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Kurt & Courtney is a 1998 British documentary film by Nick Broomfield investigating the circumstances surrounding the death of Kurt Cobain, and allegations of Courtney Love's involvement in it. [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
Nicholas Broomfield was born in 1948. He is the son of photographer Maurice Broomfield (1916-2010) and Sonja Lagusova (1922-1982). [1] His mother was a Czech Jew. [2]From 1959 to 1965, Broomfield was educated at Sidcot School, [3] a Quaker boarding independent school for boys (now co-educational), near the village of Winscombe in Somerset in south west England.
Broomfield incidentally captured Hoke's final interview, as he died days later when he was struck by a train in the middle of the night. Broomfield titled the finished documentary Kurt & Courtney, which was released on February 27, 1998. In the end, Broomfield felt he had not uncovered enough evidence to conclude the existence of a conspiracy.
It’s telling that Broomfield, whose “Kurt & Courtney” (1998) was built around a rather compelling conspiracy theory about the death of Kurt Cobain, attempts no such thing with Brian Jones ...
In 'The Stones and Brian Jones,' director Nick Broomfield eschews the "wooly" murder theories to focus on how the band wouldn't have existed without the late musician's "amazing vision."
It was 19 years ago that Nick Broomfield, that spiky and compelling one-man band of documentary filmmakers, released “Biggie & Tupac” (2002), his chilling, no-frills, down-the-mean-streets-of ...
On April 19, 1997, one day after his final performance and talking to Brent Alden, and eight days after filming his interview with Nick Broomfield for the Kurt & Courtney documentary, Hoke was found dead on the railroad tracks in Riverside, California. He was decapitated in the accident and his death is highly suspicious.
Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love watch a Mudhoney concert Dec. 4, 1992, at the Hollywood Palladium in Los Angeles. (Photo: Lindsay Brice/Getty Images)