տուն Uncategorized Losing an Oscar role to Kate Winslet, how I’ve struggled like Grace...

Losing an Oscar role to Kate Winslet, how I’ve struggled like Grace Kelly… and why I do have regrets over THAT movie: An exclusive interview with Nicole Kidman

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A radiant and relaxed Nicole Kidman is holding court in the luxurious grounds of the six-star Hotel du Cap in the South of France.

In just a few hours’  time the Oscar winner’s controversial new movie about the life of the late Princess Grace of Monaco will open the Cannes Film Festival – and receive the sort of critical drubbing which would cause most A-list stars to go into hiding.

But if the Moulin Rouge and The Hours actress is feeling the pressure from the furore surrounding the film, she isn’t letting it show.

In fact the 46-year-old mother of four is determined to confront the controversy head on, and in one of her most personal interviews to date she reveals how:

  • She regrets turning down a chance of face-to-face talks with Princess Grace’s family about the film.
  • She lets her musician husband vet her film roles and would turn her back on Hollywood if he asked her to do so.
  • She turned down the starring  role in the acclaimed Holocaust drama The Reader because she didn’t want the film’s harrowing story to ‘penetrate her baby’ while she was pregnant.

Speaking just hours before Grace Of Monaco’s glitzy premiere on Wednesday, Kidman admitted she was nervous about the film’s reception but also said she could identify with a woman trying to life a normal life in a ‘gilded cage’.

She was also indebted to Thierry Fremaux, director of the Cannes Film Festival, for choosing it as the festival’s opening film. 

She said: ‘I was nervous, because I am always nervous, but at the same time it was nice when someone  was finally embracing it [the film] because there has been an enormous amount of controversy.

‘Thiery was very, very strong in his support of it, which I am so appreciative for. He was willing to go out on a limb for it and that’s enormously helped the film.’
Grace Of Monaco has been dogged by controversy ever since it began shooting. Grace Kelly’s son Prince Albert, who is the current ruler of Monaco, and his sisters Princesses Stephanie and Caroline have dismissed it as ‘needlessly glamorised’ and ‘historically inaccurate’.

 

Even Olivier Dahan, the film’s acclaimed French director, has distanced himself from the final cut of the movie which he insists is the work of the film’s distributor Harvey Weinstein.

While Kidman will take comfort from the fact that her own performance has attracted some favourable reviews, there is no escaping the hostile reaction to the ‘lamentable’ script.

One critic described the end product as so wooden ‘it is a fire hazard’. But Kidman, whose other big-screen credits include Cold Mountain, The Others and Eyes Wide Shut, insists that as the film’s star she can’t get involved in the rights and wrongs of a particular project.

She said: ‘If I was producing the movie, it would be a different thing. My loyalty has to be to the film and the director, that’s where I stand.

 

‘Everything else, I am not that privy to. Whether they are protecting me or not telling me, that’s  OK. I’ll stay in the bubble. That’s my job.

‘You can’t get involved in all those things operating around a  film when you are acting, because that takes the energy away from  the performance.’

Kidman says she can understands why Monaco’s ruling family may have concerns and only regrets not tackling those head-on. ‘They invited me for lunch, but I was shooting six days a week and I had my small children and my mother and my aunt. I couldn’t take all these people.

‘Now subsequently I wish I would have gone, because I would have been able to explain to them the intentions.’

She added: ‘It’s very threatening if someone plays your mother. But I would hope that they would know that there was an enormous amount of respect and love behind everything that was done.’

Kidman said working on the film had not only provided her with new insights into the Princess’s life but had made her realise just how much she had in common with her.

 

Grace Of Monaco begins in 1962 when the former Hollywood actress Grace Kelly has been married to Monaco’s ruler Prince Rainier, played by Tim Roth, for six years.

The couple’s fairytale romance which once enchanted the world  has now been replaced by a marriage strained to breaking point. The Princess feels trapped by her royal life and longs to make one more film with her old mentor Alfred Hitchcock.

In one of the film’s most poignant scenes, she confides: ‘I don’t know how I am going to spend the rest  of my life in a place where I can’t  be me.’

Kidman said: ‘I knew all her  films. And I knew that she married Rainier. What I didn’t know was  that the transition from American movie star to European royalty was more difficult than I would have thought.

‘She was very young. The way the marriage happened, and suddenly she was pregnant.

‘All of those things happened  very quickly. A lot of the struggles that she had, I’ve had. Not in terms of being a princess, but the gilded cage and motherhood versus career versus responsibility versus the desire to put good in the world.

‘All of those struggles and the desire to keep a marriage together. All of those things are very relevant to me. She is very human in her desires and that is what surprised me in  the script.’

 

Kidman, who won an Academy Award playing novelist Virginia Woolf in the 2002 film The Hours, said it was never her intention to impersonate the Princess, who died in a car crash in 1982.

She said: ‘There was a 60 Minutes television interview that she did three weeks before she passed away, which was very, very sad. I studied her intonations, but I didn’t want to mimic her.

‘Olivier said, “You definitely don’t want to mimic her. If we had  wanted that, we would have hired  a mimic.” ’

Kidman, who shot to fame in the 1989 film Dead Calm, has been in the public eye for 25 years and  has long got used to the public fascination with her own private life, Daily Mail informs.