Welcome to Toni Collette Online, your premiere web resource on the Australian actress and singer. Best known for her iconic performances in "Muriel's Wedding", "The Sixth Sense", "United States of Tara" and "Hereditary", Toni Collette has emerged as one of her generation's greatest talents. In its 13th year online, his unofficial fansite provides you with all latest news, in-depth information on all of her projects on film, television and the theatre as well as extensive archives with press articles, photos and videos. Enjoy your stay.
Career > > 2002 > The Hours

The Hours

December 25, 2002 | Miramax | 114 minutes
Directed by: Stephen Daldry | Written by: David Hare | Literature: Michael Cunningham | Cinematography: Seamus McGarvey | Editing: Peter Boyle | Costume Design: Ann Roth | Production Design: Maria Djurkovic | Music: Philip Glass
"The Hours" centers around three women: Virginia Woolf (Nicole Kidman) who is writing her novel "Mrs. Dalloway" in 1923, Laura Brown (Julianne Moore) who is reading the novel in 1951, and Clarrisa Vaughn (Meryl Streep) who is living the novel in 2001. The story takes place during one day of each of the three women's lives as they struggle with their own hardships, but they are all sharing a part of the lives of the other women as one is writing it, one is reading it, and one is living it. We all live our own lives, but sometimes our final hours don't mean as much to us as they do to other people.
Cast: Meryl Streep (Clarissa Vaughn), Julianne Moore (Laura Brown), Nicole Kidman (Virginia Woolf), Ed Harris (Richard), Toni Collette (Kitty Barlowe), Claire Danes (Julia Vaughan), Jeff Daniels (Louis Waters), Stephen Dillane (Leonard Woolf), Allison Janney (Sally Lester), John C. Reilly (Dan Brown), Miranda Richardson (Vanessa Bell), Eileen Atkins (Barbara), Margo Martindale (Mrs. Latch), Linda Bassett (Nelly Boxall), Jack Rovello (Richie Brown)

Production Notes

When Scott Rudin purchased the screen rights to Michael Cunningham’s novel, many wondered how easily a film could be made of such a nuanced, non-linear literary work. With the addition of a top-flight cast and director, and a screenplay by one of the most acclaimed contemporary dramatists, The Hours has made an assured, enhanced transition from page to screen. Director Stephen Daldry says: “I actually found that the idea of three stories and three women, and the relationship among them, was a wonderful opportunity to try to create a single narrative.” Screenwriter David Hare saw Michael Cunningham’s novel as an “extraordinarily accomplished piece of literature.” He adds: “I thought that the tactic of telling three stories without the reader being able to understand the way they connected was completely fascinating. Somehow, Michael managed to sustain your interest even though you didn’t know exactly how the pieces fit. And the fascination of that he accomplished beautifully. Then, when you did understand how they fit, it became profoundly satisfying.”

Meryl Streep, who plays Clarissa Vaughan, had originally received the book as a gift from a friend. “I thought the book was beautiful,” she says. “When my agent called me about the film I couldn’t imagine how they were going to make it into a movie, how so much of an interior world could be translated into a film. But when the script came to me, I thought it was really wonderful. David Hare has such a compassionate nature, and he’s a consummate wordsmith.” Streep was familiar with Hare’s extraordinary ability to explore people’s inner thoughts, having appeared in the film version of his play, “Plenty. ” “David is able to express things that are inside people,” says Streep. “He puts them in the situation and makes it actable. And I think that was what convinced me that ‘The Hours’ would be an interesting project to work on.”

“What David Hare managed to do,” says Julianne Moore, “was to translate both the emotional reality and the structural reality of the novel. I honestly didn’t think it could be done, but he did it beautifully.” A fan of Cunningham’s novel, Moore adds: “I’m a big reader of fiction, and I’m very rarely surprised by it. When you read a lot of literature, you learn to look for clues, and you see what’s coming. But The Hours completely stunned me. His concept of getting through ‘the hours’ of our day and of our lives, and what that means – that is hat is both painful and valuable about life, all at once. I was so moved by it.” The character of Virginia had a particularly profound effect on Kidman. “It’s very interesting,” she says, “how characters come to you at a certain time in your life when you need them. I don’t think I was in my most fun-loving frame of mind at that time, and she was cathartic for me in a strange way. There is a beautiful line in the script about how the dead give us gifts. And for me, Virginia gave me a gift. That’s what’s quite strange about the whole experience: At that time in my life, I needed her. I needed to play her.” “The Hours” received nine Oscar nominations, including Best Picture and Best Director. It won Best Actress for Nicole Kidman. The trio of Kidman, Moore and Streep won the Berlin Film Festival’s Golden Bear as Best Actress.

Awards & Nominations

  Vancouver Film Critics Cirlce – Best Supporting Actress
  Boston Society of Film Critics – Best Supporting Actress
☆   Screen Actors Guild Award – Best Ensemble in a Motion Picture
☆   Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards – Best Acting Ensemble
☆   Phoenix Film Critics Society Award – Best Ensemble

The Hours is being listed under the following tags: , , ,