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Kim Cattrall Turned Down Iconic ‘Sex and the City' Role Four Times Because of 'Self-Inflicted Ageism'

Kim Cattrall Turned Down Iconic ‘Sex and the City' Role Four Times Because of 'Self-Inflicted Ageism'

Yahoo10-07-2025
With And Just Like That… returning to our screens via HBO Max, it feels right that Kim Cattrall should also get back in on the Sex and The City action.
The revival series is currently airing with stars Sarah Jessica Parker, Cynthia Nixon and Kristin Davis all reprising the roles that catapulted the group to superstardom in the late '90s and early '00s.
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Bar a small cameo in the season two finale, Cattrall has not reteamed with Carrie, Miranda and Charlotte on the streets of New York in the new show and confirmed she won't be appearing in the third installment. Reports of a long-running feud between Parker and Cattrall have dominated Sex and The City headlines for years following the 2008 and 2010 movies.
However, in a new interview with U.K. outlet The Times, Cattrall is revealing a few tidbits about her connection to the iconic character of sex-positive publicist Samantha Jones.
In the feature published Thursday evening, the 69-year-old Liverpool-born star said she turned down the role four times, believing that at 41 she wouldn't be seen by audiences as sexy. 'Self-inflicted ageism,' she told the paper. 'Well, that changed — 40 became sexy. It became, 'Man, let's have more of that.''
The British/Canadian/American actress continued: '[Samantha] wasn't a nymphomaniac — well, some people might have thought she was — but she was just enjoying the main course. Everyone else was nibbling on the appetisers when she was going for the steak.'
'And it was always on her terms — that I always insisted on.'
Despite such a celebrated performance, Cattrall, who has been dating BBC audio engineer Russell Thomas since 2016, added that she is not much like her character in real life. 'I'm the antithesis of her in many ways. I'm a serial monogamist, and then some.'
The six seasons of the show, which ran from 1998 to 2004, saw the women battle tumultuous love lives, sex problems and professional hiccups while strengthening their own friendships. The popularity of the show has only increased since its addition to streaming services like Netflix, which broadcast the pinnacle of nineties NYC glamor to a younger, Gen Z audience.
Cattrall was talking to The Times about the second season of Central Intelligence, a BBC Radio 4 and BBC Sounds drama series. It follows a retelling of the founding of the CIA in which Cattrall stars opposite Ed Harris and Johnny Flynn.
New episodes of And Just Like That… are dropping weekly on HBO Max and on Sky in the U.K.
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Roger Daltrey hopes to ‘make it through' The Who's farewell tour
Roger Daltrey hopes to ‘make it through' The Who's farewell tour

New York Post

time3 hours ago

  • New York Post

Roger Daltrey hopes to ‘make it through' The Who's farewell tour

Roger Daltrey has seen better days. The Who frontman, 81, admitted that he is 'nervous' about his health as the 'Baba O'Riley' band prepares to kick off their 'The Song Is Over' farewell tour later this month. 'This is certainly the last time you will see us on tour,' Daltrey told The Times during an interview published Friday, Aug. 1. 'It's grueling.' 7 Roger Daltrey live in concert at the Piece Hall in Halifax, UK. FARRELL / BACKGRID 7 Roger Daltrey performing at the Armadillo in Glasgow, Scotland, on April 28, 2025. James Edmond/Shutterstock 'In the days when I was singing Who songs for three hours a night, six nights a week, I was working harder than most footballers,' he continued. 'As to whether we'll play concerts again, I don't know. The Who to me is very perplexing.' However, the 'Pinball Wizard' crooner also acknowledged that his 'voice is still as good as ever,' even after performing for over six decades. 'I'm still singing in the same keys, and it's still bloody loud, but I can't tell you if it will still be there in October,' he shared. 'There's a big part of me that's going: I just hope I make it through.' 7 Guitarist Pete Townshend, bassist John Entwistle, drummer Keith Moon and singer Roger Daltrey of The Who at the Coliseum Theatre in London on December 14, 1969. Getty Images Daltrey, who formed The Who alongside guitarist Pete Townshend, bassist John Entwistle and drummer Keith Moon in 1964, previously fell ill with a serious case of meningitis back in 2015. He said that he still feels the after-effects, and added that the virus had done 'a lot of damage.' 'It's buggered up my internal thermometer, so every time I start singing in any climate over 75 degrees, I'm wringing with sweat, which drains my body salts,' the 'Won't Get Fooled Again' singer shared. 7 Roger Daltrey of The Who performs at the TQL Stadium on May 15, 2022, in Cincinnati. Amy Harris/Invision/AP 'The potential to get really ill is there, and I have to be honest, I'm nervous about making it to the end of the tour,' he concluded. Daltrey reflected on his life during another chat with The Times published last year. After sharing that all his 'dreams came true,' the rock legend said that he is now 'ready to go at any time.' 7 Roger Daltrey headlining Heritage Live 2025 at Audley End House. Lee Blanchflower – Splash News / 'You've got to be realistic,' he explained. 'You can't live your life forever. Like I said, people my age, we're in the way. There are no guitar strings to be changed on this old instrument.' More recently, Daltrey joked about going deaf and blind in his old age, much like the blind, deaf and mute main character of The Who's 1969 album and rock opera 'Tommy.' 'The joys of getting old mean you go deaf. I also now have got the joy of going blind,' he told the crowd at London's Royal Albert Hall during a concert in March. 7 Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend of The Who perform at the Colosseum at Caesars Palace on July 29, 2017, in Las Vegas, Nevada. Getty Images 'Fortunately, I still have my voice,' he joked, 'because then I'll have a full Tommy.' The Who's farewell tour is set to kick off in Florida on Aug. 16, and wrap up in Las Vegas on Sept. 28. Daltrey and Townshend, 80, announced their final tour back in May as Moon died in 1978 from a drug overdose, and Entwistle passed away in 2002 after suffering a heart attack triggered by cocaine. 7 Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend of The Who perform during the Super Bowl XLIV Halftime Show at the Sun Life Stadium on February 7, 2010, in Miami Gardens, Florida. WireImage 'It's not easy to end the big part of my life that touring with The Who has been,' Daltrey said at the time. 'Thanks for being there for us and look forward to seeing you one last time.' 'Well, all good things must come to an end,' Townshend added. 'It is a poignant time.' 'Roger and I are in a good place, despite our age, eager to throw our weight behind this fond farewell to all our faithful fans, and hopefully to new ones who might jump in to see what they have been missing for the last 57 years,' the iconic guitarist added. 'This tour will be about fond memories, love and laughter,' Townshend concluded. 'Make sure you join in.'

Photographer's eerie lookalike inspired a search for world's best dopplegängers
Photographer's eerie lookalike inspired a search for world's best dopplegängers

USA Today

time4 hours ago

  • USA Today

Photographer's eerie lookalike inspired a search for world's best dopplegängers

Over the last 25 years, French-Canadian photographer François Brunelle has traveled the world photographing around 250 pairs of doppelgängers. Doppelgängers, which translates from German to 'double walker,' originally meant ghostly counterparts of a living person. In folklore and literature, encountering someone who could be your twin has traditionally been viewed as a bad omen. But in modern usage, the term often describes two unrelated people who closely resemble each other. This concept is the focus of Brunelle's photography series, 'I'm Not a Lookalike!' The inspiration for the project came from his own lookalike: Mr. Bean, who is played by British actor and comedian Rowan Atkinson. After being told for years that he looked like the character, Brunelle watched an episode that included a scene he called 'awkward' to see his doppelgänger in. 'I said, 'Oh my God, it looks like me, and he's taking a bath!'' said Brunelle, who felt like he was watching himself on TV. Upon realizing he couldn't be the only lookalike, Brunelle started photographing doppelgängers together. Some of the pairs he captured didn't see the resemblance, 'which can be quite surprising (and entertaining) at times,' Brunelle admitted via email to USA TODAY. He started his project in Montréal with lookalikes he knew in Canada. As media coverage grew and word spread on social media, he received thousands of messages from people worldwide. Many of the doppelgängers he photographed know each other in real life and were made aware of their resemblance to each other after being told by others, like Ester Scholten and Agnes Loonstra. In 2013, Loonstra was approached by a man on a train in the Netherlands. He mistakenly thought she was one of his university students, Scholten, and encouraged Loonstra to reach out to her. Meanwhile, Scholten learned about this encounter from her professor. Out of curiosity, Loonstra decided to find Scholten on Facebook. Scholten shared a translation of the first message she ever received from Loonstra with USA TODAY. 'Hi Ester, probably a bit of an unexpected message, but recently I was approached on the train by a man, and he thought I was you! After some confusion, he said he was a teacher of yours and asked me if I was a girl from Arnhem. Very funny, apparently, he was so amazed by the resemblance (in his eyes) that he insisted I should google you because we seemed so alike. Haha! So here we are... Do you see the same resemblance? 🙂 maybe the ginger hair, bangs and almond-shaped eyes? 🙂' Scholten felt like she was seeing herself when she saw photos of Loonstra on Facebook. 'Even our mouths look somewhat similar. So strange!' Scholten wrote back in her messages to Loonstra. They both found their resemblance surprising because they felt their features were so distinctive that they thought they were unique. The two decided it would be fun to meet, and when they did, they realized it wasn't only their looks that were similar. 'There were a few moments during that first encounter that were almost terrifying, such as the moment we both pulled up a chair to put our feet on and the moment we laughed at the exact same time and discovered the way we laugh is so similar,' Scholten said. Loonstra was 25 and Scholten was 30 when they met on May 4, 2013. At the time, Loonstra was part of an a cappella group that had rehearsals in Scholten's hometown. People waved at her, thinking she was Scholten. 'People I knew told me I had been rude for not saying anything when I passed them,' Scholten said. So Loonstra began waving back at the strangers, followed by a text to Scholten to let her know. From their very first meeting, a friendship was born as they discovered they shared love for the same music, literature and what Scholten calls their "intense' love of cats. 'About half of all our WhatsApp conversations are about cats,' she said. 'We are proud crazy cat ladies.' From that love came the inspiration for a book they published together titled 'Crazy Cat Lady,' combining Loonstra's skills as an illustrator and Scholten's knack for writing. It was picked up by Workman Publishing in New York and has been released worldwide in English and translated to Spanish, German, Finnish, and even Loonstra and Scholten's native language, Dutch. Agnes also played a special role in Ester's wedding as her maid of honor. 'I see Agnes like the little sister I never had,' Scholten said. Although they don't live in the same part of the Netherlands, they try to see each other at least once a month. Loonstra reached out to Brunelle after hearing about his project from several people who sent it to her. Loonstra and Scholten were later included in a study by the Josep Carreras Leukemia Research Institute in Barcelona with other doppelgängers photographed by Brunelle that confirmed they and the other lookalikes were not related. Of the 32 pairs studied, researchers found that the lookalikes share similar DNA variations, particularly concerning genes involved in forming facial features. There were also similarities in height and weight. The study's lead researcher, Manel Esteller, called it 'coincidences of genetics that happen purely by chance,' and does not mean the pairs are related. Despite the study's findings, Loonstra and Scholten are still frequently asked by strangers if they are biologically related, and sometimes, to keep things simple, they just say yes. Brunelle's website features a callout for lookalikes, and he also created pages on Instagram and Facebook for the project. Brunelle plans to release a book this year featuring about 100 photos of the pairs he's photographed, along with a short story from either the subject or his perspective. He shared a few of those stories with USA TODAY. Roniel Tessler and Garrett Levenbrook | New York City, 2013 "I was born in New York, and Roniel in Washington, D.C. Roniel's friends met me at the University of Michigan four years ago and mistook me for him. They then put us in touch, and we discovered we lived near each other. We have remained good friends ever since." ‒ Levenbrook Beatriz Nogueira and Bruna Soares Da Costa | Lisbon, Portugal , 2015 "I work in human resources, and Beatriz is a student. We were both born in Portugal and have been friends since childhood. We first realized we were look-alikes when people started mixing us up. My own father saw a photo of Beatriz and was convinced it was me! I think we look more alike in profile than face-on. We are similar not just physically, but in personality too. And here is a fun detail, I recently discovered we're both left-handed!" ‒ Soares Da Costa Karen Chu and Ashlee Wong | Culver City, California, 2013 "I am a nursing student, while Ashlee is a registered nurse. Most non-Asian people think all Chinese look alike, but that is far from the truth. I consider myself lucky to have met Ashlee, my 'sister' at a traditional Chinese dance performance. Although many people think we look very similar, Ashlee is definitely shorter." - Chu

Christelle Oyiri Turns Up the Volume with 'Perpetual Remix'
Christelle Oyiri Turns Up the Volume with 'Perpetual Remix'

Hypebeast

time4 hours ago

  • Hypebeast

Christelle Oyiri Turns Up the Volume with 'Perpetual Remix'

Under the low-slung ceilings ofTate's Tanks, a sculptural symphony of flesh and machine unfolds. The London institution tapped French artist, DJ and producerChristelle Oyirifor its inaugural Infinities Commission, and her resulting work delivered nothing short of stunning. In a perpetual remix where is my song?examines the impact of digital art on the ways we construct identity, reconsidering bodily form in an age of cut-and-splice technologies and the uncanny parallels between DJing, cosmetic surgery and online image-making. Oyiri's bronze casts of female forms sit atop speaker plinths. Caught between stages of metamorphosis, spotlights move from one figure to the next, as an accompanying soundscape warps from above. Projected behind them is a marriage of filmed footage and found imagery that flickers between internet ephemera and personal archive, bringing forth a hypnotic loop of beauty and performance. 'In a hyperconnected society, where the image is perpetually staged and corrected, how do the virtual and the material come together in the quest for the ideal body? How do aesthetic practices influence our perception of reality and desire?' the artist asks. Now on view through August 28,In a perpetual remix where is my song?marks the debut work for the Infinities Commission, an annual commission that aims to platform artists disrupting the boundaries between creative arenas. This year's panel is chaired by Chief Curator Catherine Wood, alongside the likes of Brian Eno, Ouilimata Gueye, Anne Imhof, Andrea Lissoni and Legacy Russell. Tate ModernBankside,London SE1 9TG,United Kingdom

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