Nicole Mary Kidman was born on June 20, 1967, in Honolulu, Hawaii, while her Australian parents — Antony Kidman, a biochemist and psychologist, and Janelle Ann, a nursing instructor and feminist activist — were in the United States on a study visa. She grew up primarily in Sydney and Melbourne, with a childhood defined by her mother's intellectually serious household and her own early commitment to performance. She studied ballet and drama from childhood, attending the Victorian College of the Arts and the Philip Street Theatre in Sydney, while simultaneously beginning a film and television career in Australia as a teenager. Her early Australian work — particularly the thriller Dead Calm (1989), in which she played a traumatized woman being stalked on a boat — demonstrated a willingness to inhabit extreme psychological states with physical and emotional commitment that distinguished her from more decorative screen presences.
Her breakthrough in Hollywood came through Days of Thunder (1990), in which she met Tom Cruise, whom she subsequently married and with whom she starred in Far and Away (1992) and Eyes Wide Shut (1999). The decade of her marriage to Cruise produced substantial creative work — including her Golden Globe-winning performance in To Die For (1995) — while also reducing her independent artistic profile. After their divorce in 2001, she produced the most concentrated period of creative achievement of her career: Moulin Rouge! (2001), which earned her Academy Award and Golden Globe nominations; The Hours (2002), in which she played Virginia Woolf and won the Academy Award for Best Actress; Cold Mountain (2003); and Dogville (2003). The physical transformation for The Hours — the prosthetic nose, the weight change, the complete disappearance into Woolf's physical and psychological world — became a reference point for the level of commitment she brought to serious dramatic roles.
Big Little Lies (2017), in which she starred and produced, demonstrated both her sustained dramatic power and her developing authority as a creative producer: the HBO miniseries won eight Emmy Awards and became one of the most discussed dramatic programs of the decade. Her subsequent television and film work — The Undoing (2020), Being the Ricardos (2021, Oscar nomination), Nine Perfect Strangers (2021), and the Lioness series — reflected a performer who has learned to select material through both artistic and commercial intelligence, maintaining critical credibility while operating within the systems of production that give her work its widest possible reach. She has won two Academy Awards, five Golden Globes, and two Emmy Awards.
Kidman's INFJ quality is visible in her consistent gravitation toward characters whose inner lives are radically different from what their surface presentation suggests — women who are concealing enormous internal experience beneath composed exteriors, women whose psychology is more complex than the social role they occupy, women who are seen without being understood. Her preparation process is intensive and life-changing; she has spoken in interviews about the deliberate suppression of her own personality to allow the character's to emerge — which is an extreme expression of the INFJ's deep intuitional engagement with the interior of another consciousness. Her use of her platform for advocacy — particularly around domestic violence through her work with UN Women — reflects the INFJ's characteristic sense of responsibility to direct their influence toward genuine healing.