The long-estranged daughter of the late film star Klaus
Kinski, German actress Nastassja Kinski began her career in her teens.
According to most sources, her first film was director Wim Wenders' The
Wrong Move (1975), though there is evidence that a German TV movie
directed by Wolfgang Petersen, For Your Love Only (1976), was produced
first. Still not yet 20, Kinski fell in love with the much-older filmaker
Roman Polanski, who subsidized her training as an actress. After taking
drama classes in New York and London, Kinski was deemed ready by Polanski
to star in Tess (1980), a lavishly produced filmization of Thomas Hardy's
Tess of the D'Urbervilles. Shortly thereafter Kinski became the dream of
male college undergrads everywhere by posing for a Richard Avedon poster
wearing nothing save the large live python which spiralled around her
body. Kinski's next few films tended to capitalize on her physical
attributes rather than her very real talent; in Cat People (1982),
directed by her then-lover Paul Schrader, the actress' character
transformed into a panther after having sex; and in Exposed (1982), she
participated in one of the goofiest moments of screen erotica in history
when costar Rudolf Nureyev "played" her body with a cello bow.
Compared to scenes like these, Kinski's appearance as Dudley Moore's wife
in Unfaithfully Yours (1983) was downright puritanical -- but it was back
to the bizarre with her role as a woman dressed in a bear suit in Hotel
New Hampshire (1985). At this point, Kinski's film output was getting a
bit too beyond the fringe for most filmgoers, and she spent much of the
next decade in "artistic" movies of little box office appeal
(Torrents of Spring [1989], Faraway, So Close [1991]). For a brief time
she remained in the public eye thanks to several well-publicized romances
and because she gave birth to a baby without (at first) revealing the name
of the father, allowing the world press to go into an torrent of
speculation (the father turned out to be Egyptian producer Ibrahim Moussa,
who briefly became her husband). In the early 1990s, Kinski dropped from
view altogether, devoting herself to her marriage to pop-music maestro
Quincy Jones. In 1994, Kinski made a surprising reappearance in the
"normal" role of a KGB agent in the popular movie thriller
Terminal Velocity (1994) -- managing to remain clothed in her big scene,
wherein she was locked in the trunk of a car and thrown from a plane in
flight! |