Friday, October 31, 2008

Nicole Kidman & Courteney Cox Arquette

Morning Piss: Pet Your Inner Cougar




Apparently, you, my PO'd, potty-mouthed readers, are far more pissed at Nicole Kidman than am I—and for different reasons. I've been bitching about her less-than-stellar bodyguard policies for so long (and I've become friggin' immune, practically, to her frozen face now) that you all had to remind me how sad things really have gotten:

"Someone needs to tell her [Kidman's face] looks awful. It's plain to see she is surrounded by yes people," wrote Mary. "[Kidman's] face is smooth and without lines, soon to be without features. Her lips look like the spare tire on my jeep," sassed Jim Morrison.

Now, Nic, we're bitching because we love you, don't you know that? But please, we beg of you, take a page from the career of the similarly aged Courteney Cox Arquette, who just announced her plans to star in Cougar Town, a show about a 40ish gal struggling with the same crap you're struggling with in real life, Ms. Kidman, only with buckets more green and a celebrity hubby.

But the point remains: Do as CCA's doing and embrace your current status, and stop running so tragically in the opposite direction. Also, return those lips to Angelina Jolie, she wants them back.

Nicole Kidman hunts Oscar glory

EPIC romance Australia will kick off its multi-million dollar Oscars campaign next week when stars Nicole Kidman and Hugh Jackman appear on Oprah Winfrey's US talk show.

The high-profile television appearance will launch a 10-week worldwide promotional blitz, with Kidman, Jackman and Sydney director Baz Luhrmann set to launch the long-anticipated movie in the US, Sydney, London and Paris.

While the film is due to have its world premiere in Australia in two weeks it's still unseen by critics, but influential taste-maker Winfrey was given a sneak peak of Australia in unfinished form ahead of her interviews with the two stars last week.

Nicole Kidman Pictures and Wallpapers

Nicole Kidman Pictures




Nicole Kidman Wallpaper


Beauty Nicole Kidman

Nicole Kidman

Nicole Kidman



Born Nicole Mary Kidman
June 20, 1967 (1967-06-20) (age 41)
Honolulu, Hawaii, USA

Nicole Mary Kidman (Date of Birth: 20 June 1967)


Welcome to Khubsurti Blog, a fan site for the Academy Award winning Australian actress Nicole Kidman. Nicole is one of the most sought-after actresses of her generation, and is known for her roles in Moulin Rouge, The Hours and To Die For, and can next be seen in Australia.

Kidman was born in Honolulu, Hawaii. Her father, Dr Antony David Kidman, is a biochemist, clinical psychologist and author, with an office in Lane Cove, Sydney.[4][5][6] Her mother, Janelle Ann (née Glenny), is a nursing instructor who edits her husband's books and was a member of the Women's Electoral Lobby. At the time of Nicole Kidman's birth, her father was a visiting fellow at the National Institute of Mental Health of the United States. The family returned to Australia permanently when Kidman was four years old and Kidman's parents now reside on Sydney's North Shore. Kidman has a younger sister, Antonia Kidman, who is a journalist.

Kidman attended Lane Cove Public School in her primary school years, and then she attended the North Sydney Girls' High School. She then studied at the Victorian College of the Arts in Melbourne, at the Phillip Street Theatre in Sydney, along with her friend Naomi Watts. This was followed by studies at the Australian Theatre for Young People.

Nicole Mary Kidman is an Academy Award-winning actress, a UN Citizen of the World award winning humanitarian and a UNIFEM and UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador. In 2006, Kidman was made a Companion of the Order of Australia, Australia's highest civilian honor. In 2006, she was also the highest-paid actress in the motion picture industry.

After making various appearances in film and television, Kidman received her breakthrough role in the 1989 thriller Dead Calm. Her performances in several films, such as To Die For (1995), Moulin Rouge! (2001), and The Hours (2002), have won her much critical acclaim. In 2003, Kidman received her Star on the Walk of Fame in Hollywood, California. She is also well-known for her former marriage to the actor Tom Cruise and her current marriage to the noted country musician Keith Urban. Because she was born to Australian parents in Hawaii, Kidman has dual citizenship of Australia and the United States.

COMING SOON Nicole Kidman

Nicole Kidman


COMING SOON
is the Baz Luhrmann film 'Australia' in which Nicole plays Lady Sarah Ashley, an English aristocrat who must battle against cattle barons to protect her land. Released in the US on November 26th.

It's a "sweeping romance" and is "very passionate", it's a "classic romance that uses the sweeping landscape of Australia". Hugh Jackman describes it as "a combination of Out of Africa, Gone with the Wind, Lawrence of Arabia -- that kind of world, a romantic adventure epic with me and Nicole." The epic begins in the mid-1930s and concludes with its major set-piece, the 1942-43 Japanese bombing of Darwin and the exodus south, known as the Adelaide River Stakes. It centers on an English aristocrat (Kidman) who inherits a ranch the size of Maryland. When English cattle barons plot to take her land, she reluctantly joins forces with a rough-hewn cattle driver (Jackman) to drive 2,000 head of cattle across the country's most unforgiving landscape, only to face the bombing of Darwin, Australia, by Japanese forces.

Nicole Kidman finds motherhood ’bittersweet’



Nicole Kidman gets very farklempt when she thinks about her 3-month-old daughter, Sunday Rose. “I’m raw and emotional,” the “Golden Compass” actress said. “I cry even thinking of her. But they are tears of joy. Because I suppose I never thought I would get to (give birth to a child). To have been given it so late in life - I’m so ready for it,” the actress told Parade Magazine. Mrs. Keith Urban agrees that it’s hard being a mom in her forties. “It’s very bittersweet. Because at 41, I think, ‘I want to see her 21st birthday, and I want to see her get married.’ My relationship with death used to be far more ambivalent . . . now it’s very much about staying in the world,” she said.

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