CANBERRA — The mystery of Oscar-winner Nicole
Kidman’s name choice for her daughter has reportedly been
solved, with Kidman’s father saying "Sunday Rose" was inspired
by an Australian arts patron notorious for her lurid love life.
Antony Kidman said the unusual name chosen by
Kidman and her country music star husband Keith Urban was first
suggested by him and his wife, who drew inspiration from
prominent Australian arts patron Sunday Reed.
"I have read a bit about Sunday Reed and her
husband John. She was a key mover and shaker in the arts around
the beginning of the century. The name Sunday struck me as being
a nice name for a woman, so my wife and I mentioned it," Antony
Kidman told the Daily Telegraph newspaper on Wednesday.
Sunday Reed lived for nine years during the
1930s in a three-way love triangle relationship involving her
arts patron husband and one of Australia’s best-known artists,
Sidney Nolan. She eventually became Nolan’s muse.
Nolan is best known in his homeland for a
series of stylized paintings of famous outlaw Ned Kelly, who
battled police in an armored suit and whose final days were
turned into several films variously starring Mick Jagger and
late Australian actor Heath Ledger, who died of a drug overdose
in January.
Sunday Reed was also niece of one of
Australia’s richest men and Nolan painted his Ned Kelly series,
several of which hang in the Australian National Gallery, in her
living room.
Reed committed suicide 10 days after the
death of her husband in 1981.
The Telegraph said Nicole Kidman and Urban
had spent a long time looking at a quote by Nolan about birth,
hanging in a Sydney art gallery, shortly before announcing
Kidman’s pregnancy in January 2008.
"When you are young you are given a good view
of life, because of your closeness to birth," Nolan wrote.
Sunday Rose Kidman Urban, Kidman’s first
biological child, was born on Monday and weighed 6 pounds, 7 ½
ounces (2.93 kg).
Kidman and former spouse Tom Cruise adopted two children
during nearly 10 years of marriage that ended in divorce in
2001. – Reuters