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Hitchcock Kim Novak to be honoured with Lifetime Achievement Award at Venice Film Festival

Kim Novak to be presented with the lifetime achievement award at the Venice Film Festival 2025
Kim Novak to be presented with the lifetime achievement award at the Venice Film Festival 2025

Hollywood actress Kim Novak, 92, best known for portraying the double life of Alfred Hitchcock's heroine in Vertigo, is set to receive the Venice Film Festival Lifetime Achievement award.

Despite a short-lived career, Novak became "a living legend, earning her rightful place in history, with the respect and esteem of the film critics and industry alike", the festival said.

Novak said she was "deeply, deeply touched" by the award, which will be presented during the festival, which runs from 27 August to 6 September.

"To be recognised for my body of work at this time in my life is a dream come true. I will treasure every moment I spend in Venice. It will fill my heart with joy," she said in a statement.

Novak played the chilling dual role of suicidal blonde Madeleine Elster and brunette shop girl Judy Barton in Vertigo, which was released in 1958.

OCTOBER 12: Actress Kim Novak on the set of the 1958 film "Vertigo" on October 12, 1957. (Photo by Richard C. Miller/Donaldson Collection/Getty Images)
Kim Novak on the set of Vertigo, 1957

Other memorable roles included a prostitute with a big heart in Kiss Me, Stupid by Billy Wilder (1964), a witch in Richard Quine's Bell, Book and Candle (1958) and an adulteress in another Quine film, Strangers When We Meet (1960).

In 1965, she largely turned her back on Hollywood, refusing to accept the iron-fisted rule of studio executives, and turned to painting instead.

The festival's artistic director Alberto Barbera said that Novak had not planned on becoming an actress but "inadvertently" become a screen legend.

She was "one of the most beloved icons of an entire era of Hollywood films, from her auspicious debut during the mid-1950s until her premature and voluntary exile from the gilded cage of Los Angeles a short while later," he said.

Publicity still of American actress Kim Novak in the film 'Pushover,' 1954. (Photo by John Kisch Archive/Getty Images)
Kim Novak in the film Pushover, 1954

"Independent and nonconformist, she created her own production company and went on strike to renegotiate a salary that was much lower than that of her male co-stars," he added.

The award "celebrates a star who was emancipated, a rebel at the heart of Hollywood who illuminated the dreams of movie lovers," Barbera said.

The documentary Kim Novak's Vertigo by Alexandre Philippe, made in collaboration with the actress, will be presented in its world premiere screening during the festival.

Source: AFP

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