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NICOLE ON ACTING, SINGING AND ON-SCREEN ROMANCING
EXCLUSIVE Nicole Kidman/Moulin Rouge Interview
By Paul Fischer In Los Angeles
Im
terribly jet-lagged, she said, yet Nicole Kidmans beauty natural
allure masked any obvious exhaustion she might have felt, greeting the
US press corps in Los Angeles. Her hair was kept simple and she wore a
striped, French-looking outfit. Cant you tell? Its for
Moulin Rouge,
she says smilingly.
Being Mothers Day here in Los Angeles, she
must have wished she could be doing anything but talking to the press.
She managed to say hi to her mum the day before and at least, here in
Beverly Hills LErmitage Hotel, her children were with her.
Thank God theres a swimming pool here; theyre having
a ball splashing around. Beyond that reference to her private life,
Nicole was happy to spend time talking about Moulin Rouge, and her work.
Enough has been written about what she now simply refers to as The
Divorce. Ive never been in this position before. It
feels slightly surreal. I feel very exposed. I know one day Ill
look back at this period and be able to go, Weeeee!
She laughed out loud. This has been a big year for me.
Perhaps that year may have been rocky on the
private side, but the tenacious actress has been able to venture deep
into her work, which is why she is enjoying (or not) a frenetic promotional
schedule for Moulin Rouge, Baz Luhrmann s stylized musical romance
set in 1890s Paris. I do feel really proud of this film. We
worked really hard on it. We waited a long time for it to be finished.
I think it is important to promote it because it is not something a public
says: 'Yes, this is what we want to go and see.' It's a musical. We sing
a lot of the film. It's very hard to describe in two sentences. Yet, the
reaction that we are getting from almost everyone who sees it is that
they have never seen anything like it, and they enjoy it. So that is exciting.
I'm just extremely proud of it and glad that I was able to make a movie
with Baz and Ewan and everybody.
Moulin Rouge
is a zesty and audacious musical extravaganza set in Paris infamous
Moulin Rouge nightclub in the Montmartre district. Kidman plays sultry
courtesan Satine, nicknamed The Sparkling Diamond, who finds herself torn
between her love for the impoverished writer played by Ewan McGregor and
her lust for the riches offered by an obsessed fan played by fellow Aussie
Richard Roxburgh. Garish and over-the-top, Kidmans
first entrance from the ceiling singing Diamonds are a Girls
Best Friend defines the tone of director Luhrmann' s vision. Here
was a movie fraught with risk, and it was precisely that which attracted
Kidman to this unique enterprise, because Im drawn to things
like that, she says laughingly. Of course wanting to play this character
this way had as much to do with working with Luhrmann, she also insists.
I also have a great belief in him as a director and Ive known
him and his work for many years. Not that getting the role was a
piece of cake by any means. Luhrmann saw the actress on stage in New York
doing The Blue Room. Hed sent me flowers backstage with a
note saying: I have this great character for you to play: She sings, she
dances and then she dies. That certainly piqued her interest. After
the two met, Kidman had to audition. After all, who knew if I could
sing like that, but of course, Kidman landed the role, and despite
the challenges that lay ahead. When I got the role I was just floored,
because to get a role where you actually get the opportunity of doing
something SO unusual, working with Baz, working in Sydney, not to mention
this extraordinary character and what he was going to achieve with her,
was such a gift.
Then,
she hastens to add, the reality of playing this character this way, set
in. When we got to Sydney we had to do a read-through, but of course
with a read-through on a musical, youre not just reading lines,
youve got to sing, and unaccompanied; its very confronting
and leaves one feeling very exposed, the actress concedes. Yet for
Nicole, an actress who has always thrived on artistic perfection, that
was challenging and rewarding, because Baz is the kind of director
who pushes you early on in the piece, so that by the time you start to
film, youre so comfortable with what youre doing, youre
ready to try and do anything. Including singing, and going back
to the basics of acting, she further explains. It was like drama
school all over again, because we had singing class and dance class. Then
wed have a coffee break and wed be off doing improvisational
stuff. We also lived in this big house and it was drama school all over
again.
Many of the key moments in Moulin involve
emotional sequences told through music, a device that Luhrmann uses effectively.
For Nicole, conveying emotion musically was a challenge the actress willingly
embraced. The one thing that Baz insisted from the outset, is that
for the emotion to continue even once the singing starts. He didnt
want us to take time out for the singing, as it were and the audience
goes: Now lets back into the film. He wanted to keep the plot, love
story and emotions that were being depicted, present and alive during
those scenes, so that people wouldnt get bored. Kidman adds
laughingly that theres no doubt in her mind that Luhrmann achieved
that aspiration. One thing I havent heard someone say about
the film is that its boring. Even with the tango sequence and those
kinds of scenes, its amazing how you can depict strong emotions
like jealousy, love or obsession through music and dance, far more readily.
Strangely enough, once we embrace that concept doing the love scenes and
singing Come what may to each other, somehow made it easier,
in a strange way. Not quite as easy, however, was stepping into
Marilyn Monroes shoes performing and re-defining Diamonds
are a Girls Best Friend. That was a nightmare, because
I just thought: What is this film going to be? But Marilyn does the quintessential
number there which is obviously so iconic. But theres something
to be said about throwing yourself into it and going: OK Baz, YOU think
its going to work, great. We tried different ways of doing it and
came up with the particular way you see it in the movie, less breathy
than Marilyn, more of a chest voice and less classic in a way. Ours is
raunchier. But I still cant believe we tried all of this, but thats
what kind of fun about it, because in terms of Baz as a director, hes
both very enthusiastic yet naďve in his approach to things, because he
thinks anythings possible.
That first entrance of Nicoles not only
defines Luhrmann s unique style and tone, but also presents Kidman
as the personification of a movie star. Though the actress feels uncomfortable
with that label, asked to comment on other movie stars that may have inspired
her in preparing for this film, Kidman is unhesitating in her response.
Rita Hayworth is IT, she exclaims. I just watch her
and think: WOW. I mean, shes SO beautiful, SO charismatic and an
extraordinary dancer. She just takes your breath away as a performer.
I never used to pay that much attention before, and I used to be more
into Ingrid Bergman and Katherine Hepburn, but suddenly I look at Marilyn
Monroe, Cyd Charise, Rita Hayworth and Marlene Dietrich, and theyre
all extraordinary. So I have enormous respect for all those women now,
and their talent, right across the board. To prepare for Moulin,
Nicole watched almost all of the musicals I could lay my hand on
from Hollywoods Golden Age, but also points out that this is a post-modernist
musical and as such borrows from contemporary sources and references
which you seem to discover after more than one viewing. Even I didnt
get them all, because my job was to find the truth of my character, and
not to be limited by trying to achieve things with it.
Perhaps this has much to do with Kidmans
own approach to her work. When we first met 15 years ago, there was even
then, an inherently girlish enthusiasm that the then 16-year old actress
had for her profession. Much has changed since then, but not necessarily
her girlish enthusiasm for her work. Id say I was more passionate
now and I still just love to act and I am committed to it. I think it
is a great art form, I DONT believe I putting it down as such. Its
still very easy to be corrupted in ANYTHING and there are times when you
feel it happening and times when it DOES happen and youre unaware
of it but you can still pull yourself back and say: This is why I love
doing it. Kidman still loves to act, she continues, because
I get to reach out to a whole lot of people with ideas, sometimes profound
ideas and sometimes they work and sometimes they dont. But you still
get to work with some of the most brilliant people in the world and you
help to facilitate extraordinary ideas. So I consider myself incredibly
fortunate to be working with these people.
Still as genuinely humble at 31 as she was
at 16, Nicole has grown up on screen and audiences have seen her remarkable
transformation. And theres more to come, from Spanish director Alejandro
Amenábars dark thriller The Darkness, to her upcoming portrayal
of Virginia Woolf in The Hours, through to her next film with Lars von
Trier. She still insists on pushing the envelope that little bit further,
and the actress happily insists that she wouldnt have it any other
way.
MOULIN ROUGE OPENS IN LA AND NY ON MAY 18
Starring Ewan McGregor, Nicole Kidman, John Leguizamo, Jim Broadbent,
Garry McDonald, Richard Roxburgh
Directed by Baz Luhrmann (interview)
Written by Baz Luhrmann, Craig Pearce
Studio 20th Century Fox
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