Uma Thurman

Uma Thurman Nude

Uma Karuna Thurman was born April 29, 1970, in Boston, Massachusetts. Her eccentric, multi-cultural upbringing -- her mother Nena is a former psychotherapist while her father Robert A.F. Thurman is a Tibetan Buddhist monk, and a University of Columbia professor -- could explain the unique names of the Thurman siblings, Dechen, Ganden and Mipam.

Uma Thurman

Height: 5' 11
Eyes: blue
Religion: agnostic
Uma Thurman was born on April 29, 1970, in Boston Massachusetts. 
Her parents are Robert A.F. Thurman and Nena von Schleebrügge, a Swedish model and psychiatrist. 
She has three brothers, Dechen, Ganden, and Mipam. The family was raised in the Buddhist faith, and this explains the names. 
"Uma Thurman" translates into "Bestower of Blessings" or "The Bright One". 
Dropped out of school at the age of 15.
She moved to New York at the age of 16 to pursue her acting career. 
She married actor Gary Oldman in September 1990, but they split the following year, and were divorced in 1992. 
She married Gattaca co-star Ethan Hawke on May 1 1998, and gave birth to his daughter Maya Ray.

 

Uma Thurman Nude

 

Uma Thurman News

Uma Thurman, boyfriend buy former home of Penthouse publisher
STAATSBURG - Actress Uma Thurman will soon be a Hyde Park resident.

Hotel owner Andre Balazs and Thurman have entered into a contract to buy the 55-acre estate in the hamlet of Staatsburg formerly owned by Penthouse magazine Publisher Bob Guccione.

George Cole, of George Cole Auctions in Red Hook, sold the 16-room mansion to Balazs and Thurman following his Sept. 4 auction of the contents of the home.

"It's going to be Andre Balazs and his friend, Uma Thurman," Cole said of the purchasers.

A licensed real estate broker, Cole mentioned several times while auctioning Guccione's belongings that the mansion also was for sale. Cole said Balazs and Thurman attended the auction and expressed an interest in the property.

Cole declined to reveal the purchase price but said the property sold for less than its appraised value of $15 million. He said he expects the couple to close on the sale before Dec. 15.

Guccione and his third wife, Kathryn Keeton, used the estate as a weekend home. Keeton died in 1997 and is buried on the property.

Guccione lost the property, known as The Willows, in February after defaulting on a $14.5 million loan. Kennedy Funding of New Hackensack, N.J., acquired the estate when Guccione declared bankruptcy.

Although Guccione was allowed to keep his personal belongings after the bankruptcy, Cole said, he had no room for them in his already furnished New York City townhouse.

Thurman lived for a time in Woodstock with her former husband, actor Ethan Hawke, and their two children. She has starred in such movies as the two-volume "Kill Bill" series, "Batman & Robin" and "Pulp Fiction."

Balazs, previously married to Katie Ford, chief executive officer of the Ford Model Agency, owns hotels in New York City, Miami and Los Angeles.

On The Set: Travolta, Uma and Cedric Learn to 'Be Cool!'
In a leaky brick warehouse just next to a railroad in downtown Los Angeles, John Travolta calms Uma Thurman before they shoot a scene for the "Get Shorty" sequel, "Be Cool!" Travolta ...

Hawke discusses split from Uma Thurman
March 8, 2004 — Ethan Hawke has spent a decade and a half in the movies as the onscreen innocent. But for the real actor, these are tough times.
This famously earnest actor earned an Oscar nomination for Training Day and is set to appear in the thriller Taking Lives alongside Angelina Jolie, although these days his personal life is what's grabbing the headlines.

"I'm 33 years old. While I'm sitting here my marriage is not working," Hawke told ABCNEWS. "Everybody knows it."

Last year, Hawke and his wife actress Uma Thurman split after eight years together. Their union produced a daughter and a son, and their breakup became a media sensation. "It's like this is our marriage … and now there's all these other voices in the room,' said Hawke.

"You know you hate to have your grandfather read about it. You hate to … that's what makes you feel ashamed you know," said Hawke.

Finale to a Red Carpet Romance

Hawke and Thurman became acquainted on the set of the sci-fi drama Gattaca, and fans proceeded to watch them with admiration as they wed and were then frequently photographed at high-profile events.

The fanfare turned to scathing headlines more recently when tabloids claimed that Hawke had an affair while shooting a film in Montreal.

"Uma and I did not split up over anybody's infidelity," said Hawke. "We had a lot of problems before I ever went to Montreal."

Hawke believes he and the luminous star of Pulp Fiction and Kill Bill were undone by the stresses of married life between two successful actors. "You know you'd come up with these rules: 'One person works, the other person doesn't. Well, then somebody's always out of town,'" said Hawke.

When they decided to travel together, different complications arose.

"Then I'm living in a hotel room taking care of my kids while you're off on a film set six hours a day doing what you love. Do that for nine months and see what a good mood you're in," said Hawke. "I don't know if it's just too hard to be married to a woman that wants to be a movie star. I know that she has that right to want that."


Catching up with Uma Thurman
A smile is Uma Thurman's umbrella. She's shed 50 pounds, learned kung fu, mastered the samurai sword and stars in the new movie Kill Bill. Yet it's not all sunshine.

By Jamie Malanowski

"She's like Clint Eastwood in the body of a beautiful woman."
Most actresses, especially those past their 20s, complain that there aren't enough good roles for women, that the parts that are available aren't substantial. Not Uma Thurman.

After back-burnering her career for several years to concentrate on marriage and motherhood, Thurman, 33, is in the picture again with one of the season's most thrilling films, written just for her. Thurman has reunited with Quentin Tarantino, the director who, in 1994's "Pulp Fiction", provided her with her most indelible screen role. It's literally a comeback with a vengeance: In "Kill Bill", Thurman plays the Bride, an assassin bent on revenge after being left for dead at a wedding chapel massacre. Thurman describes it as "a massive B-genre epic" -- "Kill Bill" will be released in installments; the second volume opens in February -- and even after living for a decade with the project, she still seems awed by its ambition.

The saga weaves together elements of Japanese samurai movies, chopsocky flicks and classic spaghetti westerns, heavily dosed with Tarantino's signature outrageousness and humor. It may turn out to be the director's magnum opus. Thurman's Bride stands to join our most memorable female action-film icons, right alongside Pam Grier and Sigourney Weaver's Lt. Ripley in the "Alien" movies.

However, Thurman's big moment is being overshadowed by some offscreen drama. A few weeks before the tabloids announced that her marriage to Ethan Hawke was in trouble, I visited Thurman not far from their rambling farmhouse in New York's Hudson River Valley. It was a stifling August day, and Thurman had recently returned from Canada, where she had completed a thriller, "Paycheck", with Ben Affleck. She took the part almost like a cool-down exercise after a workout: "I was too wrought up after "Kill Bill" to just go home."

Thurman is not the type to have hobbies or a five-year plan. As a screen personality, she always has been a little more cool and little less cuddly than the Meg Ryans of the world. That might explain why Thurman didn't let on to me that her marriage was on the rocks. (Her press representative stoutly denied a split was in the offing.) She didn't discuss Hawke, 32, at all, refashioning innocent questions about him into opportunities to talk about the challenges of balancing home and career.

"We work like hell at our marriage'' is about all she would say.

Thurman seems like a gentle sort: soft-spoken, elegant and languorously intellectual. She's not an actress you associate with the part of a predatory martial-arts expert. Yet Thurman serves as a muse to a director whose idea of comic relief is a torture scene scored to Stuck in the Middle With You. Much as a teenage girl would write "Mrs. Justin Timberlake" a hundred times in her notebook, Tarantino scrawled "Uma Thurman is going to 'KiLL BiLL'" on the cover of his script.

"He was drawn to her from the moment she auditioned for Pulp Fiction," says Tarantino's producer, Lawrence Bender. "You could see it in his eyes."

The Bride was proposed in 1993 during the filming of Pulp Fiction, when the director and the actress went out to dinner. "We started talking about revenge movies, and I started talking about this character, the Bride, and very quickly we [came up with this idea] and got all excited," Thurman recalls over a plate of eggs Benedict drowning in hollandaise sauce. "Quentin immediately went off and wrote eight pages of it, and we both agreed it would be our next movie."

Instead, the caffeinated pop-culture auteur went off to make Jackie Brown, and Thurman appeared in several films, the most memorable of which, Gattaca, stands out because she fell for co-star Hawke. The couple married in May 1998 and immediately set about building a family. They have fashioned a bohemian, nearly Hollywood-free existence, raising their two children -- daughter Maya, 5, and son Levon, nearly 2 -- between their country home and an apartment in Manhattan. They surround themselves with a wide circle of creative types: artists, writers and, of course, actors.

In a way, their lives resemble the one Thurman's parents provided for her and her three brothers. Her dad is a professor of Asian religions; her mom is a model-turned-psychotherapist. The family moved quite a bit, spending stretches in Boston, India and an artist's colony in New York. "I miss Massachusetts," she says. "There's something nice about the people there: good, liberal, solid."

Thurman has been acting half her life. She's been nominated for an Oscar (Pulp Fiction), has won a Golden Globe (HBO's Hysterical Blindness) and has had her pick of roles, directors and leading men. But even after 24 feature films in 15 years, it's nearly impossible to pin her down in a neat little category. "I believe in change," she says, then laughs. "I've always been willing to lean forward and fall on my face."

But the responsibilities of motherhood have forced Thurman to make sure the parts she takes are in films she really believes in. "There was never a question of whether I wanted to play [the Bride], in the way I usually question whether I want to," she says. "It was more a question of whether I wanted to undertake this journey."

The Bride has expertise you don't learn at the Actors Studio. Preparing to play her took three months of training in a variety of martial arts, including samurai swordsmanship, and filming spanned nine months in four countries. To complicate matters, Thurman was pregnant.

"I called to tell her I'd worked out the shooting schedule," Bender says. "I told her, 'After your delivery, we've allocated eight weeks for recovery, and then we begin shooting.' 'Lawrence,' she said, 'I'm not baking a loaf of bread here.' " Between the rigorous training and the vigorous filming that followed, Thurman dropped 50 pounds.

"I don't know how she did it," says co-star Vivica A. Fox. "All that training, fighting, battles with swords, and then she went and breast-fed her son. To have all that activity, all those hormones swirling -- it blew my mind." However she managed it, her colleagues are impressed. "People will be amazed," Bender says. "She's like Clint Eastwood in the body of a beautiful woman."

 

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