Oscar winner Nicole Kidman has lived through dramatic high and low points to become one of the world's most outstanding film stars. The US-Australian actress celebrates her 50th birthday on June 20.
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'Red witch' and diva - Nicole Kidman turns 50
She is one of the busiest Hollywood stars. In 2003, US-Australian actress Nicole Kidman received an Oscar for a performance where she could hardly be recognized.
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Lithe and agile as ever
During the last few months, Nicole Kidman made quite a few appearances on the red carpet, much enjoying the limelight of the international film world. At the Cannes Film Festival in May, she presented four new films. And she seemed to glow with happiness at the Oscar gala in February where she was nominated as Best Supporting Actress.
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With curly red hair
Following her success in various television series in her home country of Australia, Nicole Kidman made it to Hollywood in the mid-1980s. But back then, she looked quite different from nowadays. She presented herself in the typical look of that decade in the thriller "Dead Calm," a US-Australian co-production.
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The Portrait of a Lady
After playing in many commercially successful films, such as "Days of Thunder" and "Batman Forever", she starred in Jane Campion's film adaptation of the Henry James novel "The Portrait of a Lady" in 1996. Kidman made a strong effort to be taken seriously as an actress in ambitious roles.
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Working for Stanley Kubrick
Her performance in the film "Eyes Wide Shut" (1999) by legendary director Stanley Kubrick was a milestone in her career in art-house films. In the adaptation of a work by Arthur Schnitzler, Kidman starred opposite Tom Cruise with whom she also started a relationship. In 2001, however, the couple divorced.
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The dancer
Nicole Kidman took ballet lessons from age 4 to 12. Not surprisingly, therefore, she easily managed the numerous dance scenes in the wild musical "Moulin Rouge." Starring opposite Ewan McGregor, Kidman impressed audiences with her agility and temperament in the film by her Australian countryman Baz Luhrmann.
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Pale and unapproachable
Following the wild musical, Nicole Kidman gave a brilliant performance in which she presented herself in a totally different light. Spanish director Alejandro Amenábar engaged her for his psychological thriller "The Others." Kidman played the mother of two young children living in a house in the countryside.
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Honored with an Oscar
In 2002, Kidman reached a preliminary climax in her career. In "The Hours," an homage to the literary oeuvre of Virginia Wolf, she convincingly played the author. In Los Angeles, she was rewarded with an Oscar as Best Actress - for a Nicole Kidman who was hardly recognizable due to her artificial nose.
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Free to pick and choose
Around the turn of the century, Nicole Kidman became one of the world's most sought-after stars - both in Hollywood and European films. In 2003, the excentric Danish director Lars von Trier engaged her for his experimental movie "Dogville."
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No luck with 'Birth'
In the middle of the decade, Nicole Kidman became less lucky - the mystery thriller "Birth" by British director Jonathan Glazer flopped. The film's producers may have also resented having paid her a salary of 15 million dollars.
Nicole Kidman then had to set her sights a little lower. In 2007, she played in the science fiction drama "Invasion" that German director Oliver Hirschbiegel shot in the US. But that film was also neither a commercial, nor an artistic success.
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Back home
The film "Australia" (2008) was intended as a sort of comeback. Once again, Nicole Kidman worked with Baz Luhrmann with whom she had already worked in "Moulin Rouge." The film's title gives it away: it was all about the history of Australia. Despite its huge budget, the film was not successful at the box office.
Following "Australia," Nicole Kidman had to struggle hard as her reputation had suffered from these flops. Also, critics showed less enthusiasm for her, judging her performances and her appearances in public as too artificial - and this although Kidman did accept unconventional roles, like in "Stoker," a thriller by South Korean director Park Chan-wook.
Image: Twentieth Century Fox of Germany
Nicole Kidman as Princess Grace
The opening film of the Cannes Film Festival of 2014 did not exactly add to the image of the actress. In "Grace of Monaco" by Olivier Dahan, Kidman played Princess Grace. As a matter of course, both audiences and critics compared her with Grace Kelly. Kidman didn't have a chance - although she presented herself with a big smile on the red carpet in Cannes.
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The courage to play a bitch
Nicole Kidman, however, deserves to be credited for not simply withdrawing trom the scene, or accepting only glamorous roles. In 2014, she played a nasty animal preparator in the heartwarming British comedy "Paddington" that depicts the adventures of a Peruvian bear in London - a bitchy performance with a dandified hair style.
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Working with Werner Herzog
Two years ago, Nicole Kidman gave a notable performance as British historian and Africa fan Gertrude Bell in "Queen of the Desert" by German director Werner Herzog. In the eyes of some critics, it was a miscast to have Nicole Kidman playing a courageous woman in a tough environment.
Image: 2015 PROKINO Filmverleih GmbH
Red-haired once again
During the last two years, Nicole Kidman's career seems to have taken a turn to the better once again. In the film "Long Way Home" featuring the odyssey of an Indian boy across the subcontinent, Kidman played the boy's future adoptive mother. And she wore her old hairstyle once again - curly and red. She received an Oscar nomination for her performance.
Image: Universum Film / Long Way Home Productions 2015
Entering the film olympus?
Nicole Kidman made a very special appearance at the Cannes Film Festival in May with no less than four new films, among them Sofia Coppola's "The Beguiled." She presented herself daily on the red carpet and took home the festival's honorary award. It looks as though Nicole Kidman has overcome the doldrums, facing a glamorous future.
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How do you define a superstar? First of all, he or she would have to be present everywhere. Secondly, not only artistic qualities should be the reason for his or her fame and admiration. What would also be required for attaining superstar status would be a public image that goes beyond the artist's status. Something magical or supernatural. Well, one superstar who fulfills all these requirements is certainly Nicole Kidman.
Kidman got her Oscar for playing Virginia Woolf
Born in Honolulu in 1967 and raised in Australia, the top actress is known for playing a wide range of roles. The Oscar that she received in 2002 for playing Virginia Woolf in "The Hours" gives proof of that. The fact that she got the trophy for a role in which she almost unrecognizably disappeared behind her mask in some scenes cannot be held against her.
Nicole Kidman perfectly matches modern beauty ideals. With her (dyed) blond hair, her soft, almost porcelain-like complexion, her impressive height and her radiant smile, she fulfills the expectations of mass audiences.
That's why big fashion and cosmetics companies discovered her long time ago, and have used her face for their publicity campaigns. Kidman is undoubtedly one of the world's most present stars - also outside show business and the film world. In some years, she was clearly at the top of the charts of the best-paid Hollywood divas. Her salary for publicity events was astronomically high.
Nicole Kidman - a red-haired star turned blond
But somehow, her pristine beauty is almost provocative. It hasn't gone unnoticed that the actress looked quite different at the beginning of her career. Back then, she presented herself with curly red hair, a bit more chubby-cheeked and gaminesque. Her transformation into a soft-skinned porcelain type is probably not only due to age.
It can be assumed that her delicate and gracile appearance is also owed to the amazing skills of modern surgeons and dermatologists. Whether the transformation is due to surgery, botox injections or just skillful make-up remains a mystery.
Eight-point lift for Kidman?
Speculations about beauty operations of the stars tend to abound in the tabloids and on the Internet. Germany's major tabloid, the daily "Bild," has been particularly eager to find out more about the Kidman case. The paper asked German plastic surgeon Dr. Nikolaus Raab what could possibly have caused the recent conspicuous changes in Kidman's looks.
In Dr. Raab's view, Kidman underwent a so-called "eight-point facelift with higly potent hyaluronic acid that was injected into her skin with different degrees of viscosity and in different depths at different spots on her face." The beauty doc furthered explained that "this type of lifting spans the face like a tent adding more vitality to very slender faces." Whether or not those "Bild" revelations are true or not - one should congratulate Kidman on her choice of doctors and beauty staff. After all, there are quite a few Hollywood stars who were less lucky with their desperate beautification efforts.
Kidman received the "Golden Raspberry"
It's quite likely that the Australian actress, after years of rather moderate success, struggled hard to make a comeback. After all, she got a "Golden Raspberry" as one part of the year's worst screen couple after starring opposite Will Ferrell in "Bewitched." Another horrendous Raspberry nomination followed suit in 2017 for her performance in "Just go with it."
But Kidman is a true artist. It's hard to top someone who received an Oscar in 2003 only to be punished by a Golden Raspberry two years later. Besides, she also got an Oscar nomination for the film "Rabbit Hole." Light and shadow seem to be particularly close when it comes to this actress.
Nicole Kidman - "Hot as a volcano, but amiable"
"In her best performances, defensive and offensive streaks seem to balance out, amiability and creepy tremors from inside, the heat of a volcano searching its way out" - that's how German film critic Thomas Koebner described Kidman a few years ago - and he hit the nail on the head.
Nicole Kidman, back then dubbed "the red bitch" by Koebner, has long distanced herself from her beginnings as a red-haired upcomer in Australian TV series. By now, she seems to have developed a totally different personality - which hasn't always brought her success, such as her performances as Grace Kelly in "Grace of Monaco" and as an Africa traveler in Werner Herzog's awkward film "Queen of the Desert" have shown.
Nicole Kidman at the Cannes Film Festival
At the same time, Nicole Kidman delivered brilliant performances in "Birth," "The Paperboy," "Stoker" and "Lion." In these films, she gave proof of her versatility and her charisma. With four new films that she presented at the Cannes Film Festival, the actress that once played Grace Kelly is likely to remain at the top of the world's best actresses also during the second half of her career.