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Nicole Kidman shares rare update on her children with Tom Cruise

Nicole Kidman shared rare insight into the lives of her children with Tom Cruise (Getty Images)
Nicole Kidman shared rare insight into the lives of her children with Tom Cruise (Getty Images)

Nicole Kidman has given a rare insight into her relationship with her daughter Isabella and son Connor, whom she shares with Tom Cruise.

The Big Little Lies star doesn’t usually speak about her adopted children – who are now adults – but in a recent interview with Vanity Fair, the actress has now finally opened up about being their mother.

Suggesting that she is still in contact with her children, Kidman explained that Bella “feels more English” after choosing to live with her husband Max Parker in London.

Read more: Nicole Kidman has banned her children from using social media

“Bella lives just outside London. You know, she really feels more English. We lived there for Eyes Wide Shut, Mission Impossible, and The Portrait of a Lady,” she said. “They both had English accents when they were little.”

<span>Kidman adopted Bella, now 26, and Connor, now 24, during her 11-year marriage to Tom Cruise (Getty Images)</span>
Kidman adopted Bella, now 26, and Connor, now 24, during her 11-year marriage to Tom Cruise (Getty Images)

Kidman is also mother to 10-year-old Sunday and eight-year-old Faith, whom she shares with husband Keith Urban.

In November last, year, Kidman spoke about Isabella and Connor’s decision to practise Scientology like their father Cruise.

She told Who Magazine: “They are adults. The are able to make their own decisions. They have made choices to be Scientologists and as a mother, it’s my job to love them.

Read more: Nicole Kidman ‘heartbroken’ at daughter Bella’s Scientology rise

“And I am an example of that tolerance and that’s what I believe – that no matter what your child does, the child has love and the child has to know there is available love and I’m open here.

I think that’s so important because if that is taken away from a child, to sever that in any child, in any relationship, in any family – I believe it’s wrong. So that’s our job as a parent, to always offer unconditional love.”