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The Interpreter is a 2005 political thriller film directed by Sydney Pollack, starring Nicole Kidman, Sean Penn, Catherine Keener, and Jesper Christensen.It was the first film shot inside the United Nations Headquarters, as well as the final feature film directed by Pollack before his death in 2008.
In 2012, Kidman played novelist Martha Gellhorn in the HBO biopic Hemingway & Gellhorn (2012), for which she received her first Primetime Emmy Award nomination. [15] She then portrayed actress-turned-princess Grace Kelly in the biopic Grace of Monaco (2014) and starred as an evil taxidermist in the comedy Paddington (2014). [ 16 ]
Nicole Mary Kidman was born on 20 June 1967, in Honolulu, Hawaii, [5] [6] while her Australian parents were temporarily in the United States on student visas. [7] Her mother, Janelle Ann (Glenny), [8] [9] a nursing instructor and member of the Women's Electoral Lobby, edited her husband's books; her father, Antony Kidman, was a biochemist, clinical psychologist, and author. [10]
Nicole Kidman is proud of how her new erotic thriller depicts women's sexuality at older ages. "A lot of times women are discarded at a certain period of their career as a sexual being," Kidman ...
Nicole Kidman is fully embracing her backless dress era as she enjoys the award season circuit, from the open-back jewel-encrusted Celine LBD she wore to the 2024 Governors Awards to the silver ...
Nicole Kidman broke down in tears onstage while dedicating her International Star Award to her late mother, Janelle Ann Kidman, at the Palm Springs Film Festival. The 57-year-old actress was ...
Martin Stellman (London, July 28, 1948) is a British screenwriter and director best known for creating and writing The Interpreter (2005), starring Nicole Kidman and Sean Penn, and co-writing with Franc Roddam the 1979 British cult classic Quadrophenia.
Sylvia Broome (Nicole Kidman) is an interpreter at the United Nations in New York. She understands ku, a fictional language, and hears a conversation between two delegates speaking that language. [16]