In the latest interview, Tom Cruise mentioned Nicole Kidman. This is the first time in more than 20 years, the actor shared about his ex -wife in the media.
Tom Cruise has just had an interview on e! News. Notably, during the conversation, the actor mentioned Nicole Kidman. This is the first time Tom Cruise shared about his ex -wife in the media, after 23 years.
Specifically, when mentioning the movie Eyes Wide Shut (1999), Cruise revealed that he was the one who suggested to director Stanley Kubrick chose Nicole Kidman to play Alice, the wife of the character Bill played by him.
“I suggested Nicole played this role. Because she was obviously a great actor,” the actor said.
Tom Cruise’s share of Nicole Kidman is receiving public attention and discussion on social networking platforms.
According to E! News, the last time the mission is impossible to talk about his ex -wife in 2002, when he mentioned the cause of the broken duo.
“She knows why, and I know why. She is my mother’s mother. I wish her all the best,” Cruise shared with Vanity Fair magazine at that time.
Nicole Kidman and Tom Cruise first met on the studio of Days of Thunder (1989). In 1999, they appeared together in the movie Eyes Wide Shut (1999) with hot sex scenes. The actress was completely immersed in a romantic marriage with Tom Cruise for more than 10 years.
After breaking up in 2001, the actor holds the right to take care of his adopted children, Connor and Isabella. Nicole Kidman blamed the Scientology religion that ruined her marriage and separated her from two children.
The broken marriage with Tom Cruise was still an obsessive memory in Nicole’s mind because she was the one who was abandoned.
“He left a divorce and coldly left the house without an explanation. I begged him to stay but could not”, Kidman once shared.
After the divorce, Kidman married Keith Urban and had two more daughters. Meanwhile, Tom Cruise remarried with Katie Holmes in 2007. The marriage lasted for 5 years, Katie Holmes filed a divorce for the mission of the impossible duty too superstitious.