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THE INTERPRETER
NICOLE KIDMAN (Silvia Broome) first came to the attention of American audiences
with her critically acclaimed performance in the riveting 1989 psychological thriller, Dead
Calm. Since then, she has become one of the most sought-after actresses in film. For her
portrayal of Virginia Woolf in The Hours, Stephen Daldry's feature adaptation of Michael
Cunningham's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, Kidman won the 2003 Academy Award® for
Best Actress. She also received the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Drama, the
BAFTA Award for Best Actress and the Berlin Film Festival Silver Bear Award for Best
Actress (together with Meryl Streep and Julianne Moore, an unprecedented event in that
Festival's distinguished history). She was also nominated for a Screen Actors Guild Award.
In 2004, Kidman starred in Lars von Trier's provocative independent feature,
Dogville, with an ensemble cast that included Chloë Sevigny, Jeremy Davies, Paul Bettany,
Lauren Bacall and Stellan Skarsgård. She also starred in the psychological thriller Birth, costarring
Lauren Bacall, Danny Huston and Anne Heche, for director Jonathan Glazer (Sexy
Beast). Her performance in Birth garnered Kidman a Golden Globe nomination for Best
Actress in a Drama—her seventh nomination.
In December of 2003, Kidman received both a Golden Globe Award nomination as
Best Actress in a Drama and a Broadcast Film Critics (Critics' Choice) nomination as Best
Actress for her performance in Cold Mountain, based on Charles Frazier's best-selling novel
and adapted for the screen and directed by Anthony Minghella.
Kidman's range and versatility have won her wide acclaim for daring performances.
In 2002, her performances in both Baz Luhrmann's innovative musical feature, Moulin
Rouge, and in writer/director Alejandro Amenábar's wildly successful psychological thriller,
The Others, earned her dual Golden Globe Award nominations—as Best Actress in a Musical
and Best Actress in a Drama. She won the Golden Globe for the former. Moulin Rouge also
earned Kidman a London Film Critics Circle Best Actress Award and an Oscar® nomination.
The Others earned her a BAFTA nomination.
In 1995, Kidman starred as Suzanne Stone in director Gus Van Sant's widely
acclaimed black comedy To Die For. For her pitch-perfect, wickedly funny portrayal of a
woman obsessed with the dream of becoming a TV personality, she won a Golden Globe
Award for Best Actress, along with Best Actress Awards from the Boston Film Critics,
National Broadcast Film Critics, London Film Critics and the Seattle Film Festival. She was
also nominated by BAFTA in the Best Actress category.
Other film credits include: Robert Benton's The Human Stain; Birthday Girl; Stanley
Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut; Practical Magic; The Peacemaker; Jane Campion's The Portrait
of a Lady; Days of Thunder; Billy Bathgate (for which she received a Golden Globe
nomination); Malice; My Life; Ron Howard's Far and Away; and Joel Schumacher's Batman
Forever.
Kidman made a highly lauded London stage debut in the fall of 1998, starring with
Iain Glenn in David Hare's adaptation of The Blue Room for director Sam Mendes. For her
performance, Kidman won London's Evening Standard Award "for special and significant
contribution to the London Theatre” and was nominated in the Best Actress category for a
Laurence Olivier Award. The Blue Room moved to Broadway for a sold-out, limited run.
Born in Hawaii, Kidman spent her childhood in Australia with parents who instilled
in her a love of culture and education. Her father is a lecturer in biochemistry and her mother
is a nurse/educator. Kidman studied ballet as a young child and made her debut in an
Australian film, Bush Christmas, at 14. The much-lauded 1985 Kennedy-Miller mini-series,
Vietnam, made her a virtual overnight star in Australia. Only 17 at the time, Kidman was
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