PHOTOS: Musical Stoke at Circuit Fest

The rain couldn't dampen the rocking vibe at Circuit Makati as concert-goers just rocked and partied harder in Circuit Fest 2013.

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PBA's Basket-Brawls

PBA historian Jay P. Mercado chronicles some of the most notoriously celebrated crowd-clearing brawls in PBA history.

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REVIEW: Fast and Furious 6

Fast and Furious 6 is a high-octane action-packed ride that will make the most hardened action movie fans blush

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PHOTOS: ADMU Draws First Blood

The ADMU Lady Eagles displayed championship cool as they ripped the NU Lady Bulldogs in 3 sets in game 1 of the finals

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Top Female Celebs

The highest fan and issue threads will be posted weekly. Check out the gorgeous female celebrities that came out on top this week!

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Summer Quiz Night

Stay tuned for summer's last quiz night!

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  1. #561
    Cannes 2012: Nicole Kidman is 'not interested in being safe'

    SOURCE: LATIMES



    CANNES, France -- “I'm not interested in being safe, and I'm willing to fail because of that,” Nicole Kidman declares, not a shred of doubt in her voice. “I feel very ashamed when I do something safe.”

    That may sound like the easy thing for an actor to say sitting in a quiet cabana at the luxurious Hotel du Cap-Eden-Roc. But throughout her career, which includes three Oscar nominations and one victory, Kidman has always walked that particular walk as well as talked it, and never more so than this year.

    Kidman has two films showing this year at the Cannes Film Festival (Philip Kaufman's “Hemingway & Gellhorn” and Lee Daniels' “The Paperboy”), and they showcase her in roles that couldn't be more wildly different. As far as Kidman is concerned, that is a very good thing. “The diversity of characters is the thing I'm most interested in,” she says. “I don't think I do well playing myself.”

    In “Hemingway & Gellhorn,” Kidman plays journalist Martha Gellhorn, married to the novelist (played by Clive Owen) for five years but best remembered today as one of the 20th century's great war reporters.

    “I don't get to read many scripts that are going to be made that are driven by a woman,” Kidman, 44, says of her interest in the project. “She's a woman who sacrifices a lot, who doesn't compromise, for a force she feels inside her, which is to tell the stories of people around her.”

    If both this HBO production and Kidman's role in it share the pleasant feeling of classic, almost glamorous filmmaking, “The Paperboy,” adapted from the Pete Dexter novel, is something else again. A lurid, wildly excessive melodrama that depicts rural Florida in the 1960s as a cesspool of feverish mendacity, “Paperboy” features the actress totally convincing as a character whom fellow residents of Moat County describe as “an oversexed Barbie doll.”

    That would be Charlotte Bless, a woman of formidable, unapologetic sexuality whose main activity is starting epistolary romances with death row inmates. She focuses on Hillary Van Wetter (John Cusack), a sullen, white-trash alligator hunter behind bars for killing the local sheriff, and convinces Miami journalist Ward James (Matthew McConaughey) and his younger brother Jack (Zac Efron) that his claims of innocence are worth investigating.

    A maelstrom of seething emotions, “Paperboy” features scenes of extreme and graphic sexuality. In taking the part, Kidman was guided, as she often is, by her connection with the filmmaker. “I believe in putting an enormous amount of trust in your director, and I'm willing to take the knocks if it doesn't work,” she says. “I've chosen that path, chosen to contribute, and I have to trust as an actor and try not to be a control freak.”

    With Kaufman, Kidman responded to a director she describes as “incredibly deep and a philosopher with a very wise outlook on life.”

    A fan of Daniels' best picture Oscar nominee “Precious,” Kidman describes the director as feeling “‘give me all of it, I want to devour the world.' Lee is raw and abandoned, he will do or say anything, he's completely erratic and wild and will shock you with the things he says.”

    Because Kidman makes decisions about parts on a gut level, she is used to hearing criticism about her choices.

    “There are so many different opinions out there, it is so extreme, diverse and loud, there is so much noise, that to get caught up in that seems like minutia,” she says. What she does feel is “protective of the director. I worry about how they're going to fare. I'm there, but it's them, they're putting themselves on the line.”

    The thing that Kidman feels most protective about, however, is her marriage to country star Keith Urban and her two youngest children, 4-year-old Sunday and 17-month-old Faith. (She has two other children from her previous marriage to Tom Cruise.)

    “That's my priority in terms of my life,” she says, noting that she and Urban try not to be apart for more than three or four days and that he is taking a long plane ride to be with her for a day in Cannes.

    Projects Kidman takes now must factor family in. “Six months in Africa, I can't do that,” she says. “I cannot stand to be away from the girls. I'm not willing to leave them, it's very painful. I attach very deeply, and there are ramifications, pain to endure, if you allow yourself to attach and love to that extreme.”

    The couple and their children live outside of Nashville, an area Kidman enjoys, among other reasons, because it is “removed” from the limelight.

    “When you get to this age, I want to breathe, I can go with the flow of it,” she explains. “There's still a fire that ignites in me creatively, but I know how to put it out for a while.”

    That fire is also the one thing Kidman is not willing to do without professionally. “As you get older, you can lose that abandonment,” she says. “I want to stay in that place of ‘Try it, why not.' I very much still try to maintain that artistically.”

    Given where she is in her life, Kidman looks thoughtful when reminded that when she was a teenager beginning serious acting in Australia, she decided to model her career on Katharine Hepburn: She wasn't going to marry or have kids, she was just going to act.

    “I knew the thing I need to do was seek out my path artistically,” she says, looking back now on her younger self. “A burning force within me wanted to go out and explore the world, have experiences. If I was going to fall in love at 18 and have a child, I would not have done that.

    “In my psyche, the desire to find a partner was very strong, but I didn't want to give in to that. I had to fight against what I knew my nature was.”

    It's something she doesn't have to do anymore.


    -- Kenneth Turan

  2. #562
    Nicole Kidman smiles at the Hemingway & Gellhorn premiere during the 2012 Cannes Film Festival on Friday (May 25) at Palais des Festivals in Cannes, France.

    Co-stars Clive Owen and Rodrigo Santoro, as well as director Philip Kaufman, also walked the red carpet after attending a photo call earlier in the day.

    SOURCE:JUSTJARED






  3. #563
    This is hilarious.....Natawa lang ako sa comment ng French Blogger (Marie Grousset) kaya I posted this... source:nerdyvirginiaswebzine.byethost11.com



    "If her ex husband Tom Cruise has a reputation for being filthy and outdated. Nicole, remains on top, spiritual heir worthy of Marilyn and Grace Kelly. She's beautiful, she is talented, she can change her personality in a flash and play a character with guts ... Anyway, she's wonderful."



    Some reviews on Kidman's peformance in "The Paperboy":

    The revelation, however, is Kidman’s performance. Renouncing the goddess image she has so frequently assumed, her Charlotte is a ripe, feral creature, working all her sexual wiles just for exercise. With a risky mixture of precision and abandon, Kidman splendidly creates a vision of Southern womanhood at his most toxic. It won’t happen, but she deserves the Best Actress prize at this year’s Cannes. TIME MAGAZINE



    A heady, humid swamp fever rises from Lee Daniels's violent and black-comic Florida noir The Paperboy, based on the thriller by Pete Dexter: a lazy, funny tone co-exists with menace, and Nicole Kidman gives her best performance since To Die For. Race, sex, journalism, publishing and 60s America are all part of the mix – The Help was never like this – and Daniels keeps it bubbling. This gripping, scary and queasily funny picture nurtures a dark threat which lurks like one of its gators just below the surface. THE GUARDIAN UK


    In the spirit of the venture, the entire cast gets down and comes off all the better for it. Both Efron and McConaughey get very messed up physically, and both actors seem stimulated to be playing such flawed characters. Kidman exults in tramping it up but also reveals Charlotte’s superficial strength and more fundamental weakness. Merely laying eyes on Cusack’s creepy convict would be enough to convince most people that he shouldn’t be allowed out amongst the public, while Oyelowo’s Yardley shrewdly holds back, both out of understandable wariness of others’ attitudes and a reporter’s learned skepticism. HOLLYWOOD REPORTER

  4. #564
    Thank you to Mr-Dedlock (imdb.com) kinopya ko lang ang post niya...........



    Just like “The Paperboy” Hemmingway and Gellhorn is dividing the critics but the consensus seem to be that its old Hollywood camp epic romance which some enjoy and others don’t.

    SOME REVIEWS ON KIDMAN'S PERFORMANCE IN "Hemingway and Gellhorn":

    How is it that Nicole Kidman so excels when portraying real-life 20th century writers? Which is to say that, 10 years after her turn as Virginia Woolf in The Hours, she’s outstanding as war correspondent Martha Gellhorn, who also happened to be Ernest Hemingway’s third and most independent-minded wife, in the HBO film Hemingway & Gellhorn.
    Kidman is terrific in certain scenes and merely very good in others; there are a few too many moments of her traipsing around Spain, blond hair flying glamorously, not knowing quite what she’s doing there. But for the most part, she rivets one’s attention, lifting the entire enterprise by her presence. HOLLYWOOD REPORTER

    This is from Todd Mcarthy (HollywoodReporter critic) who I’m officially going to induct into the “Kidmaniacs” hall of fame, for Giving her raves in both Paperboy and Hemingway & Gellhorn!


    The actors are first-rate, down to the supporting roles. As Gellhorn, Kidman would appear to have an easier role to play, if only because we are not as familiar with Gellhorn as we are with Hemingway. However, this is her story, and she slings the weight of it across her shoulders and carries it to safety. This is Kidman's best work in years, smart, brassy, funny, sexy and tough. She brings her A-game because Owen's showier role must be legendary, a larger than life evocation of masculinity suited for the name Hemingway. CHICAGO SUN TIMES


    Kidman didn't have an enormous public persona in Martha Gellhorn to work with (or against), but she is both luminous and masterful as she takes Martha from starry-eyed optimism to war- and Hemingway-hardened cynicism. You can't take your eyes off her, not because she's beautiful but because her performance is so compellingly dominant. SAN FRANCISCO GATE


    Hemingway & Gellhorn premieres on HBO Monday, June 4, at 7:15pm / 6:15 pm on HBO HD. Other play dates on HBO: Sunday, June 17, at 7:15pm and Friday, June 22, at 12:55pm.

  5. #565
    SOURCE: thank you to Spunky_1(keithurban.net)










    Sunday Rose and Faith Margaret arrives in Sydney on the 30th of May 2012. Nicole and the girls had been staying with Nicole’s sister and her family for a few days in Singapore. Nicole had to fly to Thailand to film for a day as what she said in one of her interviews while in Cannes.

  6. #566
    MEET AUSTRALIA’S RICHEST WOMEN

    SOURCE: Business Review Weekly



    1. GINA RINEHART – $29.17 BILLION

    The world’s richest woman, mining heiress Gina Rinehart needs no introduction. The daughter of late WA mining identity Lang Hangcock has parlayed a multi-million inheritance into a multi-billion dollar empire by keeping a tight rein on her company Hancock Prospecting.

    2. ANGELA BENNETT – $2.03 BILLION

    Bennett’s wealth stems from the same place as Rinehart’s – WA’s Pilbara where her father Peter Wright and his mate Lang Hancock (Rinehart’s dad) forged a partnership that was to create untold wealth. In 1962 Wright and Hancock inked an agreement with Rio Tinto under which the global mining giant pays out a 2.5 per cent royalty from its Hamersley Iron business.

    3. VICKY TEOH – $525 MILLION

    Vicky and husband David Teoh were unknown to most Australians before they made their first appearance in the Rich 200 in 2010. The couple share their wealth from listed telecommunications outfit SP Telemedia, which was formed in 2008 through the reverse takeover of SPT by the Teoh’s TPG.

    4. CHARLOTTE VIDOR – $485 MILLION

    Charlotte Vidor appears on the 2012 Rich 200 alongside husband Irvin. The couple, in their late 70s, made their fortune in property, where their Toga Group (established in 1963) owns and manages a raft of brands including Medina Apartment Hotels, Vibe Hotels and Travelodge.

    5. IMELDA ROCHE – $440 MILLION

    The wife of Bill Roche, Imelda (77) is another Rich 200 member who share’s his or her wealth with their partner. Originally reaping their wealth from establishing the Australian branch of Nutrimetics, which they flogged to Sara Lee form $150 million in the late 1990s, the Roche’s now oversee a substantial property and investment portfolio from Sydney.

    6. MARY FAIRFAX – $430 MILLION

    The widow of publishing magnate Warwick Fairfax, Mary Fairfax’s (89) wealth these days is derived from property, rather than the media. Lady Mary’s cash flow is derived primarily from the development of her Harrington Park estate in Sydney’s Camden area, as well as a property portfolio that includes a number of hotel and residential holdings.

    7. NAOMI MILGROM – $375 MILLION

    As the owner of fashion retailer Sussan, it’s not surprising Naomi Milgrom’s (59) wealth took a bit of a hit over the past year. The daughter or retail king Marc Besen, Milgrom bought out the family business in 2003 and turns over about $500 million a year through its Sussan, Sportsgirl and Suzanne Grae brands.

    8. CHRISTINA QUINN – $350 MILLION

    One half of another wealthy couple, Christina Quinn (54) derives her fortune from VIP Pet Foods, alongside husband Tony. The Scottish couple, who emigrated to Australian in the early 1980s, established VIP Pet Foods in 1994, with the company now believed to be the world’s biggest manufacturer of chilled pet foods.

    9. DIANA GROLLO – $340 MILLION

    As the name suggests, Diana Grollo (64) and husband Rino’s riches stem from property. The sister-in-law of Bruno Grollo, Diana’s branch of the family owns construction company Equiset, as well as interests in Victoria’s Mount Buller ski resort and the Great Barrier Reef Undersea Explorer – not to mention a half-stake in Melbourne’s landmark Rialto tower.

    10. IRIS LUSTIG-MOAR – $320 MILLION

    Max Moar and Iris Lustig-Moar (67) may be divorced but their property development business Lustig & Moar Group continues to be a money spinner for the due. The former couple’s wealth received a small bump up in 2012 courtesy of the success of the Lucient and Silverleaf apartment blocks in Melbourne.

    11. PATRICIA ILHAN – $300 MILLION

    The widow of ‘Crazy John’s’ mobile phone entrepreneur John Ilhan, Patricia Ilhan (48) sold the family business to Vodafone after her husbands death and has since diversified into property and other investments. A shade under half her fortune is in property in 2012, with Australian equities, fixed interest and infrastructure investments making up the lion’s share of what’s left.

    12. NICOLE KIDMAN – $300 MILLION

    Yes, that Nicole Kidman. The Oscar-winning actress splits her time between Sydney and Nashville and enjoys a property portfolio that has its roots in a 2002 divorce settlement with the Top Gun star. Now married to Aussie country music star Keith Urban, Kidman (44) suffered a slight fall in wealth from 2011, when she was valued at $304 million.

  7. #567

    NICOLE KIDMAN INTERVIEW JUNE/JULY ISSUE of HARPER'S BAZAAR

    I'd like to introduce you to Mrs Keith Urban, or the real Nicole Kidman. So much has been written, speculated and assumed about her that I felt I knew her, too, or at least knew enough about her to form opinions. I was wrong.

    For a start, she likes to be hugged by complete strangers.

    “When we come back [to Australia] and we go into a shop or something, someone will just give me a hug and I think, ‘Oh my gosh, this is nice,” she tells me. “I’ll put it out there: I love getting hugs.” And, she says, she always hugs back.

    This June, while her husband is home for the live finale of The Voice in his role as a judge on the reality television show, I suspect it will be family hugs all-around, such is the affection Australia now feels for her husband, a home-grown — but hitherto largely unknown beyond the country music scene — star. Nowadays we’re all with Nicole on Team Keith.

    In royal style we lined the streets of Sydney for their wedding in 2006. Nicole’s car traversed the sprawling suburbs and we waved and waved. He seemed nice enough — importantly, he was Australian (although born in New Zealand, he was raised in Queensland) — and his normality was just the thing we believed she needed post the giddy heights and troughs of the Hollywood scene and her first marriage, to Tom Cruise. (Truth be known, us Australians are never too comfortable about our stars living in Hollywood; we love them to win Oscars but Tinseltown habitation suggests that they adopt a certain psyche that doesn’t fit our national character, or at least the one we celebrate.)

    Urban, of course, turned out to be a lot more than a nice bloke, as anyone who attended the wedding, at which he sang his Making Memories of Us, will attest. The lyrics are telling: “I’m gonna be here for you baby/I’ll be a man of my word … And I’ll earn your trust making memories of us.” Kidman cried. “I think I had about an hour and a half doing hair and makeup, and it was all gone, washed off,” she says. “I just got through the wedding. It was just crazy; he can make me cry like no one can.”

    Despite the auspicious ceremony, the marriage famously got off to a rocky start. Just months into it, Kidman staged an intervention and Urban went to rehab for the third time in eight years, but the first since he’d known her. He’s never looked back. “Nic has taught me so much and brought so much into my life and opened my eyes in so many ways,” he subsequently told Oprah Winfrey. “[This is] the best place I’ve ever been.”


    “It’s very easy to fall in love when things are great, but the way to really fall in love is when things aren’t great,” reflects Kidman. When I tell her that she should expect Keith to be the one who is mobbed when the couple is back in Australia, she laughs in delight: “Well, that’s what it’s like over in Nashville, too: I’m ‘Keith’s wife’ in Nashville.”

    She’s thrilled that her countrymen now know what she knows about her husband, and that his music is finding a wider audience. “He’s an amazing musician,” says Kidman. “I’m just hoping that our girls get that [talent]. I think when you’re in a relationship where you really care for the other person, when they achieve their dreams it’s better than when you do yourself. That’s what is so wonderful; that’s what I hoped would happen with The Voice, because I know how good he is and I wanted other people to see it, I suppose. I hoped other people would see it.”

    As luck would have it, it seems daughter Sunday Rose has inherited some of her father’s interest in music. Urban believes in exposing the kids to musical instruments from a young age and makes sure there are drums, pianos and guitars littered throughout the home, all of which Sunday seems drawn to. Or maybe she just wants to be like her dad. Santa bought her a toy car for Christmas, which she likes to park besides her dad’s in the garage. Apparently she locks it up and walks away with a distinct Urban swagger. “And she’s got an American accent but an Australian spirit,” adds Kidman proudly. So is that what she fell for when she met Keith — his Aussie spirit? “I think we share the same sense of humour. And I’d use that term ‘Aussie battler’, you know; there is certainly that aspect to all of us, I think, and it’s a good one. Sometimes you’ve got to just tough it out, and that’s something that certainly Keith has.”

    Kidman has had to tough it out, too. By all accounts, the end of her first marriage left her in tatters emotionally, and without her two adored adopted children — Isabella and Connor — in her home. It was her family and friends (old friend Naomi Watts moved in), but most of all her sister, Antonia, who came to the rescue to help put her back together. Understandably, Kidman says she was thrilled when she found out Sunday Rose was to have a younger sister.

    “Obviously Bella and Connor are adults now so they’re in a whole different place,” she says. “We were open to whatever happened, but to have Faith come, so that there were two little girls together, so they can have one another’s backs … That’s what I’m always going to tell them: ‘You’ve got to take care of each other because that’s the important thing between sisters, that you take care of each other, [that] you’re there for each other’.”

    Which must have made criticism surrounding the birth in December 2010 of Faith Margaret, a much yearned-for sister for Sunday Rose, all the more difficult to bear. Faith was famously born with the help of a surrogate mother, or “gestational carrier” as is the common term in the US.

    “Keith was wonderful with that because he’s protective but at the same time he’s not a paranoid person,” says Kidman without a hint of anger or resentment. “Between the two of us we were able to navigate it … we’ve both kind of adjusted to the fact that people are going to have opinions but ultimately you have your life, you live your life, and when I look back at it I want to be proud of what I did. I know the truth and I know what our motives are.”

    No doubt there will be those who throw yet more criticism at the pictures on these pages, and the fact that her children feature in them. So I think it’s best I explain how they came to be.

    Kidman was booked for our cover shoot with a young Australian photographer and regular BAZAAR contributor, Will Davidson. The shoot took place a few hours out of Sydney in a country home with a perfect red dirt road, as envisioned by Davidson. Kidman arrived on time, without entourage, and even spotted the crew not a coffee but a coffee van — “my treat” — when she was told the cost was beyond the shoot budget.

    She was a willing photographic subject, talked to me in an unguarded and genuinely warm manner before the pictures, and later waited obligingly until dark for a specific Gucci dress to arrive. (In the end the light was so low that the shot didn’t make the cut.) Later in the afternoon, Sunday Rose and Faith arrived after their sleeps to see Mummy. Kidman didn’t want to put them down; Sunday Rose donned one of the tuxedo jackets from the clothing racks because it was getting chilly. The photographer then took some shots of Kidman with the girls solely for her family album.

    I was shown the versions of her with the children, but with their faces obscured. I fell in love and I wanted our readers — in fact, everyone — to see the pictures because they say so much more about Kidman than I am attempting to do right now in words. They are magic, raw and full of intense love, anearly show her devotion to her children. I went to work convincing her that they deserved to be published, so for those who would criticise, blame me.

    “I think it’s OK,” says Kidman of the shots. “Because you can’t see their faces; they’re still protected. I feel it’s a really lovely way to celebrate being a mum and being a family, and they’re my daughters, and they’re Keith’s daughters [laughs] ... you can see the hair!”

    Another reason I really didn’t know Nicole Kidman before this cover story is because I always assumed she was super-confident. After all, she’s accepted an Academy Award in front of her peers and millions of viewers, and walked enough red carpets to cover the Simpson Desert. But she’s not. She’s shy, like many actors whose characters are cover-ups for their unease being themselves in public. So how does she cope with the constant intrusion into her privacy?

    “Nowadays, it’s certainly very different to when I was married to Tom; it wasn’t like this at all. You had a lot more privacy, in a way. Because of the internet and press now, and the way it travels so quickly, photos and everything, it’s just something we’ve had to adjust to.

    “I think that’s just what I’ve known for so many years now … it’s why I try to live quietly when we’re in Sydney. I try to live quietly wherever we go. And that’s probably to do with being slightly introverted and not a big extroverted personality anyway, and partly to do with how I was raised, which is to quietly go about your business.”

    She says she doesn’t like to watch herself on film. “I still don’t really see them [her films], no.” she admits. “I think part of it is because I’m embarrassed, and part of it is because I’m shy and all those things. I would rather be tough on myself than have other people be tough on me.”

    Kidman is also a producer (her credits include Monte Carlo, Rabbit Hole and In the Cut), a willing star of lower budget, art-house films and an enthused theatre actor given the opportunity. She says she finds big-budget productions daunting.

    “I’ll be the first to say if I don’t think my work is good: ‘Oh, don’t see it’,” she says, “which is most of the time.” It’s a comment that will send shivers down the spines of producers, who pay substantial sums for the publicity
    Kidman brings to their projects.

    The two Kidman films that will premiere at Cannes Film Festival this month, Hemingway & Gellhorn and The Paperboy, both sit happily in the art-house category. In director Philip Kaufman’s Hemingway & Gellhorn, Kidman plays Martha Gellhorn, the war correspondent wife of Clive Owen’s Ernest Hemingway, whose five-year marriage inspired the author’s For Whom the Bell Tolls.

    “We were trying to do an epic on very little money,” Kidman says. “I like the freedom of it because you’re not beholden to hundreds of millions of dollars and a lot of special effects and all that sort of stuff. It’s the type of film I tend to be drawn to, and when I do big-budget films
    it’s a whole different thing. I’m not as good at choosing those kind of movies!”

    In The Paperboy she plays the perma-tanned and trashy Charlotte Bless, who writes letters to an inmate on death row. On the morning I call Kidman for a follow-up interview, her co-star in The Paperboy, Zac Efron, is quoted in news reports on the internet claiming their sex scenes were the highlight of his life. “Oh really?” she says with a laugh. “That’s funny.”

    It’s been confirmed that Kidman will play Grace Kelly in Olivier Dahan’s upcoming epic (think La Vie en Rose, which won Marion Cotillard the Best Actress gong) about a period in the actor-turned-princess-of-Monaco’s life when she helped smooth over diplomatic relations between France and Monaco over the principality’s lax tax laws.

    “[Kelly] did a lot of [Alfred] Hitchcock, he being one of my favourite directors, but I hadn’t paid an enormous amount of attention to her life,” says Kidman. “This script is really good and Olivier is wonderful. I’m very lucky to have that role, actually. I feel very lucky to be able to go get lost in her and try to honour her. It’s her story but it’s not a biopic; it’s a small part of her life and then [the film] deals with much bigger issues.”

    The final thing you didn’t know about Nicole Kidman is that she is famous in my household only as Keith’s wife. In an attempt to convince my twins — huge fans of The Voice — to be quiet while I talked to Kidman on the phone, I brought up a photo of her and Urban together on the internet. “Who’s this?” I asked, without pointing to either of them. “Keith!” was their immediate response. “And this is Keith’s wife, Nicole, whom I am going to talk to.” “Does he love her?” asked my hopelessly romantic six-year-old. I thought about the happy, comfortable, glowing lady who lit up every time she mentioned her husband, and whose children ran into her arms. “Yes, I think he must,” I said. And she loves him too.

    Words: Edwina McCann

    Photography: Will Davidson

  8. #568

    NICOLE KIDMAN AT CANNES FIM FESTIVAL
    SOURCE:HERALDSUN.COM


    NICOLE Kidman flew back to Australia yesterday to get back to her most important role - being a mum.

    After a week wowing the Cannes Film Festival in a parade of incredible frocks, the gorgeous Paperboy actor looked almost normal as she landed in Sydney.

    Well, apart from the huge entourage and designer handbag, that is.

    Nic's other half, Keith Urban, returned to Sydney from Los Angeles on Wednesday.

    The Voice Australia coach looked every inch the model dad as he protectively walked daughters Sunday Rose and Faith Margaret from the airport to a waiting car.

    He will be back in the studio for the live show on Monday after jetting back from the Bayou Country Superfest.

  9. #569




    VERY OLD PHOTOS (thank you to spunky_e1 -keithurban.net)












  10. #570
    SOURCE: CNN.COM



    Michelle Rodriguez: No Oscar Nod for Nicole Kidman


    “Avatar” star Michelle Rodriguez may have stepped in the proverbial hornet’s nest with some eyebrow-raising comments she made in France recently.

    The outspoken actress was speaking to New York magazine's Vulture last week at an amfAR event when she offered her take on Lee Daniels’ new film “The Paperboy.”

    To the question of whether one of the film’s stars, Nicole Kidman, could potentially earn an Oscar for her controversial turn in the flick (she "pees" on co-star Zac Efron in one scene) Rodriguez promptly shot the possibility down. Her reason? Kidman's neither “black” nor “trashy.”

    "One of my friends said, 'She’s going to get nominated for an Oscar for that,’” Rodriguez said of the buzzed-about film. “I was like, 'Nah, man. She’s not black!'"

    "I laugh, but it’s also very sad," she added. "It makes me want to cry. But I really believe. You have to be trashy and black to get nominated. You can’t just be trashy."

  11. #571
    KEITH ,NICOLE,SUNDAY ROSE AND FAITH MARGARET AT LUNA PARK IN AUSTRALIA (10 June 2012)

    SOURCE: @TheJaykeHall


  12. #572



    We just received an incredible donation of $100, 000 from Nicole Kidman & Keith Urban!!! ‪#GoldWeekTelethon‬


    SOURCE:@SYDNEY KIDS HOSPITAL

  13. #573

    Helping hand ... Amanda and Scott Miller, daughters Madeleine, 4, and Alyssa, 2, with Nicole Kidman

    ACTRESS Nicole Kidman added some Hollywood glamour to yesterday's (June 11)telethon for the Sydney Children's Hospital - and made a $100,000 donation.

    The mother of four said she had visited the hospital many times and was always touched by the children.

    "They are fighting so hard," she said.

    "And their families are fighting."

    More than $2.5 million was pledged during the event.

    Kidman was reunited with two-year-old Alyssa Miller, whom she visited at the Randwick hospital last year. The St Helens Park youngster was battling leukaemia when they met but is now in remission.

    Alyssa's father Scott said he owed everything to the staff at the hospital: "Without the staff at the hospital she would not be here today. When she was first diagnosed they said she would be lucky to make her first birthday."

    A swag of celebrities gave their time to man the phones for the telethon, including Olympian Geoff Huegill, TV personality Catriona Rowntree and comedienne Julia Morris. Model Samantha Harris said she was honoured to help out: "Just to think of some of the things the children have to go through - they and their families - is really heartbreaking."

    Sydney Children's Hospital Foundation CEO Adam Check said he was overwhelmed by the amount pledged.

    "We were hopeful of getting our $2.2 million target but certainly respect it is a tight economy," he said.

    "The money will be used to purchase equipment, for research and to improve patient amenities within the hospital."

    Comment on this article:

    Perdita of Strathfield Posted at 5:54 AM Today
    Everything about Nicole Kidman is a class act from her looks to her personality to her generosity to her acting. Only in Australia where envy and angst rides high when a local becomes prominent on the world stage is she not fully appreciated. And, of course, many of us are too dumb to understand that she's interested in challenging and different roles and doesn't just confine herself to blockbuster movies, like lesser actors. She is a genuine star, in every sense of the word.

    SOURCE:dailytelegraph.com.au

  14. #574
    Nicole Kidman is included in the epic photo of Paramount Pictures commemorating their 100th anniversary along with other big Hollywood stars!

    http://newsonthedot.blogspot.com/201...its-100th.html

    Kidman starred in Paramount Pictures' movies such as "The Hours" and "The Stepford Wives".

  15. #575
    Keith Urban and wife Nicole Kidman take their children Sunday Rose and Faith Margaret to Sydney's Luna Park

    SOURCE: dailytelegraph.com

    THEY may be long-time Sydney regulars but Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban are still suckers for the simple joys of the Harbour City, with the superstar pair taking in a day at Luna Park with their children Sunday Rose and Faith Margaret in tow.

    The Kurban brood braved the poor weather as they took to the rides and games pavilion before climbing into a waiting chauffeur-driven 4WD late on Sunday afternoon.

    And 44-year-old Urban yesterday hinted at spending more time at the couple's Milsons Point base.

    Asked if he planned to stick around for another year with Nine's The Voice, Urban gave an encouraging: "We're working on it."

  16. #576
    It was a star-studded affair at Richard Wilkins' 25 Year Anniversary Fundraiser for Downs Syndrome at Fox Studios last night. The entertainment reporter is celebrating his 25-year anniversary on television this year, and was joined by celebrity pals including Nicole Kidman, Jestina Campbell, Jodi Gordon, Olivia Newton-John, Gigi Edgley, Karl Stefanovic, Sophie Faulkiner and many more. The coaches from The Voice — Seal, Delta Goodrem, Joel Madden and Keith Urban — were also there, and performed for the crowd on the night.
    SOURCE:JUSTJARED.COM






  17. #577
    Birthday Girl: Keith Urban treats wife Nicole Kidman to Greek dinner as they mark her 45th in Sydney

    She may be a Hollywood film star, but when it comes to her birthday, Nicole Kidman has simple needs.
    The Oscar winner was treated to a low-key meal with husband Keith Urban and her family at a Greek Australian restaurant in Sydney today.
    Nicole, who turns 45 today, looked years younger as she waved at fellow diners as she left The Apollo in Potts Point, before heading on to Lady Gaga's concert.











  18. #578
    SOURCE:BLOGS.INDIEWIRE.COM

    The Essentials: The 5 Best Nicole Kidman Performances

    Few actresses seem to make as diverse an array of choices as Nicole Kidman. The actress has spent the last decade or two as one of the few actresses who can truly call themselves A-list, but swings between incredibly bold, interesting choices with world-class filmmakers, and nearly irredeemable crap ("Bewtiched," "The Stepford Wives," "The Invasion," "Trespass"). She rarely gives a turn that's anything less than totally committed, but one always feels a little nervous settling in for a new Kidman flick.

    That being said, one only has to skim her resume to remember that she is, after all, one of our most gifted and interesting movie stars, and has given more great performances than most of her contemporaries. Today is Kidman's 45th birthday, and as such, we thought we'd mark the occasion by picking out five of our favorite performances from the actress. Did we miss out on yours? You can advocate for your own favorite in the comments section below.



    "To Die For" (1995)
    In the mid '90s, Kidman was really best known for playing relatively thankless wife/girlfriend parts. But it took Gus Van Sant to spot the devil inside, when the director cast her as the murderously ambitious weather girl Suzanne Stone in his delicious satire "To Die For." Working from a script by "The Graduate" writer Buck Henry, it was a prescient look at celebrity culture and the hunt for fame that's only gotten more and more relevant as we settle into the era of TMZ, the Kardashians and Casey Anthony.

    And Van Sant delivered one of his best, least indulgent films, neatly using a mock-doc framing conceit to ground the sometimes absurd comedy. Kidman excels as Stone, a small town would-be reporter who seduces a group of teens (including Joaquin Phoenix and Casey Affleck in early roles) into killing her husband (Matt Dillon), who wants to start a family. Malevolent, manipulative, teasing and dead sexy, it was a real departure for Kidman, and she steers just this side of caricature, never making Suzanne redeemable, but also showing that she's much more than a murderous pretty face.



    "Dogville" (2003)

    Never let it be said that Nicole Kidman avoids a challenge. Kidman had finally cemented her place on the A-list and escaped from the shadow of her ex-husband Tom Cruise, thanks to "Moulin Rouge" and "The Others" becoming big hits in 2001, and to winning an Oscar for playing Virginia Woolf in "The Hours" in 2002. Her next project? A gruelling, nearly three-hour metaphorical drama shot entirely on a stage from Lars von Trier, the button-pushing Danish auteur behind "Breaking the Waves" and "Dancer in the Dark."

    The Brechtian drama sees Kidman as Grace, who arrives in the small Rocky Mountain town of the title, seemingly fleeing from gangsters, and is given shelter by their inhabitants (who include Paul Bettany, Stellan Skarsgård and Patricia Clarkson), only for them to gradually enslave her physically and sexually. The theatrical artificiality allows a stronger light to shine on the performances, which are superb (how did this Paul Bettany become the star of "Priest"?), and Kidman stands first among them. It's arguably the purest of von Trier's suffering women, Kidman thanklessly accepting every last indignity thrust upon her by the people of Dogville, until... well, she doesn't, at which point the quality of her turn is truly revealed. It's a shame she didn't return for "Manderlay" (or the yet-to-be-made "Wasington"), because we'd have loved to have seen more of her Grace.



    "Birth" (2004)

    Badly received and much misunderstood at the time, "Birth" has grown in reputation as the years have gone on, and it now reveals itself as, if not Kidman's very best performance, than certainly in the top rank. In Jonathan Glazer's firmly original film, she plays Anna, a privileged New Yorker about to remarry, ten years after the death of her husband. At a party for her mother, she's confronted with a young boy, Sean, who claims to be the reincarnation of her dead spouse. A bold, brave, extraordinary and unique picture that never goes where you expect it to go, it's one of the great unsung pictures of the last decade.

    And Kidman is wondrous in it, as Anna navigates old wounds reopened by this unsettling young upstart; she's angry, vulnerable and increasingly won over, and even turned on (an incredibly brave choice to take) by the possibility that her true love has returned. It's a beaut of a part, and Kidman plays every note like it's the last role she'd ever play, right down to the genuinely surprising (if perhaps a little too neat) third act twist. If you've never seen it, rush and find it as soon as you can, if only for Kidman's face in the breathtaking, wordless opera sequence.




    "Margot At The Wedding" (2007)

    One of Kidman's great virtues (and perhaps something that's kept her from really excelling in more straight-up romantic fare like "Australia") is her lack of need to be loved by the audience, and that's never been clearer than in Noah Baumbach's "Margot at the Wedding." Another film somewhat undervalued at the time (and it is admittedly a step down from the sheer brilliance of the director's previous film, "The Squid and the Whale"), it sees Kidman play the titular Margot, a self-absorbed, petulant author who blows into a seaside town like a hurricane for the wedding of her sister Pauline (Jennifer Jason Leigh) to Malcolm (Jack Black), with designs on an old flame (Ciarán Hinds) who's hosting a Q&A in a local bookshop.

    More than any other film on this list, you feel that Kidman's simply having a blast in the part, revelling not just in the chance to play such a terrible ****ing human being, but also in the relatively rare occasion that she doesn't have to carry an entire film on her shoulders, with Leigh and Black each giving impressive turns too. We understand entirely why people find it a difficult film to love, but you're missing out on one of Kidman's most acerbically funny turns (and her sense of humor is one of her more underrated tools) if you avoid it.



    "Rabbit Hole" (2010)

    Unlike "Birth" or 'Margot,' Nicole Kidman was given serious recognition, including an Oscar nomination, for "Rabbit Hole," and yet the film still managed to elude audiences. Which once again is a great shame. It's got a degree in common with "Birth," in that Kidman plays a woman haunted by grief who finds solace in a friendship with a much younger boy. In this case, however, she's part of a married couple, alongside Aaron Eckhart, whose 4-year-old son chased his dog into the road and was killed by a teenager (Miles Telller).

    Becca, Kidman's character, is so overwhelmed by grief that she simply wants to wipe the slate clean, getting rid of her child's possessions and moving away, and her quiet fury is impressive, matched by lovely moments of serenity. And it's one of the more moving portrayals of life going on after grief -- the couple are trying to struggle on, and almost find themselves forgetting their troubles for a second, which is how it actually happens. The film doesn't quite overcome some of the issues of David Lindsay Abaire's source play, or the essential staginess of that material, but Kidman (and Eckhart, who didn't get the same plaudits, but should have) is a wonder.

  19. #579
    Pictures of Keith and Nicole going to see Lady Gaga's Sydney concert (6/20/12)

    SOURCE : thank you to spunky_e1 - keithurban.net




  20. #580
    Nicole Kidman gets a sweet kiss from her almost 4-year-old daughter, Sunday, on Thursday (June 21) in Sydney, Australia.

    The Aussie actress, who celebrated her 45th birthday the day before, relaxed on the balcony of a beach house with hubby Keith Urban, her parents, and her sister and brother-in-law. Happy birthday, Nicole!

    SOURCE:JUST JARED










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