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Nicole
Kidman is amongst one of the most beautiful and stunning actress of
the Hollywood industry. This Tall, striking, redheaded Australian
actress already had a career of some substance when she gained
notoriety in the US as the second wife of superstar Tom Cruise.
Nicole Kidman was born on June 20,1967 in Honolulu, Hawaii, USA. Her
father Antony is a biochemist and mother Janelle is a nursing
instructor.
An actress who was relegated to playing decorative parts for years and
was known primarily for her real-life role as the wife of Tom Cruise,
Nicole Kidman spent the latter half of the 1990s finally earning the
critical respect she deserved. Standing a willowy 5'11'' and sporting
one of Hollywood's most distinctive heads of red hair, the Australian
actress first came to the attention of a wide American audience with
her role opposite Cruise in Days of Thunder (1990), but it was not
until she starred as a homicidal weather girl in Gus Van Sant's 1995
To Die For that she began to be regarded as a performer of
considerable range and talent.Raised in the upper-middle-class Sydney
suburb of Longueville, she grew up with a love of the arts,
particularly dance and theatre. Trained in ballet from the age of
three, Kidman made her acting debut in a nativity play when she was
six. By the age of ten, she was studying acting in drama school, and
she went on to train at the St. Martin's Youth Theatre in Melbourne
and at Sydney's Phillip Street Theatre. An awkward, gawky teenager who
was teased relentlessly because of her height, Kidman took refuge in
the theatre, and she landed her first professional role at the age of
14, when she starred in Bush Christmas (1983), a TV movie about a
group of kids who band together with an Aborigine to find their stolen
horse. This was followed by a role in another adventure film, BMX
Bandits (1983), and a number of TV movies.
Kidman's first breakthrough came when she was asked to star in
Vietnam, a miniseries directed by John Duigan; the actress won
positive notices for her portrayal of an awkward 1960s schoolgirl who
matures into an idealistic 24-year-old Vietnam war protester. She also
won an American agent, something that opened quite a few doors of
opportunity. In 1989, Kidman got another major break when she was
tapped to star in Phillip Noyce's Dead Calm. A psychological thriller
about a couple (Kidman and Sam Neill) who are terrorized by a young
man they rescue from a sinking ship (Billy Zane), the film helped to
establish the then-19-year-old Kidman as an actress of considerable
mettle. That same year her reputation was further boosted by her
starring performance in the made-for-TV Bangkok Hilton, which cast her
as a young woman incarcerated in a Thai prison on false drug smuggling
charges. By now a rising star in Australia, Kidman began earning
recognition across the Pacific. In 1989, she was picked by Tom Cruise
for a starring role in her first American feature, Tony Scott's Days
of Thunder (1990). The film, a testosterone-saturated drama about a
racecar driver (Cruise), cast Kidman as the neurologist who falls in
love with him. A sizable hit, it had the added advantage of
introducing Kidman to Cruise, whom she married in December of 1990.
Following a role as Dustin Hoffman's moll in Billy Bathgate (1991),
and a supporting turn as a snotty boarding school senior in Flirting
(also 1991), John Duigan's wonderful and criminally little-seen
coming-of-age drama, Kidman collaborated with Cruise on their second
film together, Far and Away (1992). Despite their onscreen pairing and
some gorgeous cinematography, the film got only a lukewarm reception,
and Kidman's subsequent projects, My Life and Malice ( both 1993),
were similarly disappointing. Batman Forever (1995), in which she
played the hero's love interest, fared somewhat better, but it did
little in the way of establishing Kidman as a serious actress.
1993 witnessed some professional and personal advances for Kidman. She
starred in two high-profile features: Malice, playing a classic femme
fatale opposite an equally smarmy Alec Baldwin, and My Life, a
high-minded tearjerker with Michael Keaton.
1995 was a banner year for Kidman. She played the female lead opposite
Val Kilmer in the high-profile sequel Batman Forever and starred in To
Die For, a much smaller-scale Gus Van Sant-directed comedy thriller
that created a sensation at Cannes. In the former, one of that
summer's most anticipated movies, Kidman played a glamorous criminal
psychologist with the hots for the Caped Crusader and Bruce Wayne. In
the latter, she shone opposite Matt Dillon as a TV weathercaster with
murderous designs on her husband.
Summer 1995 also marked the beginning of lensing on Jane Campion's
Portrait of a Lady opposite John Malkovich. These three very cannily
chosen projects decisively proclaimed that she was no longer just Mrs.
Tom Cruise.
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