Before the Glitter, a Quiet Space: Nicole Kidman’s Sacred Oscars Ritual

In an industry where pre-awards show preparation typically involves personal trainers, celebrity estheticians, and meticulously planned green juices, Oscar-winning actress Nicole Kidman offered a revelation this awards season that stopped the Hollywood press in its tracks. Speaking at the Chanel and Charles Finch pre-Oscars dinner at the Beverly Hills Hotel, Kidman was asked how she prepares for the industry’s biggest night—and her answer carried the gentle weight of a centuries-old tradition rather than a trendy wellness routine. “This is crazy, but I will go to church in the morning,” she told Variety, adding with quiet certainty, “It just centers me. It’s what I do on a Sunday” . In that simple admission, the acclaimed actress—set to present at the 98th Academy Awards—peeled back the curtain on a grounding practice that has apparently anchored her through the chaos of Hollywood’s most glittering weekends, reminding us that for some stars, the most important preparation happens not in a glam suite but in a pew.

Kidman’s Sunday ritual, which she described as something she’ll be “squeezing in” before the ceremony’s demands, opens a rare window into the spiritual life of one of entertainment’s most private figures . This is not a newfound celebrity affectation but a thread woven through her life’s tapestry—from a childhood shaped by her “very Catholic grandmother” to raising her daughters Sunday and Faith with an understanding that some traditions outshine any box office receipt . “A lot of my friends tease me,” she admitted in a 2019 interview about her strong belief in God, yet the teasing has never dimmed her commitment . Even following her recent divorce from Keith Urban, with whom she shares her two youngest daughters, Kidman has spoken of moving “toward what’s good,” and part of that compass seems calibrated in the quiet of a Sunday morning service . As she walked the Oscars red carpet later that evening in a stunning strapless gown, one couldn’t help but see the interview’s words in a new light—the actress who finds her center not in the flash of cameras but in something far more enduring, proving that even under Hollywood’s brightest lights, the soul still craves a space of its own.



