Montreal Gazette

Nicole Kidman: an elegant beauty in inelegant roles

Latest film sees her urinating on a co-star

- LEAH ROZEN NEW YORK TIMES

Nicole Kidman, movie star, Oscar winner and red-carpet regular, recently played a cow. Talk about your glamour roles.

The performanc­e was for an enactment of Jack and the Beanstalk, which took place in her Nashville home as she was putting her 4-yearold daughter, Sunday, to bed. She also impersonat­ed the fairy tale’s stem-climbing hero while her husband, country singer Keith Urban, played the magic beans. “I’m, like, ‘I can’t read this book again for the hundredth time,’ so I said, ‘We’re going to do it!’ ” said Kidman, 45. (The couple also has a 19-month-old daughter, Faith, and Kidman has a daughter, Isabella, 19, and a son, Connor, 17, from her marriage to Tom Cruise.)

After nearly 30 years of making movies, no one is telling Kidman to stop taking on roles that challenge both her and what moviegoers think they know about her. Over a cappuccino at a Manhattan hotel last month she discussed her career and her latest unlikely role: as a Southern floozy in the intentiona­lly pulpy drama The Paperboy, opening in October. Directed by the maker of Precious, Lee Daniels, the film earned both cheers and jeers for its audacity when it was shown at the Cannes Film Festival in May.

Kidman, an elegant blond, is strikingly tall (she’s nearly 5-feet-11) and looked even taller in a chic black pantsuit. She spoke precisely but with an easy sense of humour. “You can ask me pretty much anything,” she volunteere­d. “There’ll be things I’ll go, ‘That feels a little too personal.’ But most things I don’t have a fear of being asked about.”

She said her career was founded on a drive to get inside the characters she plays. When she was younger, acting was about escaping her own insecuriti­es by becoming someone else. Now, she said, “it’s the desire to study the human condition, the desire for collaborat­ion, to learn and absorb, and to lead a well-examined life.”

Director Baz Luhrmann, her friend, fellow Aussie and two-time collaborat­or (Moulin Rouge! and Australia), said Kidman is a rare breed. “Nicole is a serious actor and an iconic movie star,” he wrote in an email. “This combinatio­n doesn’t come along all that often.” Off screen, he said, “she can be fantastica­lly down to earth, straight to the point, and a whole lot of fun, with a particular­ly Aussie sense of humour that doesn’t take itself too seriously.”

Another close friend, actor Naomi Watts, praised Kidman’s way of navigating between commercial and independen­t films. “I think Nic has a wild streak in her and a very practical streak, and she manages to balance both very well, and that’s evident in her work,” Watts said.

“She’s a fascinatin­g and complicate­d woman full of contradict­ions, and that’s what makes her work so deep and interestin­g.”

Put The Paperboy in the wild streak column. Based on the 1995 novel by Pete Dexter, the movie features Kidman as a seemingly hotto-trot woman named Charlotte, a resident of a small town in Florida in 1969. She writes romantic letters to prison inmates and cavorts about in derrière-hugging gold lamé pants, tight tops and straighten­ed, teased blond hair. “I think straight hair gives me class,” Charlotte mistakenly observes.

Kidman’s risqué Paperboy scenes include a steamy jailhouse makeout session, sans physical contact, with Charlotte’s fiancé, a condemned murderer (played by John Cusack), and an already much-discussed beach scene in which she urinates on a worshipful young man (Zac Efron) in an effort to counteract his jellyfish stings. (In a line likely to become an instant camp classic, Charlotte, in shooing away other female, would-be Good Samaritans, proclaims that if anyone is going to urinate on the young man, “it’s gonna be me.”)

“I wanted something raw, and I wanted to work with a director who was going to access something different in me,” Kidman said of taking the part. Daniels said Kidman’s formidable resumé had him feeling intimidate­d initially. (Besides

“I wanted to work with a director who would access something different in me.”

NICOLE KIDMAN

an Oscar for her role as Virginia Woolf in The Hours from 2002, she has earned two more Oscar nomination­s and worked in nearly 40 films). But “she said, ‘Lee, if you’re going to direct me, you’ve got to understand that I’m just a plain working girl,’ ” he said. “And she was.”

On the first day of shooting — Daniels doesn’t believe in rehearsals — he had Kidman and Efron jump straight into the jellyfish scene. “You just go for it,” she said. “I think we did three takes, but it felt like a hundred.”

Efron said he admired Kidman’s willingnes­s to go full throttle in that scene — she slapped him so hard trying to revive him that she apologized afterward for hurting him — and the ones that followed. As a young actor he found it inspiring and instructiv­e to see her “go unabashedl­y into a part like this and just let go,” he recalled. “She’s so unafraid. There are no walls up.”

Born in Hawaii but raised in Sydney by a psychologi­st father and nursing instructor mother, Kidman discovered acting early through reading.

“I was fair-skinned in a country that’s about the outdoors,” she said. While others were at the beach, her mother insisted pale Nic spend her day indoors. She passed the time devouring classic novels like Madame Bovary and War and Peace.

She enrolled in an acting class and was soon working steadily on Australian TV and in movies. Tom Cruise saw her in the 1989 thriller Dead Calm, one of her first adult roles, which led to her being cast opposite him in Days of Thunder (1990) and their subsequent 10-year marriage.

Watts, who has known Kidman since they were teenagers in Sydney and acted with her in the 1991 film Flirting, said: “Nicole was ambitious but there was nothing ruthless about her ambition. She was just a woman who knew what she loved, was focused on it and committed, and really, really worked hard on improving all the time.”

Her ambition has led to working with major and sometimes iconoclast­ic directors, including Stanley Kubrick (Eyes Wide Shut) and Anthony Minghella (Cold Mountain), as well as Luhrmann, Gus Van Sant (To Die For), Stephen Daldry (The Hours) and Lars von Trier (Dogville).

Of the notoriousl­y difficult von Trier, she said: “He does things cinematica­lly that nobody else does. And whether you love him or hate him, the filmmaking is incredibly strong.” That’s why, even as she is busy preparing for her forthcomin­g role as Grace Kelly in Grace of Monaco, she is trying desperatel­y to squeeze into her schedule a small part in von Trier’s next film, The Nymphomani­ac.

Equally difficult was Kubrick, whom she remembers fondly from Eyes Wide Shut, in which she starred with Cruise.

What stayed with her from the experience? “Stanley taught Tom and I, ‘Never say no.’ When someone proposes an idea, you never shut it down. And that’s a good lesson that goes far beyond work. That’s a life lesson.”

What Kidman considers saying no to these days are offers that take her away from her young daughters and husband for too long. “I’ve worked hard to get to this place personally,” she said. “I don’t take any of it for granted. I cherish it.”

That’s why she guesses she will probably have to pass on the von Trier movie. She said: “I’m more than willing to make those sacrifices because, when I’m 70 and 80, I want my family around me. I know other things can come into play about that, but it’s certainly not going to be because I didn’t show up.”

 ?? LIONEL CIRONNEAU/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Actors Nicole Kidman and John Cusack star in the new film The Paperboy, directed by Lee Daniels.
LIONEL CIRONNEAU/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Actors Nicole Kidman and John Cusack star in the new film The Paperboy, directed by Lee Daniels.
 ?? 20TH CENTURY FOX ?? Kidman and Hugh Jackman are shown in a scene from director Baz Luhrmann’s 2008 film Australia. The Australian starlet also had a starring role in Luhrmann’s 2001 movie, Moulin Rouge!
20TH CENTURY FOX Kidman and Hugh Jackman are shown in a scene from director Baz Luhrmann’s 2008 film Australia. The Australian starlet also had a starring role in Luhrmann’s 2001 movie, Moulin Rouge!

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