Martyn Palmer
Stories and Songs on today's free French CD, with The Times

While the hoopla that seems to accompany her every move continues outside her London hotel room, Nicole Kidman is curled up on the sofa, under a big fluffy blanket, her skyscraper-high black stilettos kicked off and discarded before her. Could she be taking refuge from the press pack as she attends the premier of The Golden Compass, the first of Philip Pullman’s fantasy trilogy, His Dark Materials, to make it to the big screen? No – “I’m sorry, but I’m really cold,” she says. “I’ve just got in from Australia, and now I’m freezing.”
You may have seen the most recent pictures of Kidman, emerging from an Australian court, pale blue eyes wide open with the look of the hunted, after telling a judge that she had feared for her life after being chased in a car by a paparazzi photographer, Jamie Fawcett. “I was frightened and worried about [an] accident,” Kidman told the court.
Fawcett is suing The Sun-Herald newspaper for defamation over an article that said he was Sydney's most disliked freelance photographer. Fairfax Media, the newspaper’s publisher, subpoenaed Kidman to appear in court.
In Australia Kidman, who turned 40 this summer, is a national obsession. Some of the photographers there seem to delight in baiting her to the point where it has been speculated that she might turn her back on her homeland for good. “Oh, no way,” she says. “That was one day out of 365.”
Indeed, she has spent much of the past year there filming Australia, Baz Luhrmann’s Second World War romantic epic in which she plays an English aristocrat who falls for a rugged Aussie, played by Hugh Jackman. But after nine months the film is still not finished and Luhrmann, with whom she made one of her best films, Moulin Rouge!, is living up to his reputation as a director who likes to take his time.
“We finish on December 21,” she says. “I hope. For Moulin Rouge! we did everything in the studio but for this we’ve been on location the entire time – in Darwin, up in Queensland and then camping out in tents in the middle of the desert. It’s extraordinary in epicness. This is the kind of film that I dreamt of making as a little girl.”
In the past few years, Kidman’s previously sure touch has, at times, deserted her. She was in a couple of lame remakes – The Stepford Wives, The Invasion (based on Invasion of the Body Snatchers) – and Bewitched, a clunky rehash of the Sixties sitcom. But now she’s back on course – The Golden Compass is a big, splashy blockbuster which should lead to two sequels and, while making Australia, she has simultaneously filmed The Reader for Stephen Daldry.
“I love that man,” she says of Daldry. “He just gets me. I love working with Baz and I love working with Stephen. You have certain people that you consider your creative soul-mates and those two are and basically I would do anything for them."
When both films are completed she wants to take some time off to be with her husband, the country singer Keith Urban. They have been through tough times – Urban checked himself into rehab to tackle an alcohol problem shortly after their wedding in June last year – but now, she insists, they are happy.
“Actually, I’m not that interested in working right now,” Kidman says. “I think that a lot of my wish to work was about wanting to get lost, not wanting to be in the world. I have a reason to be in the world now and that reason is Keith.”
Kidman was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, when her father, Anthony, a clinical psychologist, was working there. After a brief spell in the US when she was a toddler, the family moved back to Sydney. She first acted professionally as a 14-year-old in a family film called Bush Christmas. “I think I earned a thousand dollars for eight weeks’ work and it felt like I was rolling in it.”
At the start of the 1990s, Kidman was gaining a reputation beyond Australia. She met Tom Cruise on Tony Scott’s Days of Thunderand by the time they appeared together in Stanley Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut in 1999, Kidman was as big a star as her husband. She has two adopted children with Cruise, Isabella Jane, 14, and Conor, 12, and has said that she hopes to start a family with Urban: “What will be, will be. It’s in God’s hands.”
As well as a home in Australia, they have a ranch in Tennessee, which she says, is her escape. “We just have our own little bubble that we exist in. And I can completely disappear. I’m really good at it and I don’t need much.”
In The Golden Compass she is suit-ably sinister as the icily beautiful Mrs Coulter, who organises the kidnapping of children off the streets of Oxford and sends them away to the mysterious North where they are subjected to horrible experiments. “I hope we get to make the next two because you only get this tiny bit of her background in the first so to see her trajectory would be interesting. What appealed was the chance to explore a character over three films, and that’s very rare.”
Pullman’s book also tackles deeper, philosophical issues about freedom and individuality and casts the Church as the villain of piece. This has drawn criticism: the Catholic League has even called for the film to be boycotted. However, its director Chris Weitz has removed almost all of the religious references – and as for Kidman, “I was raised a strict Catholic and the last thing I want to do is have my grandmother turning in her grave.”
Instead, there are fantastic special effects, with talking bears, surreal landscapes and Zeppelins. For Kidman and the rest this meant a lot of work in front of the CGI green screen. “Green screen is not my favourite thing,” she says. “I became an actor because I wanted to act with other actors. That’s been the beauty of Baz’s film; you are on location breathing the air, feeling the impact of the sunsets. With something like Compassyou have to really use your imagination. It’s a different challenge. But it’s where movies are heading. Australia is the last of a dying breed and this is part of the new wave.”
And with that she pulls the blanket up around her.
— The Golden Compass is released on Dec 5
Nicole Kidman, this is your screen life
To Die For (1995) Kidman won her first Golden Globe for her performance as a ruthlessly ambitious weathergirl who gets some teenagers to kill her husband.
Eyes Wide Shut (1999) Played a wife who admits that she has fantasised about a stranger, setting her husband (Tom Cruise) off on an odyssey of twisted sex.
Moulin Rouge! (2001) Giving her voice an airing in this lavish musical, Kidman plays a courtesan having a tortured affair with a poet (Ewan McGregor).
The Others (2001) In this chilly horror Kidman is the mother of two children who have an allergy to sunlight, which forces them to live in a spooky darkened mansion.
The Hours (2002) Her performance as Virginia Woolf (below) won Kidman an Oscar, a Bafta and her third Golden Globe.
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She says she was raised a strict Catholic but look
at the parts she has played over the years .
Hardly pro Catholic parts or wholesome women.
Chelsea, Port Townsend, Washington
I don't think I've seen Nicole Kidman's forehead move for over 3 years. What on earth has happened to acting, where the creases and movement of facial muscles, once so prized and studied for expression, have disappeared through Botox and facelifts? It doesn't matter how many snazzy computer graphics you put in, a face is a face, and I want to read a character's face, not look at a blank stiff image that is lacks all humanity.
Laura Roberts, London, UK
Oh, for the love of Pete! Why do you all get so hypertensive over Pullman and his opinion? Drink some decaf and sit down and think about what makes your own faith so strong and important to you instead of wasting so much energy on verbalizing your fear and anger at other people because they aren't Catholic or don't believe in God. Pullman's opinion is after all just an opinion and poses no direct threat to you. Any threat you perceive is born out of your own fear and any action you take is bred from pure prejudice. Don't patronize him if you think he is such a heathen. If you are so concretely certain that your belief = truth then why spend so much time challenging Pullman? Unless you have doubts of course.
COEXIST, Tucson, Arizona
The women is a wonder. Whatever she is in she is great and any real man cannot take their eyes off her.
George Albert, Kansas City, NY
Trish, I reckon religions are rejected on the grounds of disbelief rather than because of moral codes. After-all if a person believed that a religion was true then rejected it on the basis of its moral codes that would be a bit silly.
Further I was not arguing for an unqualified suppression of that which is desired. Rather that desire be subject to higher matters, such as trust and love: rather than putting desire first which is what Pullman is promoting. But in any case no faith defines human life in terms of fulfillment of desires, as you do. Catholics, for example, believe the fulfillment of the human is the 'Vision of Truth' via union with God. Desire may have its part to play, but it is a bit part.
Greg Lorriman, Leatherhead, UK
The books are anything but anti-Catholic. The church they potray has been taken in a particular direction by "Pope John Calvin", based on the real John Calvin, is based in Geneva, and is therefore more Calvinist in nature than Catholic. The books champion free will, which is a core Catholic belief, and a crucial difference between Catholic and Calvinist interpretations of christianity. I am not religious myself, but thought I would point out the theological background here.
FL, London, England
People should do a little research on Pullman himself. He's been quoted that as saying his books are about undermining the Christian beliefs and that his books are the Anti-Narnia and about killing God. I have read the books, I'm not Catholic and I could clearly see the anti-religion themes in the books. Hollywood took that theme completely out of the movie. Clearly there was a reason. So who's really doing the hiding?
Nicole Kidman's next movie has her having an affair with a 15 year old boy. Wonder how her Grandmother would feel about that?
Stacy, Concord,
"Having read the first book I can assure you it is catholic-bashing propaganda." say Greg. Couldn't this statement be regarded as pro Catholic propaganda? Most religions are rejected by those who choose to do so <i>because</i> they "define freedom in terms of overcoming one's desires". This gives anyone not adhering to a religion the freedom of choice to live in the world as humans, with all our desires and frailties and flaws. I prefer to see it as allowing us to be more human rather than relegating us to "mere instinct - bound animals".
Trish, Dublin, Ireland
Why do people of the Catholic Religion believe this book is targetting them specifically? 'Catholic' is never mentioned in the book, and the Church is not even called that, it's known as the Magisterium, and they represent all dogmatic groups. One final question to Greg Lorriman, how is trusting someone else so completely that you run your life by what they may, or may not have said, freedom? Non-religious people can also exercise self-control as well, it isn't something exclusive to Catholicism. I am not anti-religious by the way, i am just a little confused by your thoughts
Tom, Sheffield,
I am Catholic and love these books; Pullman is agnostic - so what? The Church that he presents in the novel are a bastardised form of the modern Church, an idea of what the Church could have been like if the Reformation had not happened. The Mediaval Church was corrupt and powercrazed and needed reforming. It's been a target for stereotyping since (esp in Literature).
So Pullman doesn't like organized reigion; big deal. There are plenty of other atheists out there and yet people still believe. What gets me though is that those of us tolerant Catholics get lumped in the same category as reactionary Christians. There are good faithul peope, there are good atheists:there are bad faithfuls, and there are bad atheists. One is not always on the moral highground.
Sadly most of the people who see the film will not know that this is not the real Church:what's worse- reactionaries will clamour and shout and make the rest of us look ridiculousover a film that will be forgotton soon.
Sarah Elizabeth, Taunton, Somerset/UK
But James, the bible is a literary travesty.
Pullman might not be the greatest writer in the world, but at least he has shown some inventiveness and isn't pillaging the stories of those around him in the most turgid, confused and incoherent manner one can imagine.
I can't think of many books duller than the bible, either.
Kidd Garrett, Bristol, UK
To Greg Lorriman,
Many thanks. Knowing that the book is anti catholic, I'll go and find a copy.
(disclaimer: I was a catholic)
Andy, London,
I'd have to agree, the first book is somewhat dull fiction.
For good, barbaric, sadistic fiction, try the Bible.......
James Hammond, Newcastle, Tyne and Wear
Having read the first book I can assure you it is catholic-bashing propaganda. I also can't agree that this book is much to read: I was bored with the arbitrary, unreasoned inventiveness that so many reviewers admire (disclaimer : I am a catholic).
But it is also very opposed to religion generally. Pullman's definition of freedom is akin to "persuit of the fulfillment of desire". Most religions define freedom in terms of overcoming one's desires for the sake of trust, or 'self-control', and view Pullman's definition as undignified mimicry of mere instinct-bound animals; appropriate considering the other-self 'daemons' of the book, though a peculiar word to choose since it means 'messenger' in Greek. Messengers of what, pray? Perhaps messengers of one's self, a neat quasi self-contradiction, and quite fitting.
Anyway, don't bother with the first book : for adults it's quite boring. Synopsis : unhappy kid with neurotic mother meets irrelevant girl and turns in to a jolly big yawn.
Greg Lorriman, Leatherhead, UK
I am Australian and totally ashamed of Nicole for being in The Golden Compass Trilogy. Your grandmother WILL be turning in her grave. How could you?????????? What an embarrasment.
Jo Blo, Australia,