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Kate Hudson : |
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Kate Hudson
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Birth name : Kate Garry Hudson |
| Date of birth :
19 April 1979 |
| Place of birth: Los Angeles, California, USA |
| Nickname:
Katie |
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| Height: 5' 6" (1.68 m) |
| Spouse: Chris Robinson (31 December 2000 - 25 October 2007) (divorced) 1 child |
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"I'm not a big fan of romantic comedies, believe it or not .. Well, I don't run out to see them. I'm a hippie at heart. I wear the clothes, and they're the best. And the music is incredible, too. I have zero problems when people say, 'God, you look like your mother.' I go, 'Well, great! Thanks!" |
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Here you can find almost everything about
Kate Hudson, Profile, Biography, Trivia, Filmography, Movies (you can purchase and buy), Photos Gallery, Magazines, Icons, Posters (if you want to see the posters all over your walls you can get them here) , Books, Famous Quotes, and a beautiful collection of
Kate Hudson Wallpapers for your computer desktops. |
Photos Gallery  |
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Kate Garry Hudson (born April 19, 1979) is an American film actress. She came to prominence in 2001 after receiving an Oscar nomination for her role in the drama Almost Famous, and has since established herself as a Hollywood lead actress, starring in several films, including How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days, The Skeleton Key, and You, Me, and Dupree. A favorite female lead in romantic comedies for her outgoing comedic personality and sunny charisma, Kate Hudson avoided the dual dangers a Hollywood upbringing and famous parents; instead earning her own success on the big screen.
At the beginning of the new century Hudson was Tinseltown’s reigning nouveau hippie chick, a sensibility likely passed down from flower power mom Goldie Hawn and further established by her Oscar-nominated role as a 1970s rock ‘n’ roll groupie in “Almost Famous” (2000) and real-life marriage to Black Crowes’ rocker Chris Robinson. Hudson went on to enjoy major box office success with romantic comedies including “How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days” (2003) and “You, Me, and Dupree” (2006), due largely to the actresses’ natural charm and the fun-loving rapport she shared with her male co-stars.
Hudson was born in Los Angeles, the daughter of Academy Award-winning actress Goldie Hawn and Bill Hudson, an actor, comedian, and musician. Hudson's parents divorced eighteen months after her birth; she and her brother, actor Oliver Hudson, were raised in Colorado by her mother and her mother's long-time boyfriend, actor Kurt Russell. Hudson has stated that her biological father "doesn't know me from a hole in the wall", and that she considers Kurt Russell to be her father.
Hudson has described her mother as "the woman that I've learned the most from, and who I look up to, who has conducted her life in a way that I can look up to". She has three half-siblings, Emily and Zachary Hudson, from her biological father's subsequent marriage to actress Cindy Williams, and Wyatt, from her mother's relationship with Kurt Russell. Her cousin is singer Sarah Hudson.
Hudson is of Hungarian, Italian, and Ashkenazi Jewish descent, and was raised in her maternal grandmother's Jewish religion, her family also practiced Buddhism. Hudson graduated from Crossroads, a performing school in Santa Monica, in 1997. She was accepted to New York University, but chose to pursue an acting career instead of attending. The daughter of Academy Award-winning actress and producer Goldie Hawn and comedian-musician Bill Hudson, Kate Hudson was born on April 19, 1979. Hawn and Hudson broke up when their daughter was only 18 months old, so Hudson grew up considering Hawn’s subsequent boyfriend Kurt Russell her dad, whom Hawn started dating in 1983 during their first movie together, “Swing Shift.” She spent her childhood as the only sister in a boisterous household that included older brother Oliver, Russell’s son Boston from a previous marriage, and Russell’s and Hawn’s son, Wyatt.
Hudson's breakthrough role was as Penny Lane in Cameron Crowe's Almost Famous (2000), for which she received an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress and won the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress. She had previously appeared in the lesser-known films Gossip, a teenage drama, and 200 Cigarettes, a New Year's-set comedy with a large cast of actors.
Regarding her early career and success, Hudson has noted that she is a "hard worker", and did not want to be associated with her well-known parents, wishing to avoid the perception that she "rode on somebody's coattails". Hudson was a big personality and a natural performer from the start, with dance lessons beginning at age three and training with the Santa Monica Playhouse by age 10. She also spent a great deal of time on film and TV sets with her parents, but down-to-earth Hawn and Russell maintained a solid foundation for their kids, one that valued family ties and personal responsibility and did not indulge in Hollywood excess. But it was obvious that the charismatic Hudson had a flamboyant flair for entertaining, so they certainly did not discourage her, enrolling her at the Crossroads Performing Arts high school in Santa Monica and encouraging her to spend a summer training with the renowned Williamstown Theater Festival in Massachusetts.
The 20-year-old was floored to receive an Oscar nomination, feeling that she had officially joined the ranks of her show business family. Later that year, art imitated life when Hudson met Chris Robinson, singer for the blues/rock group, The Black Crowes, and the two began a whirlwind romance. Hudson moved into Robinson’s New York apartment soon after, and the pair were married on New Year’s Eve of 2000. Upon her mother’s advice, she took a year off to enjoy her new marriage. The following year, she and Hawn, Russell, and brother Oliver teamed up to form their own production company, Cosmic Entertainment.
Hudson turned down the part of Mary Jane Watson in the 2002 film version of Spider-Man, and instead starred in remake of the historical romance The Four Feathers, a film which was not well received by critics or audiences. Her next film, How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days, a romantic comedy, became a big success at the box office, grossing over $100 million after its February 2003 release. Hudson subsequently appeared in several romantic comedies, including Alex and Emma and Raising Helen; the films met with varying degrees of success.
Hudson wanted to choose her next film carefully. She was offered the role of Mary Jane Watson in “Spiderman” (2002) but did not feel ready for a sure-fire blockbuster actioner, opting instead for a remake of the Victorian classic "The Four Feathers." In the film, she starred as the fiancée of a conflicted British soldier played by Heath Ledger. The film did moderately well at the box office but failed to excite critics. In 2003, Hudson co-starred in the first of a string of very successful romantic comedies, "How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days" (2003). The film centered on an advice columnist (Hudson) and ad exec (Matthew McConaughey) who meet amidst differing romantic quests and experience every rom-com manner of miscommunications. The pair’s playful chemistry won over audiences (though not critics) to the tune of over $100 million in box office haul. Later the same year, Hudson was paired with Luke Wilson in the Rob Reiner romantic comedy "Alex and Emma." Playing an opinionated stenographer helping a blocked writer finish his book, Hudson further explored her comedic side by playing a trio of fictional characters in the planned novel each inspired by Wilson's growing attraction to her character. Again, Hudson provided much needed spark to an otherwise listless exercise.
Hudson headlined a thriller called The Skeleton Key in 2005. The film, which had a production budget of $43 million, enjoyed box office success, grossing over $91.9 million worldwide ($47.9 million in the US alone). Her later film, a comedy titled You, Me and Dupree and co-starring Owen Wilson and Matt Dillon, grossed $21.5 million on its opening weekend of 14 July 2006, within industry expectations. Hudson returned to the limelight herself the following year in the thriller "The Skeleton Key" (2005). The gloomy, atmospheric supernatural entry effectively used Hudson's inherent sunniness to contrast to the plot's voodoo goings-on. Not surprisingly, the film did well with audiences. “You, Me, and Dupree” (2006), however, confirmed that Hudson was still best-loved by audiences for her romantic comedies; this one concerning a houseguest (Owen Wilson) who overstays his welcome in the home of a newly married couple (Hudson and Matt Dillon). While reliant on physical gags and the usual misunderstandings that are the center of the broad comedy universe, the film enjoyed over $100 million in box office receipts.
In 2007 Hudson directed the short film Cutlass, one of Glamour magazine's "Reel Moments" based on readers' personal essays. Cutlass co-stars Kurt Russell, Dakota Fanning, Virginia Madsen, Chevy Chase and Kristen Stewart. by the beginning of 2008, so as not to overshadow Hudson’s sparkling, comedic re-teaming with McConaughey in “Fool’s Gold,” an adventure about a newly-divorced couple who bury the hatchet and team up to retrieve a sunken treasure. Hudson was next slated to co-star opposite Dane Cook in another crossed-wires romantic farce, “Bachelor No.2” (2008), and the budding entrepreneur also planned to launch a line of natural hair-care products later in the year. In 2008, her latest film, Fool's Gold, was released on February 8th. This romantic comedy is her second film to co-star Matthew McConaughey. Hudson is the image model for Kamiseta, a Filipino line of young women's clothing and apparel.
In 2000, Hudson married Chris Robinson, the frontman for The Black Crowes. They married on New Year's Eve in Aspen, Colorado. Hudson gave birth to their son, Ryder Russell Robinson, on January 7, 2004. The couple lived in a house that was once owned by director James Whale and traveled together during Hudson's film shoots or Robinson's music tours. On August 14, 2006, Hudson's publicist announced that Hudson and Robinson had separated. Rumors swirled that the reason was Hudson's affair with Owen Wilson on the set of You, Me and Dupree. On November 18, 2006, Robinson filed divorce papers, citing "irreconcilable differences". The divorce was finalized on October 22, 2007. After she and Robinson separated, Hudson publicly dated Owen Wilson, her You, Me and Dupree co-star. However, the two broke up in May 2007.
Hudson has noted that she is "not very religious," and describes herself as Jewish. A vocal opponent of anti-Semitism in part because of witnessing it during a stay in Paris, Hudson has said, "I'm Jewish and this was the first time I experienced real anti-Semitism. Paris was scary...there were synagogues bombed and there was anti-Semitic graffiti all over the place. I was very angry. This is something I am passionate about".
Hudson has also said that she does not enjoy seeing herself on screen, specifying that she "gets
cold shakes and sweats" when watching her performances for the first
time. In July 2006, Hudson sued the British version of the National Enquirer after they had stated that she has an eating disorder and described her as "painfully thin." Hudson said that the tabloid's actions were "completely inappropriate" and a "blatant lie," and specified her concern relating the impressions about weight that she feels the tabloid could have on young girls.
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