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We would love it if you would provide a
link to us on your website. Kim Novak In Wikipedia - Click Here Kim Novak in IMDB database Click Here
Kim Novak Web Site- Click Here |
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by Dan Bimrose
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NO Nude Scenes, Nude Pics, Topless, Full Frontal Nudity, Nude Photos, Playboy Pictorials or Graphic Nudity
Kim Novak (birthday February
13, 1933) is an American actress, who was one of her nation's most popular
movie stars in the late 1950s. She is perhaps best known for her performance in
Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo. Novak was born Marilyn Pauline Novak in Chicago,
Illinois. After graduating from high
school, she began a career modeling teen fashions for a local department store.
She later received a scholarship at a modeling academy and continued to model
part-time. She worked as an elevator operator, a sales clerk and a dental
assistant. After a job touring the country as a spokesman for a refrigerator
manufacturer, "Miss Deepfreeze," Novak moved to Los Angeles, where
she continued to find work as a model. The 21-year-old Marilyn Novak
struck a pose on a stairway for the RKO 3-D motion picture The French Line
(1954) starring Jane Russell and Gilbert Roland. Novak received no screen
credit. Eventually, she was seen by a Columbia Pictures talent agent and filmed
a screen test. Studio chief Harry Cohn was searching for another beauty to
replace the rebellious and difficult Rita Hayworth. Columbia decided to make the
blonde, buxom actress its version of Marilyn Monroe. Immediately, there was the
issue of what to do about her name. Neither Novak nor Columbia wanted to be
seen as cashing in on Marilyn Monroe's enormous popularity, so Novak's real
first name had to go. She resisted changing it to Kit Marlowe. She and the
studio finally settled on the stage name Kim Novak. Cohn told her to lose
weight, and he won the battle to make her wear brassieres. She took acting
lessons, which she had to pay for herself. Novak debuted as Lona McLane in Pushover
opposite Fred MacMurray and Philip Carey. She then played the femme fatale role
as Janis in Phffft! opposite Judy Holliday, Jack Lemmon, and Jack Carson.
After playing Madge Owens in Picnic
opposite William Holden. She played
Molly in The Man with the Golden Arm opposite Frank Sinatra on loan-out
to United Artists. The movie was a big hit. She was paired with Sinatra again
for Pal Joey (1957), which also starred Rita Hayworth. Her popularity
became such that she made the cover of the July 29, 1957 issue of Time. That same year, she went on
strike, protesting her salary of $1,250 per week. In 1958, Novak appeared in a dual
role in Hitchcock's classic thriller Vertigo opposite James Stewart. She
played the dual roles of the elegant, troubled blonde Madeleine Elster and the
earthy, shopgirl brunette, Judy Barton. Today, the film is considered a
masterpiece of romantic suspense, and Novak's turn is possibly the most admired
of her career. She followed Vertigo
reteamed with Stewart in her role as the usually barefooted Gillian Holroyd in Bell,
Book and Candle also opposite Jack Lemmon, a comedy tale of modern-day
witchcraft that did not do well at the box office. In 1960, she co-starred with
Kirk Douglas in the critically acclaimed Strangers When We Meet with
Walter Matthau and Ernie Kovacs. Although some believe that by the
early 1960s, Novak's career had begun to slide, she refused to accept many of
the sexpot roles she was being offered. During the same decade, she also turned
down several strong dramatic roles including Breakfast at Tiffany's, The
Hustler, Days of Wine and Roses, and The Sandpiper. Novak was
paired with Lemmon for a third and final time in a mystery-comedy, The
Notorious Landlady. She played the vulgar waitress Mildred Rogers in a
remake of Somerset Maugham's drama Of Human Bondage opposite Laurence
Harvey. And she showed a cunning sense of humor in Billy Wilder's cult classic Kiss
Me, Stupid opposite Dean Martin, a
film critically panned at the time that has since gained a strong following. After playing the title role in The
Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders (1965) opposite Richard Johnson and Angela
Lansbury, Novak took a break, seeing as little of Hollywood as possible. Her comeback came in a dual role
as a young actress, Elsa Brinkmann, and an early-day movie goddess who was
murdered, Lylah Clare, in producer-director Robert Aldrich's The Legend of
Lylah Clare (1968) opposite Oscar winners Peter Finch and Ernest Borgnine
for MGM. It failed miserably. After playing a forger, Sister
Lyda Kebanov, in The Great Bank Robbery opposite Zero Mostel, Clint Walker, and Claude
Akins, she stayed away from the screen for four years. She then played the key
role of Auriol Pageant in the horror anthology film Tales That Witness
Madness. In 1979, she played Helga in Just a Gigolo starring David
Bowie and then Lola Brewster in an Agatha Christie mystery/thriller The
Mirror Crack'd (1980) opposite Angela Lansbury, Tony Curtis, Rock Hudson
and Elizabeth Taylor. She and Taylor portrayed rival actresses. Her last appearance on the big
screen came as Lillian Anderson Munnsen in the mystery/thriller Liebestraum
for MGM. However, her scenes were cut due to battles with the director over how
to play the role. In a July 2005 interview with Movieline's Hollywood Life,
Novak admitted that she had been "unprofessional" in her conduct with
director Mike Figgis. Since that time, she has turned down many other offers to
appear in film and TV. Novak made occasional appearances on television over the years. She starred as aging showgirl Gloria Joyce in the made-for-TV movie The Third Girl From the Left; played Eve in Satan's Triangle; Billie Farnsworth in Malibu; Rosa in a revival of Alfred Hitchcock Presents. The actress joined the cast of the series Falcon Crest during the 1986-87 season in the role of Kit Marlowe (the stage name she had rejected at the start of her career). She has had two husbands, English
actor Richard Johnson and veterinarian Dr. Robert Malloy. She also had an affair with Ramfis Trujillo
in the mid-50s and Sammy Davis, Jr. in 1957-58. Her home in Eagle Point, Oregon,
was destroyed in a fire on July 24, 2000. A deputy fire marshal said the blaze
was probably caused by a tree falling across a power line. Among Novak's lost
mementos were scripts of some of her most critically acclaimed movies, including
Vertigo and Picnic. The only existing draft of the actress's autobiography
was also lost to the fire. Kim is an accomplished artist, who expresses herself
in watercolor and oil paintings, sculpture, stained glass design and
photography. She also writes poetry. In November 2007, she considered suing the
German band Kill.Kim.Novak, which changed its name to andorra~atkins. No Nude Scenes, Nude Pics, Topless, Full Frontal Nudity, Nude Photos, Playboy Pictorials or Graphic Nudity, ----------------------------------------------- |
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