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Kim Novak

Marilyn Pauline "Kim" Novak (born February 13, 1933) is an American retired film and television actress and painter.

Kim Novak
Novak in 1962
Born
Marilyn Pauline Novak

(1933-02-13) February 13, 1933 (age 90)
Alma materSchool of the Art Institute of Chicago
Occupation(s)Actress, artist
Years active1954–1991
Spouses
(m. 1965; div. 1966)
Robert Malloy
(m. 1976; died 2020)
Websitekimnovakartist.com

Novak began her career in 1954 after signing a contract with Columbia Pictures, and quickly became one of Hollywood's top box office stars, appearing in Picnic (1955), The Man with the Golden Arm (1955) and Pal Joey (1957). She is widely known for her performances as Madeleine Elster and Judy Barton in Alfred Hitchcock's thriller Vertigo (1958) with James Stewart. The film had mixed reviews from critics upon release but is now recognized as one of the greatest films ever made. Other notable films include Bell, Book and Candle (1958), Strangers When We Meet (1960) and Of Human Bondage (1964).

Although still relatively young, Novak withdrew from acting by 1966 and has only sporadically worked in films since. She appeared in The Mirror Crack'd (1980), and had a regular role on the primetime series Falcon Crest (1986–1987).[1] After a disappointing experience during the filming of Liebestraum (1991), she permanently retired from acting, saying she had no desire to return.[2] Her contributions to cinema have been honored with two Golden Globe Awards, an Honorary Golden Bear Award, and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Novak is a painter and visual artist.

Early life

Marilyn Pauline Novak was born in Chicago, Illinois on February 13, 1933.[3] She is the second daughter of Joseph and Blanche (née Kral) Novak (who both appeared with her in the 1962 film The Notorious Landlady).[4][5][6] Both of her parents were born in Chicago to people of Czech descent.[3][7][8][9] Joseph (1897-1987) was a history teacher who took a job as a freight dispatcher on the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad during the Great Depression.[10]

She attended William Penn Elementary, Farragut High School,[11] and Wright Junior College. She won two scholarships to the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.[12]: 71–74 [13][14]

During the summer break in her last semester of junior college, Novak went on a cross-country tour as a promotional model for Detroit Motor Products Corporation's Deepfreeze home freezer at trade shows.[15][16][17] Novak was pronounced "Miss Deepfreeze".[17][18]

Acting career

Early films and breakthrough (1954–1959)

 
Novak from the front cover of the New York Sunday News in 1957

In San Francisco, after the refrigerator company tour ended, Novak and two other models decided go to Los Angeles, to check out the film industry.[15] In Los Angeles, with two other models, she, as Marilyn Novak,[19] were extras in Son of Sinbad (1955), and later, for The French Line (1954), starring Jane Russell at RKO.[15][19] In Los Angeles, Novak was discovered by an agent, who signed her to a long-term contract with Columbia Pictures.[20] From the beginning of her career, she wanted to be an original and not another stereotype. Therefore, Novak fought with Columbia's chief, Harry Cohn, over the changing of her name. He suggested the name "Kit Marlowe", arguing, "Nobody's gonna go see a girl with a Polack name!", but she insisted on keeping her name, saying, "I'm Czech, but Polish, Czech, no matter, it's my name!" They eventually settled on the name "Kim Novak" as a compromise.[21]

Columbia intended for Novak to be their successor to Rita Hayworth, their biggest star of the 1940s, whose career had declined; also, the studio was hopeful that Novak would bring them the same box-office success Marilyn Monroe brought 20th Century-Fox. Novak's first role for the studio was in the film noir Pushover (1954), in which she received third billing below Fred MacMurray and Philip Carey. She then co-starred in the romantic comedy Phffft (1954) as Janis, a character who finds Robert Tracey (Jack Lemmon) "real cute". Both films were reasonably successful at the box office, and Novak received favorable reviews for her performances. In her third feature film, 5 Against the House (1955), a gritty crime drama, she received second billing after Guy Madison but above Brian Keith, all three above the title. It was only a minor critical and box-office success.

She then played Madge Owens in the film version of Picnic (1955), from the William Inge play, co-starring William Holden and Rosalind Russell. Its director, Joshua Logan, felt that it would be more in character for Novak to have red hair; she agreed to wear a red wig during filming. Logan says Harry Cohn suggested Novak appear in the film but did not insist upon it: the director tested her for the role several times and was delighted with her performance, feeling she was close to her character.[22]

Picnic was a resounding critical and box-office triumph, and Novak won a Golden Globe Award for Most Promising Newcomer. She was also nominated for the BAFTA Film Award for Best Foreign Actress, but did not win. She appeared as a mystery guest on the game show What's My Line? on February 5, 1956, to promote the film's opening at the Radio City Music Hall. Director Otto Preminger then cast her in The Man with the Golden Arm (1955), in which she played Frank Sinatra's sultry ex-girlfriend. In a cast which included Eleanor Parker, Novak received praise for being one of the film's bright spots, and the film was a box-office hit.

 
Novak singing "My Funny Valentine" in Pal Joey (1957)

Novak's next project, The Eddy Duchin Story (1956), cast her as Marjorie Oelrichs, the wife of pianist Eddy Duchin, played by Tyrone Power. Because the two leads did not get along during filming, Novak nearly considered backing out of the production, but decided against it. At the time of its release, the film was a critical and box-office hit, with many suggesting that Novak's advertisements for No-Cal diet soda contributed positively to the film's success. Offered a choice for her next project, she selected the biopic Jeanne Eagels (1957), in which she portrayed the stage and silent-screen actress who was addicted to heroin. Co-starring Jeff Chandler, the film was a largely fictional account of Eagels' life. The film drew negative reviews, but turned a profit at the box office. Eagels' family sued Columbia over the way Eagels had been depicted in the movie.[23]

After appearing in a series of successful movies, Novak became one of the biggest box-office draws of 1957 and 1958. Columbia then placed her in a film adaptation of Pal Joey (also 1957), based on the 1940 novel and Broadway play, both written by John O'Hara. Playing Linda English, a naive showgirl, she again co-starred opposite Frank Sinatra and Rita Hayworth. Released in October, the film received favorable reviews; Variety called the film "strong, funny entertainment," although Novak's performance has generated a mixed reaction, partly because of noticeable lack of on-screen charisma. The movie was a box-office hit and has been considered one of Novak's better performances.

Vertigo

Director Alfred Hitchcock was working on his next film, Vertigo (1958), when his leading actress, Vera Miles, became pregnant and had to withdraw from the complex role of Judy Barton.[24] Hitchcock approached Harry Cohn to offer Novak the female lead without even requesting a screen test. Though Cohn hated the script, he allowed Novak to read it because he considered Hitchcock to be a great director.[25] Novak loved it, as she could identify with the character and agreed to take part in the film without meeting Hitchcock. At the same time, she was striking for more money from Columbia, and refused to show up for work on the Vertigo set to protest against her salary of $1,250 a week. Novak hired new agents to represent her and demanded an adjustment in her contract. Cohn, who was paid $250,000 for Novak to do Vertigo, suspended her, but after a few weeks of negotiations, he relented and offered her a new contract worthy of a major star.[26] She was now receiving $3,000 a week and explained to the press, "I don't like to have anyone take advantage of me."

 
Novak in Vertigo
 
Alfred Hitchcock with Novak on the set of Vertigo (1958)
 
Novak and Stewart in publicity photo for Vertigo (1958)

Novak finally reported for work, and according to Hitchcock, she had "all sorts of preconceived notions" about her character, including what she would and would not wear.[27] Before shooting began, she told the director she did not like the grey suit and black shoes she was slated to wear, thinking them too heavy and stiff for her character. Novak later recalled, "I didn’t think it would matter to him what kind of shoes I wore. I had never had a director who was particular about the costumes, the way they were designed, the specific colors. The two things he wanted the most were those shoes and that gray suit."[25] Indeed, Hitchcock explained to Novak that the visual aspect of the film was even more important to him than the story, and insisted on her wearing the suit and the shoes that he had been planning for several months.[27] Novak learned to make it work for her, as she saw it as a symbol of her character.[25] Nonetheless, Hitchcock allowed Novak the freedom to develop the character herself. As she later recalled: "It excites me to work on dual personalities because I think I have many myself. And I think that I was able to use so much of me in that movie. At first I was feeling insecure because I kept saying, "Is this right? How do you want me to play this character?" Hitchcock said: "I hired you and that's who I want, what you bring to this role. But what I do expect from you is to stand where I want you to, wear what I want you to and speak in the rhythm that I want you to." And he worked a long time with me to try to get the right rhythm."[24] The role took on a personal significance for her, as she felt she went through the same thing as her character when she arrived in Hollywood:

From my point of view, when I first read those lines where she says, "I want you to love me for me," and all the talking in that scene, I just identified with it so much because going to Hollywood as a young girl and suddenly finding they want to make you over totally, it's such a total change and it was like I was always fighting to show some of myself, feeling that I wanted to be there as well. It was like they'd do my hair and go and redo a bunch of things. So I really identified with the fact of someone that was being made over with the resentment, with wanting to. Needing approval and wanting to be loved and willing, eventually, to go to any lengths to get that by changing her hair and all of these different things. And then when Judy appears, it's another story and then when she has to go through that change. I really identified with the movie because it was saying, "Please, see who I am. Fall in love with me."[24]

 
James Stewart with Novak in Vertigo

Novak described Hitchcock as a gentleman, but found the experience of working with him to be strange. "I don't know if he ever liked me. I never sat down with him for dinner or tea or anything, except one cast dinner, and I was late to that. It wasn't my fault, but I think he thought I had delayed to make a star entrance, and he held that against me. During the shooting, he never really told me what he was thinking."[11] The director was actually frustrated to have her instead of Vera Miles, as Novak learned later. "Hitchcock didn’t like having me in his picture and he felt I was ruining it. It was only after the film was finished that I heard how much he thought I’d wrecked his picture. I felt I did a lot of good work in that movie, and I got some of the best notices of my career. But Hitchcock couldn’t blame himself, so he blamed me."[28] Novak got along well with her co-star, James Stewart, who supported her during the filming of the movie. "He treated me so well. I learned a lot about acting from him. When we had emotional scenes, he had to prepare himself first by somehow going deep inside of himself, and you knew to leave him alone when he was like that. And when it was over, he wouldn't just walk away. He allowed himself to slowly come out of it. He'd hold my hand and I would squeeze his hand so that we both had time to come down from the emotion."[28]

 
Novak with Stewart in Vertigo

The film had mixed reviews at the time of its release in 1958, and broke even at the box office, but has since been re-evaluated and is widely considered one of the director's best works. In the 2012 British Film Institute's Sight & Sound critics' poll, Vertigo was voted as the best film of all time, displacing Orson Welles' Citizen Kane from the position it had occupied since 1962.[29][30] Novak received mixed reviews for her performance, but she managed to surprise film critics. While Bosley Crowther, writing for The New York Times, described her as "really quite amazing,"[31] the Variety review noted that she was "interesting under Hitchcock’s direction" and "nearer an actress than she was in either Pal Joey or Jeanne Eagles."[32] The consensus regarding her performance also changed with time. Film critic David Thomson thought it was "one of the major female performances in the cinema"[33] and film director Martin Scorsese called it "extraordinary," adding that Novak's work was "so brave and emotionally immediate."[34] However, Novak was disappointed by her performance when she watched the film in 2013. "I was really disappointed. Both characters were exaggerated. They'll always remember me in Vertigo, and I'm not that good in it, but I don't blame me because there are a couple of scenes where I was wonderful."[35]

Novak again worked with Stewart in Richard Quine's Bell, Book and Candle (also 1958), a comedy tale of modern-day witchcraft also starring Jack Lemmon and Ernie Kovacs that proved to be a box-office success. She then starred opposite Fredric March in the acclaimed romantic drama Middle of the Night (1959), which she has described as not only her favorite of her films, but also cites her performance in the film as her best.

Career slowdown and other ventures (1960–1965)

 
Novak in Madrid, 1962

Novak starred opposite Kirk Douglas in the romantic drama Strangers When We Meet (1960), which drew mixed reviews but was a success financially. Richard Quine was the director, as well as her fiancé at the time. The studio planned to give them the house that was built as part of the story line during the filming as a wedding gift, but their wedding never occurred. Instead, during the last film that Quine and she made together, the British mystery/comedy The Notorious Landlady (1962) with Jack Lemmon and Fred Astaire, she discovered and purchased her future home by the sea near Big Sur in central California. It became her retreat and emotional salvation after leaving Hollywood.

She made an independent five-picture deal, with producer Martin Ransohoff and Filmways Pictures to co-produce, but it proved to be a bad choice owing to clashes with personalities over scripts. Their first endeavor, the comedy Boys' Night Out (1962), was unsuccessful.[36][37] After her Hollywood house survived the big Bel Air Fire of 1961, it was finally lost a few years later when it was swept away with most of her belongings in a mudslide in 1966.[38] During the interim, she made W. Somerset Maugham's drama Of Human Bondage (1964) with Laurence Harvey in Ireland.[39][40] This third film adaptation of the famous story went over schedule and budget, and it also failed.

The sex comedy Kiss Me, Stupid (1964) with Dean Martin followed for director Billy Wilder. Actor Peter Sellers had originally been selected and begun filming, but he had suffered a heart attack, so Ray Walston substituted at the last minute. The film had problems getting released because of conflicts with the Legion of Decency. The film opened to scathing reviews and while it made money, it did not help Novak's career. Years later it was rediscovered and acclaimed for its forward thinking and got rave reviews, particularly for Novak's performance as "Polly the Pistol". Novak starred in the historical comedy The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders (1965) in England with British actor Richard Johnson.[41] Inspired by the similar movie Tom Jones, it drew negative reviews but was a moderate success at the box office. Novak married Johnson in 1965 and divorced him in the spring of 1966. The divorce was amicable and they remained friendly. In 1966, Novak was cast as the female lead in the occult themed mystery Eye of the Devil, co-starring David Niven. The film's premise intrigued Novak, but she found the filming difficult and unpleasant. Novak was forced to leave the film after she fell off a horse, resulting in serious injuries which took time to recover from and she was replaced by Deborah Kerr.[42]

Acting sporadically (1966–1991)

By the end of 1966, she was emotionally drained and no longer wanted to live the life of a Hollywood movie star, in the glare of the spotlight with the press scrutinizing her every move.[43] When the mudslide took her Bel Air home and cost her entire life's savings in bulldozer fees, she moved away from Hollywood to Big Sur. From then on, acting became a job and was no longer a career of choice. Novak preferred to concentrate on her first love, the visual arts, often writing poetry to accompany her paintings, and even writing some song lyrics. Harry Belafonte and the Kingston Trio recorded some of her folk songs in the 1960s.[13]

 
Novak in the 1980s

Novak returned to the screen for The Legend of Lylah Clare (1968), starring Peter Finch and Ernest Borgnine, and directed by Robert Aldrich. She played a dual role, portraying a person who becomes possessed by a look-alike film actress who gets made over by her obsessive-compulsive director lover. Robert Aldrich asked Novak to do a German accent for that role, but she felt it was unbelievable and over the top, so she did not want to do it, and he never insisted. At the premiere, Novak was shocked to hear her voice had been dubbed by a German actress in many scenes. Aldrich had never told her, nor had he given her the opportunity to dub it herself. The film was aggressively scorned by critics and Novak drew some of the worst reviews of her career. It was also a box office disaster. She was extremely upset and regretted having starred in the film.[21][44][45] The last film Novak made in the '60s was the Western comedy The Great Bank Robbery (1969), opposite Zero Mostel, Clint Walker, and Claude Akins.

After nearly four years that she described as a "self-imposed vacation", Novak agreed to take part in two projects. She returned to the screen with a role in the horror anthology film Tales That Witness Madness (1973). Novak also starred as Las Vegas chorus girl Gloria Joyce, a character with whom she could identify, in the made-for-TV movie, The Third Girl From the Left (1973), with her real-life boyfriend at the time, Michael Brandon.[46] Novak admitted a preference for TV films as she thought they were faster to shoot than features. She described movie scripts of that time as offensive, saying she disliked the unnecessary sex she found in most of them. In 1975, Novak took part in the ABC movie Satan's Triangle because she was intrigued by the story, which dealt in the supernatural.[47] Novak had a small role in The White Buffalo (1977), a Western starring Charles Bronson, and she ended the decade by playing Helga in Just a Gigolo (1979), opposite David Bowie. Both films were flops, but Novak was not blamed due to her minor roles in them.

 
Novak photographed by her husband Robert Malloy

In 1980, Novak played fictional actress Lola Brewster in the British mystery-thriller The Mirror Crack'd, based on the story by Agatha Christie. She co-starred alongside Angela Lansbury, Tony Curtis, Rock Hudson, and Elizabeth Taylor. She enjoyed making the film and got along with her co-stars and the film was moderately successful. Novak did not appear in any feature films during the remainder of the 1980s. Her acting credits during the decade included the ensemble television movie Malibu[48] (1983) and the pilot episode of The New Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1985).

Producers of the successful primetime soap opera Falcon Crest offered Novak a role in their series similar to her character in Vertigo.[49] She appeared as the secretive "Kit Marlowe" in 19 episodes from 1986 to 1987. It was Novak's idea to name her character Kit Marlowe, as it was the stage name that Columbia had wanted her to use when she started in the business.[50] The former Marilyn Pauline Novak wryly described this turn of events as effectively being Cohn's revenge on her from beyond the grave.

In 1989, Novak appeared along with James Stewart as a presenter at the 61st Academy Awards. Asked in the press room about a possible comeback, Novak said that if someone sent her a script she really wanted to do, with a part she felt she could not turn down, she would be happy to go back to work on the big or little screen. At the same time, Novak turned down plenty of offers for movies, as well as an opportunity to appear in a second season of Falcon Crest, to write her autobiography, tentatively titled Through My Eyes.[51] Novak decided to re-establish contact with her agent and seek challenging roles after she realized she was not satisfied artistically. She said at the time, "I feel that I didn't live up to what I should have done with it. In other words, I'm glad I made the move away from Hollywood: I don't regret that. I know that was a major thing and a good thing. But by the same token, it was like unfinished business."[18] She returned to film with the leading role of Rose Sellers in The Children (1990) opposite Ben Kingsley.[18] A British-German coproduction, the film premiered at the London Film Festival and received good reviews. Leonard Maltin praised the acting and felt Novak's performance was "excellent". However, following disputes between the director Tony Palmer and the distributor over editing and music, the film was pulled from release and never distributed.[52]

 
Novak in 1990

Director Mike Figgis offered Novak the role of a terminally ill writer with a mysterious past in his thriller Liebestraum (1991) opposite Kevin Anderson and Bill Pullman. Novak loved the script and thought it was going to be an important picture. However, her collaboration with Figgis was tense and the two had conflicts from the beginning. Novak agreed to do the film under the impression she was going to play the whole character, but Figgis felt she was unable to play the flashback role the way he wanted, and hired actress Sarah Fearon for those scenes.[18] The two clashed on the set, as their visions of the script differed and were in many ways diametrically opposed. Although she considered him to be a brilliant director, she felt the story was too personal for him, as it was about his own life, and Novak was playing his mother. She was also unhappy, as she felt he wanted her to act like a puppet. "He wanted what he thought Hitchcock had made over. But Hitchcock didn’t do that. Figgis didn’t know Hitchcock. So he treated me the way he thought Hitchcock must have, tried to manipulate me into doing exactly... I went crazy."[53] Novak later said she was hurt and distraught, as "It was such a painful thing for me because it took me right back to Harry Cohn and all that time. And back into saying, Look, for God’s sake, haven’t you heard it enough? We don’t want you to do anything. Just be 'Kim Novak.' That movie pained me more than any movie in the world could do."[53] Novak later told Movieline in 2005 she felt she had been "unprofessional" not to obey her director. "I know he thinks I'm a total bitch. That role was fabulous, full of depth. When I interpreted it the way I thought was evident in the incredible script, he said, 'We're not making a Kim Novak movie, just say the lines. If you continue to play the role this way, I'm going to cut you out of the movie,' and he pretty much did that."[54]

Novak was supposed to do a comedy with the French director Claude Berri, also starring Peter Falk, and a remake of Bell, Book and Candle with Sharon Stone.[18][55] Neither film was made, and following the difficult experience with Liebestraum, she has usually cited that experience as the reason for her decision to retire from the film industry.[56] In 2004, she told the Associated Press:

I got so burned out on that picture that I wanted to leave the business, but then if you wait long enough you think, "Oh, I miss certain things." The making of a movie is wonderful. What's difficult is afterward when you have to go around and try to sell it. The actual filming, when you have a good script—which isn't often—nothing beats it.[57]

Retirement (since 1992)

 
Novak in 2004

After her retirement from acting, Novak made only rare public appearances and turned down most offers she received.[58] In 1996, Vertigo was given a restoration by Robert A. Harris and James C. Katz and re-released to theaters. Novak enjoyed their work so much, she agreed to make appearances at screenings of the film, something she had refused when Universal asked her in 1984.[21] She also took part in Obsessed with Vertigo, a documentary retracing the making and restoration of the film. In 1997, Novak received an Honorary Golden Bear Award for lifetime achievement at the 47th Berlin International Film Festival.[59]

In 2003, Novak was presented with the Eastman Kodak Archives Award for her major contribution to film. Prior honorees include Greta Garbo, Audrey Hepburn, James Stewart, Martin Scorsese, and Meryl Streep. During that time, Novak received several offers to do some major films and to appear on high-profile television shows. She made an appearance on Larry King Live in 2004, where she stated she would consider returning to the screen "if it was the right role."[60] In 2010, Novak was the recipient of a special tribute from the American Cinematheque in Hollywood, where her films were shown at Grauman's Egyptian Theatre. She made a rare personal appearance with a Q&A onstage between showing of Pal Joey and Bell, Book and Candle, earning a two-minute-long standing ovation upon her entrance.[61]

In April 2012, Novak was honored at the TCM Classic Film Festival, where she introduced a screening of Vertigo. She joined in conversation with Robert Osborne for a Q&A session in which she discussed her career and personal life. The hour-long interview aired on TCM as Kim Novak: Live from the TCM Classic Film Festival on March 6, 2013. Novak broke down in tears while discussing Liebestraum. As she nearly sobbed in front of the audience, Novak said, "I couldn't do a movie after that. I've never done a movie after that. I just couldn't do a movie after that."[20] The interview was an eye-opener for many fans who had wondered why Novak made so few films. Acknowledging that she never reached her potential as an actress, Novak revealed to the audience that she was bipolar and explained, "I was not diagnosed until much later. I go through more of the depression than the mania part."[62] "I don't think I was ever cut out to have a Hollywood life," Novak also commented. "Did I do the right thing, leaving? Did I walk out when I shouldn't have? That's when I get sad."[62] On the possibility of acting again, Novak said in another interview, with the fashion website LifeGoesStrong, "Who knows what the future holds? It would take an awful lot to lure me out there, but I would never say never."[63] Also during the TCM Festival, Novak was honored in a handprint and footprint ceremony at Grauman's Chinese Theatre.[64] That same year, Novak received the San Francisco Cinematic Icon Award from the San Francisco Museum and Historical Society.[65]

 
Novak in 2014

After years of seclusion, Novak started to make public appearances more frequently as she felt her body of work was being more appreciated.[66] In 2013, she was recognized as the guest of honor by the Cannes Film Festival and attended the 2013 Festival, where she introduced a new restored version of Vertigo.[67] She also took part in the festival's closing ceremony as a presenter, earning a standing ovation upon her entrance.[68] In 2014, she was a presenter at the 86th Academy Awards. That same year, she appeared at the TCM Classic Film Festival, where she unveiled her painting Vertigo / Vortex of Delusion commissioned by the TCM network as part of their 20th anniversary.[69] Novak also introduced a screening of her 1958 movie, Bell Book and Candle, during the Festival. Also in 2014, Novak was invited by Cunard Line to be a speaker on board during a New York-to-London cruise on RMS Queen Mary 2. She introduced screenings of Vertigo and Bell, Book and Candle, and did a Q&A session with Hollywood expert Sue Cameron, who is also her manager.[70] That same year, Novak appeared with both of her art mentors, Harley Brown and Richard McKinley, for a solo show of her paintings at the Butler Institute of American Art.[71]

In 2015, Novak attended the 22nd Febiofest international film festival, where she received the Kristián Award for her contribution to world cinema and also had an exhibition of her paintings at the Strahov Monastery.[72] She hosted special screenings of Vertigo featuring live performances of Bernard Herrmann's score by members of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra at the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival[73] and by members of the San Francisco Symphony at the Louise M. Davies Symphony Hall in 2016.[74] Also in 2016, Novak was invited by Turner Classic Movies to be a guest on their Caribbean Cruise where she sold five of her paintings and was able to raise nearly $7,000 for the prevention of teenage suicide with the auction of a framed giclée of her.[75]

In 2018, Novak joined in conversation with Larry King for a Q&A session at the Grauman's Egyptian Theatre, in celebration of Vertigo's 60th Anniversary.[76] That same year, she was the recipient of a special sold-out tribute from the Castro Theatre.[77]

Honors

 
Novak was honored in a handprint and footprint ceremony at Grauman's Chinese Theatre in 2012.

In 1955, Novak won the Golden Globe Award for Most Promising Newcomer – Female. Two years later she won another Golden Globe for World Favorite Female Actress. On February 8, 1960, Novak was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, at 6332 Hollywood Boulevard.[78] In 1995, Novak was ranked 92nd by Empire Magazine on a list of the 100 sexiest stars in film history. Novak was honored with a Golden Bear for Lifetime Achievement at the 47th Berlin International Film Festival in 1997 and was presented with the Eastman Kodak Archives Award for her major contribution to film in 2003. In 2012, Novak was honored in a handprint and footprint ceremony at Grauman's Chinese Theatre.[64] That same year, she received the S.F. Cinematic Icon Award from the San Francisco Museum and Historical Society for her screen contributions in San Francisco with Pal Joey and Vertigo. Her contribution to world cinema was also rewarded with the Kristián Award she was given at the 22nd Febiofest international film festival in 2015.

Novak influenced many actors, as well as fashion designers with the roles she played. Naomi Watts stated that her character interpretation in Mulholland Drive (2001) was influenced by the look and performances of Novak in Vertigo.[79] Renée Zellweger said that Novak was "pure magic" and dressed up as her character from Vertigo for a photo shoot for the March 2008 issue of Vanity Fair.[80] Nicole Kidman wrote Novak a letter saying she was "an inspiration to me and to women everywhere. Your cinematic body of work speaks for yourself, but so does the other side of Kim Novak – the free spirit who left Hollywood to live atop the hills of Big Sur. Kim Novak the painter and llama farmer. You are an icon whose screen presence is unmatched, and yet you’ve lived your life with dignity and authenticity, and the courage to follow your heart wherever it takes you."[81] In 2005, British fashion designer Alexander McQueen named his first It Bag The Novak, saying, "I'm drawn to Kim Novak in the same way that Hitchcock was. She had an air of uptightness you wouldn't want to cross."[82]

Personal life

 
Novak in 1962

In the mid-1950s, Novak had relationships with Ramfis Trujillo, the son of the Dominican dictator Rafael Leónidas Trujillo, and with Sammy Davis, Jr.[12] A BBC documentary claimed that to end her relationship with a black man, Columbia Pictures chief Harry Cohn had mobsters threaten Sammy Davis, Jr., with blinding or having his legs broken if he did not marry a black woman within 48 hours.[83] Novak also dated Michael Brandon,[84] Wilt Chamberlain,[85] David Hemmings,[86] and Porfirio Rubirosa. She was engaged to director Richard Quine in 1959.

Novak's first marriage was to English actor Richard Johnson from March 15, 1965, to May 26, 1966.[87] The two remained friends afterwards.[13]

 
Novak in 2005

In 1966, Novak left Hollywood for Big Sur, where she raised horses and painted, making an occasional film. In 1974, she met her second husband, equine veterinarian Robert Malloy, when he made a house call after one of her Arabian mares suffered colic.[4] They married on March 12, 1976. As a result of her marriage, she has two adult stepchildren.[88] The couple built a log home along the Williamson River near Chiloquin, Oregon. Malloy died on November 27, 2020.[89]

In 1997, Novak bought a 43-acre ranch in Sams Valley, Oregon, which the couple made into their home.[90] Novak took classes in painting with pastels from artists Harley Brown and Richard McKinley. In July 2000, their home burned to the ground, and she lost all her art and the only draft of the autobiography she had been working on for 10 years.[90]

In 2006, Novak was injured in a horse-riding accident. She suffered a punctured lung, broken ribs, and nerve damage, but made a full recovery within a year.[91]

In October 2010, her manager, Sue Cameron, reported that Novak had been diagnosed with breast cancer. Cameron also noted that Novak was "undergoing treatment" and "her doctors say she is in fantastic physical shape and should recover very well."[92][93] She did recover well.[94][95]

 
A photograph of Novak taken by her husband Robert Malloy

Robert Malloy's ex-wife, Joan Gundlach—the mother of Novak's stepchildren—committed suicide on April 23, 2013, aged 70.[96] Local news at Post Falls, Idaho, where Gundlach's corpse was found in the Spokane River, did not mention her celebrity connection.[97]

In 2014, after Novak's rare public appearance at the 86th Academy Awards, the media and social commentary indicated she was hardly recognized, which resulted in speculation that she had undertaken substantial cosmetic surgery;[94] Donald Trump tweeted "Kim should sue her plastic surgeon!"[98] Novak was devastated by the criticism—"It really did throw me into a tailspin and it hit me hard," and wrote an open letter in which she stood up to all of her Oscar-night "bullies."[99] Novak admitted that she "had fat injections in my face" as she felt "they seemed far less invasive than a face-lift," but later regretted it, "So why did I do it? I trusted somebody doing what I thought they knew how to do best. I should have known better, but what do you do? We do some stupid things in our lives."[58]

Novak continued her creative endeavors as a photographer, poet, and visual artist painting in watercolor, oil, and pastel. Her paintings are impressionistic and surrealistic.[100] The Butler Institute of American Art in Youngstown, Ohio hosted a retrospective of her work from June until October 2019. Novak was present at the opening on June 16. In 2021 The Butler Institute also published a book with a selection of her paintings titled Kim Novak: Her Art and Life.[101][102][103]

She is a Catholic.[104]

Filmography

Film
Year Title Role Notes
1954 The French Line Model Uncredited
Pushover Lona McLane
Phffft Janis
1955 Son of Sinbad Harem Girl Uncredited
5 Against the House Kay Greylek
Picnic Marjorie "Madge" Owens
The Man with the Golden Arm Molly Novotny
1956 The Eddy Duchin Story Marjorie Oelrichs
1957 Jeanne Eagels Jeanne Eagels
Pal Joey Linda English
1958 Vertigo Judy Barton / Madeleine Elster
Bell, Book and Candle Gillian "Gil" Holroyd
1959 Middle of the Night Betty Preisser
1960 Strangers When We Meet Margaret "Maggie" Gault
Pepe Herself Cameo
1962 The Notorious Landlady Mrs. Carlyle "Carly" Hardwicke
Boys' Night Out Cathy
1964 Of Human Bondage Mildred Rogers
Kiss Me, Stupid Polly the Pistol
1965 The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders Moll Flanders
1968 The Legend of Lylah Clare Lylah Clare/Elsa Brinkmann/Elsa Campbell
1969 The Great Bank Robbery Sister Lyda Kebanov
1973 Tales That Witness Madness Auriol Pageant Segment #4 "Luau"
The Third Girl from the Left Gloria Joyce Television film
1975 Satan's Triangle Eva
1977 The White Buffalo Mrs. Poker Jenny Schermerhorn Alternative title: Hunt to Kill
1979 Just a Gigolo Helga von Kaiserling
1980 The Mirror Crack'd Lola Brewster
1983 Malibu Billie Farnsworth Television film
1990 The Children Rose Sellars
1991 Liebestraum Lillian Anderson Munnsen Final film appearance (to date)

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Title of work Result
1955 Golden Globe Award Most Promising Newcomer - Female Phffft Won
1956 Photoplay Awards Most Popular Female Star Won
1957 Golden Globe Award World Film Favorite - Female Won
BAFTA Awards Best Foreign Actress Picnic Nominated
Golden Apple Award Most Cooperative Actress Won
1960 Hollywood Walk of Fame Motion Picture Star Won
1958 Laurel Awards Top Female Star 3rd place
1959 12th place
1960 8th place
1961 6th place
1962 13th place
1963 11th place
1997 47th Berlin International Film Festival Honorary Golden Bear Won
2003 George Eastman Museum George Eastman Award Won
2012 San Francisco Museum and Historical Society S.F. Cinematic Icon Award Won
2015 Febiofest Kristián Award Won

See also

References

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  2. ^ SFGate, August 29, 2010: Kim Novak surfaces to retrace past in boxed set Relinked June 20, 2014
  3. ^ a b Kleno, Larry (1980). Kim Novak on Camera. A.S. Barnes. p. 16. ISBN 9780498024573 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ a b Chicago Tribune, July 29, 2010: Kim Novak: The road from Chicago[permanent dead link] Relinked June 20, 2014
  5. ^ "Statesman Journal from Salem, Oregon on January 17, 1987 · Page 10". Newspapers.com. Retrieved July 17, 2021.
  6. ^ "The Miami News from Miami, Florida on August 3, 1984 · 10". Newspapers.com. Retrieved July 17, 2021.
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  83. ^ December 2014 BBC Documentary, Sammy Davis, Jr. "The Kid in the middle"
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  85. ^ It is pretty tough, but just possible, to read 'Wilt' and think, The poor little guy! Frank Deford, Sports Illustrated, January 21, 1974
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Further reading

  • Barnett, Vincent L. (2007). "Dualling for Judy: The concept of the double in the films of Kim Novak". Film History. Indiana University Press. 19 (1): 86–101. doi:10.2979/fil.2007.19.1.86. ISSN 0892-2160. S2CID 191481102.
  • LIFE
  • Kim Novak: Her Art and Life, 2021 - publisher, The Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown OH

External links

novak, this, article, contains, content, that, written, like, advertisement, please, help, improve, removing, promotional, content, inappropriate, external, links, adding, encyclopedic, content, written, from, neutral, point, view, january, 2023, learn, when, . This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Marilyn Pauline Kim Novak born February 13 1933 is an American retired film and television actress and painter Kim NovakNovak in 1962BornMarilyn Pauline Novak 1933 02 13 February 13 1933 age 90 Chicago Illinois U S Alma materSchool of the Art Institute of ChicagoOccupation s Actress artistYears active1954 1991SpousesRichard Johnson m 1965 div 1966 wbr Robert Malloy m 1976 died 2020 wbr Websitekimnovakartist wbr comNovak began her career in 1954 after signing a contract with Columbia Pictures and quickly became one of Hollywood s top box office stars appearing in Picnic 1955 The Man with the Golden Arm 1955 and Pal Joey 1957 She is widely known for her performances as Madeleine Elster and Judy Barton in Alfred Hitchcock s thriller Vertigo 1958 with James Stewart The film had mixed reviews from critics upon release but is now recognized as one of the greatest films ever made Other notable films include Bell Book and Candle 1958 Strangers When We Meet 1960 and Of Human Bondage 1964 Although still relatively young Novak withdrew from acting by 1966 and has only sporadically worked in films since She appeared in The Mirror Crack d 1980 and had a regular role on the primetime series Falcon Crest 1986 1987 1 After a disappointing experience during the filming of Liebestraum 1991 she permanently retired from acting saying she had no desire to return 2 Her contributions to cinema have been honored with two Golden Globe Awards an Honorary Golden Bear Award and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame Novak is a painter and visual artist Contents 1 Early life 2 Acting career 2 1 Early films and breakthrough 1954 1959 2 1 1 Vertigo 2 2 Career slowdown and other ventures 1960 1965 2 3 Acting sporadically 1966 1991 2 4 Retirement since 1992 3 Honors 4 Personal life 5 Filmography 6 Awards and nominations 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life EditMarilyn Pauline Novak was born in Chicago Illinois on February 13 1933 3 She is the second daughter of Joseph and Blanche nee Kral Novak who both appeared with her in the 1962 film The Notorious Landlady 4 5 6 Both of her parents were born in Chicago to people of Czech descent 3 7 8 9 Joseph 1897 1987 was a history teacher who took a job as a freight dispatcher on the Chicago Milwaukee and St Paul Railroad during the Great Depression 10 She attended William Penn Elementary Farragut High School 11 and Wright Junior College She won two scholarships to the School of the Art Institute of Chicago 12 71 74 13 14 During the summer break in her last semester of junior college Novak went on a cross country tour as a promotional model for Detroit Motor Products Corporation s Deepfreeze home freezer at trade shows 15 16 17 Novak was pronounced Miss Deepfreeze 17 18 Acting career EditEarly films and breakthrough 1954 1959 Edit Novak from the front cover of the New York Sunday News in 1957 In San Francisco after the refrigerator company tour ended Novak and two other models decided go to Los Angeles to check out the film industry 15 In Los Angeles with two other models she as Marilyn Novak 19 were extras in Son of Sinbad 1955 and later for The French Line 1954 starring Jane Russell at RKO 15 19 In Los Angeles Novak was discovered by an agent who signed her to a long term contract with Columbia Pictures 20 From the beginning of her career she wanted to be an original and not another stereotype Therefore Novak fought with Columbia s chief Harry Cohn over the changing of her name He suggested the name Kit Marlowe arguing Nobody s gonna go see a girl with a Polack name but she insisted on keeping her name saying I m Czech but Polish Czech no matter it s my name They eventually settled on the name Kim Novak as a compromise 21 Columbia intended for Novak to be their successor to Rita Hayworth their biggest star of the 1940s whose career had declined also the studio was hopeful that Novak would bring them the same box office success Marilyn Monroe brought 20th Century Fox Novak s first role for the studio was in the film noir Pushover 1954 in which she received third billing below Fred MacMurray and Philip Carey She then co starred in the romantic comedy Phffft 1954 as Janis a character who finds Robert Tracey Jack Lemmon real cute Both films were reasonably successful at the box office and Novak received favorable reviews for her performances In her third feature film 5 Against the House 1955 a gritty crime drama she received second billing after Guy Madison but above Brian Keith all three above the title It was only a minor critical and box office success She then played Madge Owens in the film version of Picnic 1955 from the William Inge play co starring William Holden and Rosalind Russell Its director Joshua Logan felt that it would be more in character for Novak to have red hair she agreed to wear a red wig during filming Logan says Harry Cohn suggested Novak appear in the film but did not insist upon it the director tested her for the role several times and was delighted with her performance feeling she was close to her character 22 Picnic was a resounding critical and box office triumph and Novak won a Golden Globe Award for Most Promising Newcomer She was also nominated for the BAFTA Film Award for Best Foreign Actress but did not win She appeared as a mystery guest on the game show What s My Line on February 5 1956 to promote the film s opening at the Radio City Music Hall Director Otto Preminger then cast her in The Man with the Golden Arm 1955 in which she played Frank Sinatra s sultry ex girlfriend In a cast which included Eleanor Parker Novak received praise for being one of the film s bright spots and the film was a box office hit Novak singing My Funny Valentine in Pal Joey 1957 Novak s next project The Eddy Duchin Story 1956 cast her as Marjorie Oelrichs the wife of pianist Eddy Duchin played by Tyrone Power Because the two leads did not get along during filming Novak nearly considered backing out of the production but decided against it At the time of its release the film was a critical and box office hit with many suggesting that Novak s advertisements for No Cal diet soda contributed positively to the film s success Offered a choice for her next project she selected the biopic Jeanne Eagels 1957 in which she portrayed the stage and silent screen actress who was addicted to heroin Co starring Jeff Chandler the film was a largely fictional account of Eagels life The film drew negative reviews but turned a profit at the box office Eagels family sued Columbia over the way Eagels had been depicted in the movie 23 After appearing in a series of successful movies Novak became one of the biggest box office draws of 1957 and 1958 Columbia then placed her in a film adaptation of Pal Joey also 1957 based on the 1940 novel and Broadway play both written by John O Hara Playing Linda English a naive showgirl she again co starred opposite Frank Sinatra and Rita Hayworth Released in October the film received favorable reviews Variety called the film strong funny entertainment although Novak s performance has generated a mixed reaction partly because of noticeable lack of on screen charisma The movie was a box office hit and has been considered one of Novak s better performances Vertigo Edit Director Alfred Hitchcock was working on his next film Vertigo 1958 when his leading actress Vera Miles became pregnant and had to withdraw from the complex role of Judy Barton 24 Hitchcock approached Harry Cohn to offer Novak the female lead without even requesting a screen test Though Cohn hated the script he allowed Novak to read it because he considered Hitchcock to be a great director 25 Novak loved it as she could identify with the character and agreed to take part in the film without meeting Hitchcock At the same time she was striking for more money from Columbia and refused to show up for work on the Vertigo set to protest against her salary of 1 250 a week Novak hired new agents to represent her and demanded an adjustment in her contract Cohn who was paid 250 000 for Novak to do Vertigo suspended her but after a few weeks of negotiations he relented and offered her a new contract worthy of a major star 26 She was now receiving 3 000 a week and explained to the press I don t like to have anyone take advantage of me Novak in Vertigo Alfred Hitchcock with Novak on the set of Vertigo 1958 Novak and Stewart in publicity photo for Vertigo 1958 Novak finally reported for work and according to Hitchcock she had all sorts of preconceived notions about her character including what she would and would not wear 27 Before shooting began she told the director she did not like the grey suit and black shoes she was slated to wear thinking them too heavy and stiff for her character Novak later recalled I didn t think it would matter to him what kind of shoes I wore I had never had a director who was particular about the costumes the way they were designed the specific colors The two things he wanted the most were those shoes and that gray suit 25 Indeed Hitchcock explained to Novak that the visual aspect of the film was even more important to him than the story and insisted on her wearing the suit and the shoes that he had been planning for several months 27 Novak learned to make it work for her as she saw it as a symbol of her character 25 Nonetheless Hitchcock allowed Novak the freedom to develop the character herself As she later recalled It excites me to work on dual personalities because I think I have many myself And I think that I was able to use so much of me in that movie At first I was feeling insecure because I kept saying Is this right How do you want me to play this character Hitchcock said I hired you and that s who I want what you bring to this role But what I do expect from you is to stand where I want you to wear what I want you to and speak in the rhythm that I want you to And he worked a long time with me to try to get the right rhythm 24 The role took on a personal significance for her as she felt she went through the same thing as her character when she arrived in Hollywood From my point of view when I first read those lines where she says I want you to love me for me and all the talking in that scene I just identified with it so much because going to Hollywood as a young girl and suddenly finding they want to make you over totally it s such a total change and it was like I was always fighting to show some of myself feeling that I wanted to be there as well It was like they d do my hair and go and redo a bunch of things So I really identified with the fact of someone that was being made over with the resentment with wanting to Needing approval and wanting to be loved and willing eventually to go to any lengths to get that by changing her hair and all of these different things And then when Judy appears it s another story and then when she has to go through that change I really identified with the movie because it was saying Please see who I am Fall in love with me 24 James Stewart with Novak in Vertigo Novak described Hitchcock as a gentleman but found the experience of working with him to be strange I don t know if he ever liked me I never sat down with him for dinner or tea or anything except one cast dinner and I was late to that It wasn t my fault but I think he thought I had delayed to make a star entrance and he held that against me During the shooting he never really told me what he was thinking 11 The director was actually frustrated to have her instead of Vera Miles as Novak learned later Hitchcock didn t like having me in his picture and he felt I was ruining it It was only after the film was finished that I heard how much he thought I d wrecked his picture I felt I did a lot of good work in that movie and I got some of the best notices of my career But Hitchcock couldn t blame himself so he blamed me 28 Novak got along well with her co star James Stewart who supported her during the filming of the movie He treated me so well I learned a lot about acting from him When we had emotional scenes he had to prepare himself first by somehow going deep inside of himself and you knew to leave him alone when he was like that And when it was over he wouldn t just walk away He allowed himself to slowly come out of it He d hold my hand and I would squeeze his hand so that we both had time to come down from the emotion 28 Novak with Stewart in Vertigo The film had mixed reviews at the time of its release in 1958 and broke even at the box office but has since been re evaluated and is widely considered one of the director s best works In the 2012 British Film Institute s Sight amp Sound critics poll Vertigo was voted as the best film of all time displacing Orson Welles Citizen Kane from the position it had occupied since 1962 29 30 Novak received mixed reviews for her performance but she managed to surprise film critics While Bosley Crowther writing for The New York Times described her as really quite amazing 31 the Variety review noted that she was interesting under Hitchcock s direction and nearer an actress than she was in either Pal Joey or Jeanne Eagles 32 The consensus regarding her performance also changed with time Film critic David Thomson thought it was one of the major female performances in the cinema 33 and film director Martin Scorsese called it extraordinary adding that Novak s work was so brave and emotionally immediate 34 However Novak was disappointed by her performance when she watched the film in 2013 I was really disappointed Both characters were exaggerated They ll always remember me in Vertigo and I m not that good in it but I don t blame me because there are a couple of scenes where I was wonderful 35 Novak again worked with Stewart in Richard Quine s Bell Book and Candle also 1958 a comedy tale of modern day witchcraft also starring Jack Lemmon and Ernie Kovacs that proved to be a box office success She then starred opposite Fredric March in the acclaimed romantic drama Middle of the Night 1959 which she has described as not only her favorite of her films but also cites her performance in the film as her best Career slowdown and other ventures 1960 1965 Edit Novak in Madrid 1962 Novak starred opposite Kirk Douglas in the romantic drama Strangers When We Meet 1960 which drew mixed reviews but was a success financially Richard Quine was the director as well as her fiance at the time The studio planned to give them the house that was built as part of the story line during the filming as a wedding gift but their wedding never occurred Instead during the last film that Quine and she made together the British mystery comedy The Notorious Landlady 1962 with Jack Lemmon and Fred Astaire she discovered and purchased her future home by the sea near Big Sur in central California It became her retreat and emotional salvation after leaving Hollywood She made an independent five picture deal with producer Martin Ransohoff and Filmways Pictures to co produce but it proved to be a bad choice owing to clashes with personalities over scripts Their first endeavor the comedy Boys Night Out 1962 was unsuccessful 36 37 After her Hollywood house survived the big Bel Air Fire of 1961 it was finally lost a few years later when it was swept away with most of her belongings in a mudslide in 1966 38 During the interim she made W Somerset Maugham s drama Of Human Bondage 1964 with Laurence Harvey in Ireland 39 40 This third film adaptation of the famous story went over schedule and budget and it also failed The sex comedy Kiss Me Stupid 1964 with Dean Martin followed for director Billy Wilder Actor Peter Sellers had originally been selected and begun filming but he had suffered a heart attack so Ray Walston substituted at the last minute The film had problems getting released because of conflicts with the Legion of Decency The film opened to scathing reviews and while it made money it did not help Novak s career Years later it was rediscovered and acclaimed for its forward thinking and got rave reviews particularly for Novak s performance as Polly the Pistol Novak starred in the historical comedy The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders 1965 in England with British actor Richard Johnson 41 Inspired by the similar movie Tom Jones it drew negative reviews but was a moderate success at the box office Novak married Johnson in 1965 and divorced him in the spring of 1966 The divorce was amicable and they remained friendly In 1966 Novak was cast as the female lead in the occult themed mystery Eye of the Devil co starring David Niven The film s premise intrigued Novak but she found the filming difficult and unpleasant Novak was forced to leave the film after she fell off a horse resulting in serious injuries which took time to recover from and she was replaced by Deborah Kerr 42 Acting sporadically 1966 1991 Edit By the end of 1966 she was emotionally drained and no longer wanted to live the life of a Hollywood movie star in the glare of the spotlight with the press scrutinizing her every move 43 When the mudslide took her Bel Air home and cost her entire life s savings in bulldozer fees she moved away from Hollywood to Big Sur From then on acting became a job and was no longer a career of choice Novak preferred to concentrate on her first love the visual arts often writing poetry to accompany her paintings and even writing some song lyrics Harry Belafonte and the Kingston Trio recorded some of her folk songs in the 1960s 13 Novak in the 1980s Novak returned to the screen for The Legend of Lylah Clare 1968 starring Peter Finch and Ernest Borgnine and directed by Robert Aldrich She played a dual role portraying a person who becomes possessed by a look alike film actress who gets made over by her obsessive compulsive director lover Robert Aldrich asked Novak to do a German accent for that role but she felt it was unbelievable and over the top so she did not want to do it and he never insisted At the premiere Novak was shocked to hear her voice had been dubbed by a German actress in many scenes Aldrich had never told her nor had he given her the opportunity to dub it herself The film was aggressively scorned by critics and Novak drew some of the worst reviews of her career It was also a box office disaster She was extremely upset and regretted having starred in the film 21 44 45 The last film Novak made in the 60s was the Western comedy The Great Bank Robbery 1969 opposite Zero Mostel Clint Walker and Claude Akins After nearly four years that she described as a self imposed vacation Novak agreed to take part in two projects She returned to the screen with a role in the horror anthology film Tales That Witness Madness 1973 Novak also starred as Las Vegas chorus girl Gloria Joyce a character with whom she could identify in the made for TV movie The Third Girl From the Left 1973 with her real life boyfriend at the time Michael Brandon 46 Novak admitted a preference for TV films as she thought they were faster to shoot than features She described movie scripts of that time as offensive saying she disliked the unnecessary sex she found in most of them In 1975 Novak took part in the ABC movie Satan s Triangle because she was intrigued by the story which dealt in the supernatural 47 Novak had a small role in The White Buffalo 1977 a Western starring Charles Bronson and she ended the decade by playing Helga in Just a Gigolo 1979 opposite David Bowie Both films were flops but Novak was not blamed due to her minor roles in them Novak photographed by her husband Robert Malloy In 1980 Novak played fictional actress Lola Brewster in the British mystery thriller The Mirror Crack d based on the story by Agatha Christie She co starred alongside Angela Lansbury Tony Curtis Rock Hudson and Elizabeth Taylor She enjoyed making the film and got along with her co stars and the film was moderately successful Novak did not appear in any feature films during the remainder of the 1980s Her acting credits during the decade included the ensemble television movie Malibu 48 1983 and the pilot episode of The New Alfred Hitchcock Presents 1985 Producers of the successful primetime soap opera Falcon Crest offered Novak a role in their series similar to her character in Vertigo 49 She appeared as the secretive Kit Marlowe in 19 episodes from 1986 to 1987 It was Novak s idea to name her character Kit Marlowe as it was the stage name that Columbia had wanted her to use when she started in the business 50 The former Marilyn Pauline Novak wryly described this turn of events as effectively being Cohn s revenge on her from beyond the grave In 1989 Novak appeared along with James Stewart as a presenter at the 61st Academy Awards Asked in the press room about a possible comeback Novak said that if someone sent her a script she really wanted to do with a part she felt she could not turn down she would be happy to go back to work on the big or little screen At the same time Novak turned down plenty of offers for movies as well as an opportunity to appear in a second season of Falcon Crest to write her autobiography tentatively titled Through My Eyes 51 Novak decided to re establish contact with her agent and seek challenging roles after she realized she was not satisfied artistically She said at the time I feel that I didn t live up to what I should have done with it In other words I m glad I made the move away from Hollywood I don t regret that I know that was a major thing and a good thing But by the same token it was like unfinished business 18 She returned to film with the leading role of Rose Sellers in The Children 1990 opposite Ben Kingsley 18 A British German coproduction the film premiered at the London Film Festival and received good reviews Leonard Maltin praised the acting and felt Novak s performance was excellent However following disputes between the director Tony Palmer and the distributor over editing and music the film was pulled from release and never distributed 52 Novak in 1990 Director Mike Figgis offered Novak the role of a terminally ill writer with a mysterious past in his thriller Liebestraum 1991 opposite Kevin Anderson and Bill Pullman Novak loved the script and thought it was going to be an important picture However her collaboration with Figgis was tense and the two had conflicts from the beginning Novak agreed to do the film under the impression she was going to play the whole character but Figgis felt she was unable to play the flashback role the way he wanted and hired actress Sarah Fearon for those scenes 18 The two clashed on the set as their visions of the script differed and were in many ways diametrically opposed Although she considered him to be a brilliant director she felt the story was too personal for him as it was about his own life and Novak was playing his mother She was also unhappy as she felt he wanted her to act like a puppet He wanted what he thought Hitchcock had made over But Hitchcock didn t do that Figgis didn t know Hitchcock So he treated me the way he thought Hitchcock must have tried to manipulate me into doing exactly I went crazy 53 Novak later said she was hurt and distraught as It was such a painful thing for me because it took me right back to Harry Cohn and all that time And back into saying Look for God s sake haven t you heard it enough We don t want you to do anything Just be Kim Novak That movie pained me more than any movie in the world could do 53 Novak later told Movieline in 2005 she felt she had been unprofessional not to obey her director I know he thinks I m a total bitch That role was fabulous full of depth When I interpreted it the way I thought was evident in the incredible script he said We re not making a Kim Novak movie just say the lines If you continue to play the role this way I m going to cut you out of the movie and he pretty much did that 54 Novak was supposed to do a comedy with the French director Claude Berri also starring Peter Falk and a remake of Bell Book and Candle with Sharon Stone 18 55 Neither film was made and following the difficult experience with Liebestraum she has usually cited that experience as the reason for her decision to retire from the film industry 56 In 2004 she told the Associated Press I got so burned out on that picture that I wanted to leave the business but then if you wait long enough you think Oh I miss certain things The making of a movie is wonderful What s difficult is afterward when you have to go around and try to sell it The actual filming when you have a good script which isn t often nothing beats it 57 Retirement since 1992 Edit Novak in 2004 After her retirement from acting Novak made only rare public appearances and turned down most offers she received 58 In 1996 Vertigo was given a restoration by Robert A Harris and James C Katz and re released to theaters Novak enjoyed their work so much she agreed to make appearances at screenings of the film something she had refused when Universal asked her in 1984 21 She also took part in Obsessed with Vertigo a documentary retracing the making and restoration of the film In 1997 Novak received an Honorary Golden Bear Award for lifetime achievement at the 47th Berlin International Film Festival 59 In 2003 Novak was presented with the Eastman Kodak Archives Award for her major contribution to film Prior honorees include Greta Garbo Audrey Hepburn James Stewart Martin Scorsese and Meryl Streep During that time Novak received several offers to do some major films and to appear on high profile television shows She made an appearance on Larry King Live in 2004 where she stated she would consider returning to the screen if it was the right role 60 In 2010 Novak was the recipient of a special tribute from the American Cinematheque in Hollywood where her films were shown at Grauman s Egyptian Theatre She made a rare personal appearance with a Q amp A onstage between showing of Pal Joey and Bell Book and Candle earning a two minute long standing ovation upon her entrance 61 In April 2012 Novak was honored at the TCM Classic Film Festival where she introduced a screening of Vertigo She joined in conversation with Robert Osborne for a Q amp A session in which she discussed her career and personal life The hour long interview aired on TCM as Kim Novak Live from the TCM Classic Film Festival on March 6 2013 Novak broke down in tears while discussing Liebestraum As she nearly sobbed in front of the audience Novak said I couldn t do a movie after that I ve never done a movie after that I just couldn t do a movie after that 20 The interview was an eye opener for many fans who had wondered why Novak made so few films Acknowledging that she never reached her potential as an actress Novak revealed to the audience that she was bipolar and explained I was not diagnosed until much later I go through more of the depression than the mania part 62 I don t think I was ever cut out to have a Hollywood life Novak also commented Did I do the right thing leaving Did I walk out when I shouldn t have That s when I get sad 62 On the possibility of acting again Novak said in another interview with the fashion website LifeGoesStrong Who knows what the future holds It would take an awful lot to lure me out there but I would never say never 63 Also during the TCM Festival Novak was honored in a handprint and footprint ceremony at Grauman s Chinese Theatre 64 That same year Novak received the San Francisco Cinematic Icon Award from the San Francisco Museum and Historical Society 65 Novak in 2014 After years of seclusion Novak started to make public appearances more frequently as she felt her body of work was being more appreciated 66 In 2013 she was recognized as the guest of honor by the Cannes Film Festival and attended the 2013 Festival where she introduced a new restored version of Vertigo 67 She also took part in the festival s closing ceremony as a presenter earning a standing ovation upon her entrance 68 In 2014 she was a presenter at the 86th Academy Awards That same year she appeared at the TCM Classic Film Festival where she unveiled her painting Vertigo Vortex of Delusion commissioned by the TCM network as part of their 20th anniversary 69 Novak also introduced a screening of her 1958 movie Bell Book and Candle during the Festival Also in 2014 Novak was invited by Cunard Line to be a speaker on board during a New York to London cruise on RMS Queen Mary 2 She introduced screenings of Vertigo and Bell Book and Candle and did a Q amp A session with Hollywood expert Sue Cameron who is also her manager 70 That same year Novak appeared with both of her art mentors Harley Brown and Richard McKinley for a solo show of her paintings at the Butler Institute of American Art 71 In 2015 Novak attended the 22nd Febiofest international film festival where she received the Kristian Award for her contribution to world cinema and also had an exhibition of her paintings at the Strahov Monastery 72 She hosted special screenings of Vertigo featuring live performances of Bernard Herrmann s score by members of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra at the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival 73 and by members of the San Francisco Symphony at the Louise M Davies Symphony Hall in 2016 74 Also in 2016 Novak was invited by Turner Classic Movies to be a guest on their Caribbean Cruise where she sold five of her paintings and was able to raise nearly 7 000 for the prevention of teenage suicide with the auction of a framed giclee of her 75 In 2018 Novak joined in conversation with Larry King for a Q amp A session at the Grauman s Egyptian Theatre in celebration of Vertigo s 60th Anniversary 76 That same year she was the recipient of a special sold out tribute from the Castro Theatre 77 Honors Edit Novak was honored in a handprint and footprint ceremony at Grauman s Chinese Theatre in 2012 In 1955 Novak won the Golden Globe Award for Most Promising Newcomer Female Two years later she won another Golden Globe for World Favorite Female Actress On February 8 1960 Novak was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6332 Hollywood Boulevard 78 In 1995 Novak was ranked 92nd by Empire Magazine on a list of the 100 sexiest stars in film history Novak was honored with a Golden Bear for Lifetime Achievement at the 47th Berlin International Film Festival in 1997 and was presented with the Eastman Kodak Archives Award for her major contribution to film in 2003 In 2012 Novak was honored in a handprint and footprint ceremony at Grauman s Chinese Theatre 64 That same year she received the S F Cinematic Icon Award from the San Francisco Museum and Historical Society for her screen contributions in San Francisco with Pal Joey and Vertigo Her contribution to world cinema was also rewarded with the Kristian Award she was given at the 22nd Febiofest international film festival in 2015 Novak influenced many actors as well as fashion designers with the roles she played Naomi Watts stated that her character interpretation in Mulholland Drive 2001 was influenced by the look and performances of Novak in Vertigo 79 Renee Zellweger said that Novak was pure magic and dressed up as her character from Vertigo for a photo shoot for the March 2008 issue of Vanity Fair 80 Nicole Kidman wrote Novak a letter saying she was an inspiration to me and to women everywhere Your cinematic body of work speaks for yourself but so does the other side of Kim Novak the free spirit who left Hollywood to live atop the hills of Big Sur Kim Novak the painter and llama farmer You are an icon whose screen presence is unmatched and yet you ve lived your life with dignity and authenticity and the courage to follow your heart wherever it takes you 81 In 2005 British fashion designer Alexander McQueen named his first It Bag The Novak saying I m drawn to Kim Novak in the same way that Hitchcock was She had an air of uptightness you wouldn t want to cross 82 Personal life Edit Novak in 1962 In the mid 1950s Novak had relationships with Ramfis Trujillo the son of the Dominican dictator Rafael Leonidas Trujillo and with Sammy Davis Jr 12 A BBC documentary claimed that to end her relationship with a black man Columbia Pictures chief Harry Cohn had mobsters threaten Sammy Davis Jr with blinding or having his legs broken if he did not marry a black woman within 48 hours 83 Novak also dated Michael Brandon 84 Wilt Chamberlain 85 David Hemmings 86 and Porfirio Rubirosa She was engaged to director Richard Quine in 1959 Novak s first marriage was to English actor Richard Johnson from March 15 1965 to May 26 1966 87 The two remained friends afterwards 13 Novak in 2005 In 1966 Novak left Hollywood for Big Sur where she raised horses and painted making an occasional film In 1974 she met her second husband equine veterinarian Robert Malloy when he made a house call after one of her Arabian mares suffered colic 4 They married on March 12 1976 As a result of her marriage she has two adult stepchildren 88 The couple built a log home along the Williamson River near Chiloquin Oregon Malloy died on November 27 2020 89 In 1997 Novak bought a 43 acre ranch in Sams Valley Oregon which the couple made into their home 90 Novak took classes in painting with pastels from artists Harley Brown and Richard McKinley In July 2000 their home burned to the ground and she lost all her art and the only draft of the autobiography she had been working on for 10 years 90 In 2006 Novak was injured in a horse riding accident She suffered a punctured lung broken ribs and nerve damage but made a full recovery within a year 91 In October 2010 her manager Sue Cameron reported that Novak had been diagnosed with breast cancer Cameron also noted that Novak was undergoing treatment and her doctors say she is in fantastic physical shape and should recover very well 92 93 She did recover well 94 95 A photograph of Novak taken by her husband Robert Malloy Robert Malloy s ex wife Joan Gundlach the mother of Novak s stepchildren committed suicide on April 23 2013 aged 70 96 Local news at Post Falls Idaho where Gundlach s corpse was found in the Spokane River did not mention her celebrity connection 97 In 2014 after Novak s rare public appearance at the 86th Academy Awards the media and social commentary indicated she was hardly recognized which resulted in speculation that she had undertaken substantial cosmetic surgery 94 Donald Trump tweeted Kim should sue her plastic surgeon 98 Novak was devastated by the criticism It really did throw me into a tailspin and it hit me hard and wrote an open letter in which she stood up to all of her Oscar night bullies 99 Novak admitted that she had fat injections in my face as she felt they seemed far less invasive than a face lift but later regretted it So why did I do it I trusted somebody doing what I thought they knew how to do best I should have known better but what do you do We do some stupid things in our lives 58 Novak continued her creative endeavors as a photographer poet and visual artist painting in watercolor oil and pastel Her paintings are impressionistic and surrealistic 100 The Butler Institute of American Art in Youngstown Ohio hosted a retrospective of her work from June until October 2019 Novak was present at the opening on June 16 In 2021 The Butler Institute also published a book with a selection of her paintings titled Kim Novak Her Art and Life 101 102 103 She is a Catholic 104 Filmography EditFilm Year Title Role Notes1954 The French Line Model UncreditedPushover Lona McLanePhffft Janis1955 Son of Sinbad Harem Girl Uncredited5 Against the House Kay GreylekPicnic Marjorie Madge OwensThe Man with the Golden Arm Molly Novotny1956 The Eddy Duchin Story Marjorie Oelrichs1957 Jeanne Eagels Jeanne EagelsPal Joey Linda English1958 Vertigo Judy Barton Madeleine ElsterBell Book and Candle Gillian Gil Holroyd1959 Middle of the Night Betty Preisser1960 Strangers When We Meet Margaret Maggie GaultPepe Herself Cameo1962 The Notorious Landlady Mrs Carlyle Carly HardwickeBoys Night Out Cathy1964 Of Human Bondage Mildred RogersKiss Me Stupid Polly the Pistol1965 The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders Moll Flanders1968 The Legend of Lylah Clare Lylah Clare Elsa Brinkmann Elsa Campbell1969 The Great Bank Robbery Sister Lyda Kebanov1973 Tales That Witness Madness Auriol Pageant Segment 4 Luau The Third Girl from the Left Gloria Joyce Television film1975 Satan s Triangle Eva1977 The White Buffalo Mrs Poker Jenny Schermerhorn Alternative title Hunt to Kill1979 Just a Gigolo Helga von Kaiserling1980 The Mirror Crack d Lola Brewster1983 Malibu Billie Farnsworth Television film1990 The Children Rose Sellars1991 Liebestraum Lillian Anderson Munnsen Final film appearance to date Awards and nominations EditYear Award Category Title of work Result1955 Golden Globe Award Most Promising Newcomer Female Phffft Won1956 Photoplay Awards Most Popular Female Star Won1957 Golden Globe Award World Film Favorite Female WonBAFTA Awards Best Foreign Actress Picnic NominatedGolden Apple Award Most Cooperative Actress Won1960 Hollywood Walk of Fame Motion Picture Star Won1958 Laurel Awards Top Female Star 3rd place1959 12th place1960 8th place1961 6th place1962 13th place1963 11th place1997 47th Berlin International Film Festival Honorary Golden Bear Won2003 George Eastman Museum George Eastman Award Won2012 San Francisco Museum and Historical Society S F Cinematic Icon Award Won2015 Febiofest Kristian Award WonSee also EditControversy about Novak s The Artist ad in VarietyReferences Edit TV Guide March 5 2013 Reclusive Film Legend Kim Novak Opens Up About Life Regrets and Her TCM Tribute Relinked June 20 2014 SFGate August 29 2010 Kim Novak surfaces to retrace past in boxed set Relinked June 20 2014 a b Kleno Larry 1980 Kim Novak on Camera A S Barnes p 16 ISBN 9780498024573 via Google Books a b Chicago Tribune July 29 2010 Kim Novak The road from Chicago permanent dead link Relinked June 20 2014 Statesman Journal from Salem Oregon on January 17 1987 Page 10 Newspapers com Retrieved July 17 2021 The Miami News from Miami Florida on August 3 1984 10 Newspapers com Retrieved July 17 2021 Kashner Sam Macnair Jennifer 2003 The bad amp the beautiful Hollywood in the fifties W W Norton amp Company p 200 ISBN 978 0 393 32436 5 Retrieved February 23 2010 Silverman Stephen M October 21 1996 Animal Magnetism Personal Success Kim Novak People Magazine Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved February 23 2011 Novak 1959 Illinois Cook County Birth Certificates 1871 1949 FamilySearch a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Levy Emanuel Movie Stars Novak Kim World s Most Popular Actress 1956 1958 Emanuel Levy Retrieved January 9 2023 a b Ebert Roger October 17 1996 Kim Novak on Hitchcock Hollywood RogerEbert Com Archived from the original on July 22 2012 Retrieved November 5 2011 a b Rosenbaum Jonathan 2010 2006 Kim Novak as Midwestern Independent Goodbye Cinema Hello Cinephilia University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 72665 6 retrieved June 11 2016 a b c Cameron Sue Kim Novak Elusive Legend Turner Classic Movies Archived from the original on May 1 2014 Retrieved May 1 2014 Turnquist Kristi July 31 2010 Interview with actress Kim Novak who lives in Oregon and is revisiting her cinematic past The Oregonian Retrieved November 5 2011 a b c Kim Novak Live from the TCM Classic Film Festival Turner Classic Movies A Spark of Genius Local Inventors and their Discoveries PDF History Center of Lake Forest Lake Bluff Retrieved January 9 2023 a b Willard Morrison Idea Man in Shirtsleeves History Center of Lake Forest Lake Bluff passitdown com Archived from the original on January 9 2023 Retrieved January 9 2023 a b c d e Forsberg Myra August 19 1990 FILM Once Again Ready on the Set For Kim Novak The New York Times Retrieved February 22 2016 a b Son of Sinbad 1955 Catalog American Film Institute Retrieved January 9 2023 a b Stated in live interview with Robert Osborne aired on Turner Classic Movies March 6 2013 a b c Shales Tom October 14 1996 Kim Novak No Fear of Falling The Washington Post Retrieved February 27 2014 Logan Joshua 1978 Movie stars real people and me p 5 21 Erickson Hal 2008 Jeanne Eagels 1957 Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times Archived from the original on June 16 2008 Retrieved April 8 2019 a b c Obsessed with Vertigo 1996 directed by Harrison Engle documentary included on many DVD releases a b c Rebello Stephen April 17 2004 Interview with Kim Novak labyrinth net au Archived from the original on July 7 2014 Retrieved February 28 2014 Thomas Bob November 27 1957 Kim Novak Explains Her Sit Down Strike The Miami News Retrieved February 28 2014 a b Truffaut Francois 1993 Hitchcock Truffaut Edition definitive Editions Gallimard p 277 ISBN 978 2 07 073574 7 a b Munn Michael 2006 Jimmy Stewart The Truth Behind The Legend Fort Lee New Jersey Barricade Books Inc p 237 ISBN 978 1 56980 310 3 Vertigo is named greatest film of all time BBC News August 2 2012 Retrieved August 18 2012 BFI s Sight amp Sound Critics poll 2012 BFI Retrieved August 4 2012 Crowther Bosley May 29 1958 Vertigo Hitchcock s Latest Melodrama Arrives at the Capitol The New York Times Retrieved June 10 2014 Review Vertigo Variety 1958 Retrieved June 10 2014 David Thomson The New Biographical Dictionary of Film London Little Brown 2002 p 640 Scorsese Martin March 5 1999 Why Vertigo is truly great The Guardian Retrieved June 10 2014 Boedeker Hal April 17 2004 Kim Novak A talk with TCM s Star of the Month Orlando Sentinel Archived from the original on March 6 2014 Retrieved September 4 2013 Ben Mankiewicz Turner Classic Movies aired July 26 2009 Nixon Rob Boys Night Out 1962 Turner Classic Movies Retrieved March 1 2014 Ryfle Steve March 19 2001 NEWSMAKERS Vertigo Star s Home Burns Hollywood com Retrieved May 1 2014 Graham Sheila October 12 1963 Hollywood Today The Virgin Islands Daily News Retrieved March 1 2014 Wilson Earl October 23 1964 Ho Hum Kim Is In Love Again Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved March 1 2014 Most Popular Film Star Times London England December 31 1965 13 The Times Digital Archive Web September 16 2013 Eye of the Devil January 1 1968 Kim Novak IMDb Miller Frank The Legend of Lylah Clare 1968 Turner Classic Movies Retrieved March 1 2014 Rushfield Richard January 22 2006 The Lost Picture Show Kim Novak s Forgotten Shoot richardrushfield com Retrieved March 1 2014 Screenplay Lures Kim Novak The Robesonian October 14 1973 Retrieved March 1 2014 Thomas Bob January 9 1975 Kim Novak Spends Most Of Her Time Away From Hollywood Lewiston Evening Journal Retrieved March 1 2014 Goodman Walter January 23 1983 TV MALIBU FOUR HOURS TWO PARTS The New York Times Actress Kim Novak Ponders Her Future On TV s Falcon Crest The Toledo Blade June 16 1987 Retrieved February 28 2014 Kim Novak name on Falcon Crest has a trivia story The Free Lance Star June 16 1987 Retrieved February 28 2014 Buck Jerry March 15 1987 Kim Novak Ponders Her Future On Falcon Crest The Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 22 2016 Mattlin Meredith July 6 2015 We May Finally Get to See This Lost Film Starring Sir Ben Kingsley and Kim Novak Indiewire Retrieved July 31 2017 a b Sheehan Henry 1996 Kim Novak Henry Sheehan Retrieved February 22 2016 Smith Liz August 5 2005 Excite Liz Smith excite com Retrieved March 1 2014 Lumenick Lou August 2 2010 Outtakes Kim Novak I bet you never did drugs New York Post Retrieved July 31 2017 Stein Ruthe August 29 2010 Kim Novak surfaces to retrace past in boxed set SFGate Thomas Bob May 14 2004 Rustic Oregon life is a real picnic for Kim Novak seattlepi com Retrieved March 1 2014 a b Stein Ruthe October 14 2013 Kim Novak returning to S F to share her art San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved March 1 2014 Berlinale 1997 Prize Winners Berlinale Archived from the original on November 11 2013 Retrieved April 21 2015 Interview With Kim Novak CNN Larry King Live May 26 2013 Retrieved January 5 2004 Platinum Career A Tribute to Kim Novak 2010 Retrieved May 1 2014 a b Kim Novak says she s bipolar regrets leaving Hollywood Los Angeles Times April 13 2012 Kim Novak Her Tips on Aging Lasting Beauty and Life Advice Archived April 2 2013 at the Wayback Machine a b Vertigo Star Kim Novak to Be Honored at TCM Classic Film Festival The Hollywood Reporter March 6 2012 Retrieved April 4 2012 Kim Novak tribute at Old Mint Sfgate July 9 2012 Retrieved April 23 2015 Meline Gabe February 10 2016 Kim Novak Opens Up I Think I m Appreciated More Now KQED Retrieved August 9 2017 Kim Novak Guest of Honour at the 66th Festival de Cannes Cannes April 22 2013 Archived from the original on June 16 2013 Retrieved August 16 2013 Todd McCarthy s Cannes Awards Analysis The Hollywood Reporter May 26 2013 Retrieved April 21 2015 Novak Kim Vertigo Vortex of Delusion KimNovakArtist com Retrieved August 9 2017 CUNARD TO WELCOME KIM NOVAK ABOARD QUEEN MARY 2 THIS JULY Cruise Line May 26 2013 Retrieved May 28 2014 Kim Novak Pastel Paintings Butler Institute of American Art Youngstown Live Archived from the original on May 2 2014 Retrieved May 1 2014 Johnston Raymond March 21 2015 Kim Novak shows her paintings at Strahov The Prague Post Retrieved August 9 2017 TIFF on Sept 20 Kim Novak hosts Alfred Hitchcock and TIFF People s Choice Febiofest September 20 2015 Retrieved September 21 2015 Kim Novak offers perspectives on Vertigo The San Francisco Examiner February 9 2016 Retrieved February 13 2016 Novak Kim March 22 2016 Kim Novak s Caribbean TCM cruise Facebook Archived from the original on February 26 2022 Retrieved March 22 2016 AmericanCinematheque SidGrauman May 17 2018 Thank you Kim and Larry for a fantastic evening Now for Vertigo in 70mm a print that came in from the UK Trivia PAL JOEY co starring Kim Novak originally premiered at the Egyptian Theatre Kim Novak is part of our history many times over Tweet Retrieved May 26 2016 via Twitter Bravo Tony May 21 2018 Vertigo star Kim Novak talks Hitchcock MeToo at sold out Castro celebration The San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved May 26 2018 Hollywood Star Project Kim Novak LA Times Hollywood Star Project 2010 Retrieved May 1 2014 Naomi Watts interview Lynchnet com Retrieved December 20 2012 The Hitchcock Hollywood Portfolio Vanity Fair March 2008 Retrieved February 20 2016 Striegel Steve May 2 2012 TCM Fest 2012 The Whirlpool in Kim Novak s Eyes International Cinephile Society Retrieved February 20 2016 How The Times tracked Alexander McQueen s career The Times London February 11 2010 Retrieved May 7 2010 December 2014 BBC Documentary Sammy Davis Jr The Kid in the middle According to his official website michaelbrandon net It is pretty tough but just possible to read Wilt and think The poor little guy Frank Deford Sports Illustrated January 21 1974 David Hemmings Novak Gets Divorce At Salinas The Capital Journal May 26 1966 CNN January 5 2004 Larry King Live Interview With Kim Novak transcript Relinked June 20 2014 3636783979735194 631092706971018 Facebook a b Mail Tribune July 25 2000 Kim Novak s home burns Archived August 13 2017 at the Wayback Machine Relinked June 20 2014 Archerd Army July 24 1967 Novak talks of quitting Variety Freeman David W October 20 2010 Kim Novak Star of Vertigo Battling Breast Cancer What Are Her Odds CBS News Retrieved August 25 2020 Vertigo star Kim Novak diagnosed with breast cancer The Telegraph October 21 2010 Retrieved August 25 2020 a b McDonald Soraya Nadia April 18 2014 Kim Novak responds to post Oscars ridicule I was bullied The Washington Post Retrieved August 25 2020 Williams Mary Elizabeth March 5 2014 Kim Novak and the curse of the beauty Salon Retrieved August 25 2020 Walker Brian April 27 2013 Missing woman s body found Coeur d Alene Press Missing Post Falls Woman Found Dead KHQ com April 24 2013 Hattenstone Simon February 15 2021 Kim Novak on Hitchcock Sinatra and why she turned her back on Hollywood to paint The Guardian Novak Kim April 17 2014 KIM NOVAK SPEAKS OUT ABOUT OSCAR BULLYING Facebook Archived from the original on February 26 2022 Retrieved August 6 2017 Kim Novak s official artist website Linked March 21 2014 Kim Novak Her Art amp Life The Butler Institute of American Art Kim Novak The Butler Institute of American Art Hitchcock Icon Kim Novak Ditched Hollywood to Become a Painter The New York Observer January 13 2020 Novak Kim June 14 2016 Kim Novak s Favorite Things The Wall Street Journal Further reading EditBarnett Vincent L 2007 Dualling for Judy The concept of the double in the films of Kim Novak Film History Indiana University Press 19 1 86 101 doi 10 2979 fil 2007 19 1 86 ISSN 0892 2160 S2CID 191481102 I Was In Life Kim Novak Remembers photo feature LIFE Kim Novak Her Art and Life 2021 publisher The Butler Institute of American Art Youngstown OHExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kim Novak Wikiquote has quotations related to Kim Novak Kim Novak at IMDb Kim Novak at the TCM Movie Database Kim Novak at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films Kim Novak Official Artist Website Photographs and literature Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kim Novak amp oldid 1142007867, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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