of Australia
- Hollywood Walk of Fame
- Living people
- People from Honolulu
- People from Sydney
- Roman Catholic entertainers