Nicole Kidmanās Next Role? Death Doula
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Laia Garcia-FurtadoTue, April 14, 2026 at 7:56 PM UTC
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Nicole Kidman Wants to Be a Death DoulaMichael Loccisano - Getty Images
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In the last few years, we have undoubtedly been experiencing a kind of Nicole Kidman-aissance. Itās not that she wasnāt already iconic, but since taking on the role of Celeste in Big Little Lies, she has transcended her own stardom, becoming embedded in our everyday pop culture in ways that we could have never imagined. Consider Babygirl, or the now-legendary AMC Commercial where Kidman exclaims āSomehow, heartbreak feels good in a place like this.ā Her new modus operandi is to make sure to keep us on our toes at all times; weāll never know what sheāll say or do next.
During a recent talk at the University of San Francisco, the actress revealed that she has been training in the art of becoming a death doula, an idea that occurred to her while she was dealing with her motherās ailing health and eventual passing in May of 2024. āShe was lonely, and there was only so much the family could provideābetween my sister and I, we have so many children and our careers and our work⦠Wanting to take care of her because my father wasnāt in the world anymore,ā she was reported as saying. āThatās when I went, āI wish there was these people in the world that were there to sit impartially and just provide solace and care.āā
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As she soon discovered, those people do exist, and they are known as ādeath doulasā or ādeath midwives,ā echoing the name of the people who have traditionally done the work of helping mothers bring babies into the world. The International End-of-Life Doula Association defines a death doula as āa nonmedical companion who provides supportā and āadvocates self-determination, and imparts emotional, spiritual, and practical careā to allow the person to die with dignity. It is a job whose benefits and impact can be felt by both the dying person and the loved ones who are taking care of them.
Kidman is not the first Hollywood star to express her desire to train in this highly empathetic field. Earlier this year, the Hamnet director ChloĆ© Zhao revealed to The New York Times that she had recently trained to become a death doula, explaining that as part of the course she had researched the way Indigenous cultures from around the world dealt with death and dying. āYou can see that the grief of losing a loved one doesnāt change. However, the societal understanding of death and the space it gives to fried and how itās embedded in the culture and the medicalization of death have shifted so much,ā she told the writer David Marchese. āIn the modern world, when death is no longer seen as a natural part of lifeābecause now itās about staying alive as long as we canāthereās almost a shame about death.ā
The musician Erykah Badu, meanwhile, has been a certified doula since 2001, and has also trained as a death doula. āI love being the welcoming committee,ā she once said. āI like laughing with those who are close to their last breath.ā What canāt these women do?
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Source: āAOL Entertainmentā