Jane Campion also wanted Lady Gaga to get an Oscar nom
Campion makes history as the first woman to be nominated twice for the top directing prize, having previously been recognized with a nom for The Piano, which earned her an original screenplay win. On that statistic, she says: “I think it’s just another sign that women are punching through those glass ceilings.
Campion confesses she’s just been on the phone with her longtime friend and collaborator Nicole Kidman, who starred in her 1996 film,. “I’ve known her since she was 14,” says Campion. “I’m really happy for her. I thought she did beautiful work as Lucy [in Being the Ricardos].” Speaking on the other films in the conversation this year, she admits to being a huge Lady Gaga fan. “One of the actors that I thought — in the lead female actress category — who I missed being there was Lady Gaga [in]. I thought she was extraordinary.” As for a nomination she was excited about outside of her own film’s: “You know, it was great seeing Kristen Stewart also nominated. I thought she was amazing.
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Jane Campion scores 2nd best director Oscar nomination, making historyJane Campion, who was nominated for her film 'Power of the Dog,' is the first woman to ever be nominated twice in the category.
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How Jane Campion just made Oscars history in the directing categoryWith 'The Power of the Dog,' Jane Campion, the second woman ever nominated for a directing Oscar, now becomes the first to earn a second nomination.
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Jane Campion scores her second best director Oscar nomination, making historyCampion, who was nominated for her film 'Power of the Dog,' is the first woman to ever be nominated twice in the category. Her first nomination was for the 1993 film 'The Piano.' That same year, she won an Oscar for best screenplay for the same movie
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New Again: Jane Campion - Interview MagazineWhen Amour, Michael Haneke's film about an aging couple struggling after a physical setback, won the Palme d'Or earlier this week, the 70-year-old Austrian director became one of just a handful of directors to win the Cannes Film Festival's top prize two times—and the only person ever to do so within the span of only three years (he also won the prize in 2009 for WWI drama The White Ribbon). Back in January 1992, Interview spoke with another Palme d'Or winner, Jane Campion, in anticipation of her film The Piano.
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