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Cynthia Nixon: 'Sex And The City Was Always A Feminist Show'
Cynthia Nixon: 'Sex And The City Was Always A Feminist Show'

Graziadaily

time26-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Graziadaily

Cynthia Nixon: 'Sex And The City Was Always A Feminist Show'

Cynthia Nixon (who, it must be said, is such a Miranda) does not sugar coat it when I ask her how the mood is among liberals in New York right now, living under Trump 2.0. 'It's terrible. It's very hard to even say: how are you?' She shakes her head, lists a few things she is newly concerned about this week ('Like, why would we need a Department of Education? Ha!'), then tells me about a few of the things she is trying to do about it. Just before we meet, she and her wife, education activist Christine Marinoni, threw a benefit for the Democrat Socialist mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani at their house. It was co-hosted by Sarita Choudhury, her costar in And Just Like That , and Nixon's The Gilded Age co-stars Morgan Spector and Denée Benton. She's also due to walk in a 'fashion show for the trans community' and attend a Hands Off protest in Bryant Park, while also organising her 59th birthday party, a fundraiser for the Chicago Abortion Fund. Nixon, 59, is one of the most politically active actors out there: she ran for governor of New York City in 2018 (she lost but has said that the process enabled her to 'shed light on progressive issues'). Right now, 'I've been throwing myself into a number of political things. You're in despair all the time anyway, but either you're in despair and paralysed, or there are things you're working on.' At the same time, Nixon is currently promoting not one, but two major HBO shows. Aforementioned The Gilded Age is about New York City in its 1800s boom time. She plays Ada Forte, long-suffering sister of caustic aristocrat Agnes van Rhijn (Christine Baranski). And, of course, there's season three of And Just Like That . For the first time, the shows were filmed simultaneously, so Nixon's 2024 sounds pretty fraught, spent whizzing between centuries, characters and locations, from Brooklyn to Albany. We sit in an empty studio after Nixon's cover shoot. She has changed into her own clothes and carries a backpack that might well belong to one of her three kids, decorated with superhero-themed cartoon strips. Though Sex And The City will always be known for introducing the world to the Baguettes, Birkins and brownstones of the upper crust Manhattan lifestyle, it was never the glamour that appealed to Nixon. ('I never pay any attention to the clothes,' she says, and visibly glazes over when I ask about Miranda's wardrobe.) But she is passionate about the ways the show changed the media landscape for women. It is, she says, 'a feminist show – it's always been a feminist show'. 'What you have to remember is that we were in our thirties and forties. Of course, I look at the show now, we look like babies, but being single at that age, at that time, still had a kind of stigma.' Its central message was unheard of: 'You can be a woman, you can have a lot of sex with a lot of different people. It didn't make you a slut and it didn't mean you were using sex to get something. You were having sex – because you enjoyed having sex!' she says. When it first aired in 1998, long before shows like Girls , Insecure and Dying For Sex , that message felt revolutionary. In the late '90s and '00s, the show ruled pop culture so comprehensively that the question of whether one was a Carrie, a Charlotte, a Samantha or a Miranda became the Myers-Briggs of the age. Miranda, who cared less about designer labels and was 'defined by her career and friendships' was not necessarily the aspirational choice. 'People used to see her as very didactic and strident and humourless,' says Nixon. In recent years, however, she has developed a cult following, and many fans are firmly Team Miranda. Nixon has noticed the shift. 'Stuff she was ballyhooing from the rooftops, I think, became common wisdom. The culture did sort of move to meet where Miranda was standing,' she says – though she catches herself. 'I mean, that has been true in recent history. Of course, in America, and I think in many places, the world is moving again. Away from a lot of the feminist ideas that Miranda had.' Such a calibrated answer is typical of Nixon, who never tips into full-on nostalgia when speaking about the show, tempting as it is to do so. She watched the entire series in preparation for And Just Like That and felt that 90% was 'still pretty great', but 'certain things have really not aged well'. Even at the time, 'it was always very difficult being on a show that was so white. I always hated that. When we would raise it, we were told: this is Candace Bushnell's world and it's a very white world. I'm like, OK…' she says. Also, she says, 'some of the trans stuff, some of the gay stuff was a little cringy to look at'. Nixon is, of course, a high-profile member of New York's LGBTQ+ community herself. As has been relentlessly unpicked, And Just Like That attempted to address some of the omissions from the original series with more inclusive casting and storylines about race and LGBTQ+ relationships. The Sex And The City universe has always inspired big feelings in viewers (somewhere on Reddit there are still people complaining that Carrie cheated on Aidan), but the outpouring over some storylines, particularly Miranda leaving husband Steve for the polarising Che Diaz, was unprecedented. Nixon says the 'poor Steve' narrative 'doesn't really bother me. Our show always killed its darlings. If we're just gonna play it safe and nice, why are you watching?' Nixon, who suggested Sara Ramirez for the part of Che, says, 'I love Che, I love Sara. It's hard to know what people would have made of Che if Che hadn't ostensibly broken up Steve and Miranda. But I don't want a show in which everybody is behaving well all the time. A feminist show doesn't show women being perfect.' For all the drama in the comments, on set, she says, the show feels like home. She is close to Kristin Davis, who recently described Nixon as 'my protector', about which Nixon explains that, back in the day, Davis, despite being 'a very powerful person', could sometimes be a little 'too polite. I am the bull in the china shop.' She and Sarah Jessica Parker are firm friends and have a lot in common. They knew each other as child actors – 'we were always auditioning for the same thing. We both had moms who were really all about education and were all about not spending too much money. I mean, in Sarah's case, it was really dire. There is a kind of a theatre ratness about us, we're little kids who grew up in the theatre, we're very New York.' She can't say too much about this season of AJLT , though it has been announced that Ramirez won't return. 'Both the old show and the new show are more fun when people are dating, so Miranda will be dating.' She says that wild upheavals are the point. When she was younger, 'I always imagined that all of the big twists and turns of my life would happen by my early twenties. I thought life was a bit flat after that.' That has not been the case, for Nixon or Miranda, who came to the last season questioning her sexuality, her marriage ('dead in the water') and her career. 'When you're getting out of your childrearing years it is like a form of adolescence. You can return to yourself. There's a lot more behind you than ahead of you. And so it's like: how am I feeling about where I've got to so far? And if I don't like it, am I going to do something about it?' She says such questions are why the roles she is offered now are so much juicer than they were when she was younger. 'I feel like there is a desire to have women who are of childbearing age, sort of bland and sane, because we don't want women who are looking after children to be scary and complicated.' An alarm on her phone sounds. Then there's a phone call. A taxi awaits, to take her to view a prospective school for her youngest child. And with that she is off, backpack on shoulder. The next evening, I see her on Instagram, walking the catwalk wearing a neon green dress at an event for Trans Day of Visibility, with Madonna and Julia Fox in the audience; a week later she's posting from the Hand's Off NYC protest. Not one to sit still, as she told me. 'We're just doing what we can do. If one tries to think of a bright side or a silver lining or whatever, you know, these terrible times are when big things can happen.' Season three of 'And Just Like That' is on Sky Comedy and NOW from 30 May Photographer: Emily Soto Styling: Alicia Lombardini

‘Zohran Mamdani represents the future New York': socialist riding high in bid to be mayor
‘Zohran Mamdani represents the future New York': socialist riding high in bid to be mayor

Yahoo

time19-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

‘Zohran Mamdani represents the future New York': socialist riding high in bid to be mayor

Can a 33-year-old cricket-playing socialist, who wants to freeze rent, make city transport free and once aspired to be a rapper win an already turbulent election to become the next mayor of New York? Zohran Mamdani, a democratic socialist and state assembly ­member in Queens, has been the surprise package in the Democratic primary and is now poised to take on the frontrunner in the race, ex-state governor Andrew Cuomo, who is mounting a political comeback after being forced from office in the face of a series of sexual harassment claims. A recent poll of Democratic ­voters placed Cuomo at 64%, supported mainly by older New Yorkers, and Mamdani at 36%. But with scandal-plagued incumbent Eric Adams sitting out the primary– he may run as an independent – the Ugandan-born Mamdani is in with a chance under a new ranked-choice voting system. 'Zohran is breaking away as a clear second place and the alternative to the disgraced ex-governor Andrew Cuomo whose campaign is a house of cards,' Mamdani spokesperson Andrew Epstein told the Gothamist news site last week. He added that the campaign has been successful so far by 'being everywhere all of the time,' with more than 10,000 volunteers knocking on more than 100,000 doors, and by pushing out a platform of affordability, of rent freezes, free metro transport and city-run grocery stores – as well as the creation of a department of community safety to invest in citywide mental health programs and crisis response. Mamdani's emergence as a viable candidate comes as another New York Democrat Socialist, congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, currently on a packed-out 'Fighting Oligarchy' tour of the US, is being touted as the new face of the national party. Mamdani 'represents the city of the future – a more Asian city, a more Muslim city, and what could be a more leftwing city,' says Democrat campaign veteran Hank Sheinkopf. With New York City ­containing about 800,000 Muslims, with 350,000 believed to be registered to vote, this could be the year that they show their power. 'Every group shows its power in New York at some point because urban power in the US is all about competition for resources,' Sheinkopf adds. Mamdani is the son of Mira Nair, the Academy Award nominated film director of Salaam Bombay!; his father, Mahmood Mamdani, is a professor at Columbia who studies ­colonialism. Around the family ­dinner table they would discuss Darfur and other political topics. Before ­running for office, Mamdani worked as a counsellor, a rapper under the name 'Mr. Cardamom' and as a cricketer. As a lawmaker, he's introduced a bill to eliminate tax exemptions for the city's biggest universities, Columbia and NYU, arguing that the tax funds should go to underfunded public universities; and has said there is a 'ceiling' on the power of representation in identity politics because 'people cannot feed themselves and their family on someone looking like them'. When the Observer caught up with him at an anti-Tesla protest, he said 'it was important that when we turn the page on Elon Musk, we also turn the page on all those who empowered and emboldened the accumulation of this kind of wealth through public policy and public subsidy'. Mamdani said New Yorkers 'have a role to play in fighting back against the wealthiest man in the world, who has purchased the president of the United States. It's critically important that we do so, and we show ourselves standing alongside New Yorkers from all walks of life who are saying that this cannot happen on our watch and our dime.' But key to Mamdani's ­candidacy may be that he's a good ­communicator, appearing in comedy clubs, ­grocery stores, diving into the freezing Atlantic on New Year's Day to illustrate his rent freeze proposal and talking to New Yorkers about why they voted for Trump; and going virtually anywhere to meet young voters that, as Gothamist noted, 'need a jolt to stop doomscrolling'. In short, he's on a mission, alongside Ocasio-Cortez, to revive the Democrats as the Trump presidency marks 100 days in office next week. But New York is also home to the largest Jewish population outside Israel, and Mamdani has faced criticism for accusing Israel of committing American-funded genocide in Gaza. Cuomo, a moderate Democrat, has gone to great lengths to portray antisemitism as a central campaign issue, calling it 'the most serious and the most important issue' in New York , and portraying himself as a 'hyper aggressive supporter of Israel and proud of it'. Mamdani has the capacity to win, says Sheinkopf, but his anti-Israel stance could be a problem: 'Is Mamdani's run a worthwhile demonstration of how healthy a democracy is? Yes. But he's got to convince people his ­behaviour is within the bounds of what [they] consider appropriate.'

‘Zohran Mamdani represents the future New York': socialist riding high in bid to be mayor
‘Zohran Mamdani represents the future New York': socialist riding high in bid to be mayor

The Guardian

time19-04-2025

  • Politics
  • The Guardian

‘Zohran Mamdani represents the future New York': socialist riding high in bid to be mayor

Can a 33-year-old cricket-playing socialist, who wants to freeze rent, make city transport free and once aspired to be a rapper win an already turbulent election to become the next mayor of New York? Zohran Mamdani, a democratic socialist and state assembly ­member in Queens, has been the surprise package in the Democratic primary and is now poised to take on the frontrunner in the race, ex-state governor Andrew Cuomo, who is mounting a political comeback after being forced from office in the face of a series of sexual harassment claims. A recent poll of Democratic ­voters placed Cuomo at 64%, supported mainly by older New Yorkers, and Mamdani at 36%. But with scandal-plagued incumbent Eric Adams sitting out the primary– he may run as an independent – the Ugandan-born Mamdani is in with a chance under a new ranked-choice voting system. 'Zohran is breaking away as a clear second place and the alternative to the disgraced ex-governor Andrew Cuomo whose campaign is a house of cards,' Mamdani spokesperson Andrew Epstein told the Gothamist news site last week. He added that the campaign has been successful so far by 'being everywhere all of the time,' with more than 10,000 volunteers knocking on more than 100,000 doors, and by pushing out a platform of affordability, of rent freezes, free metro transport and city-run grocery stores – as well as the creation of a department of community safety to invest in citywide mental health programs and crisis response. Mamdani's emergence as a viable candidate comes as another New York Democrat Socialist, congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, currently on a packed-out 'Fighting Oligarchy' tour of the US, is being touted as the new face of the national party. Mamdani 'represents the city of the future – a more Asian city, a more Muslim city, and what could be a more leftwing city,' says Democrat campaign veteran Hank Sheinkopf. With New York City ­containing about 800,000 Muslims, with 350,000 believed to be registered to vote, this could be the year that they show their power. 'Every group shows its power in New York at some point because urban power in the US is all about competition for resources,' Sheinkopf adds. Mamdani is the son of Mira Nair, the Academy Award nominated film director of Salaam Bombay!; his father, Mahmood Mamdani, is a professor at Columbia who studies ­colonialism. Around the family ­dinner table they would discuss Darfur and other political topics. Before ­running for office, Mamdani worked as a counsellor, a rapper under the name 'Mr. Cardamom' and as a cricketer. As a lawmaker, he's introduced a bill to eliminate tax exemptions for the city's biggest universities, Columbia and NYU, arguing that the tax funds should go to underfunded public universities; and has said there is a 'ceiling' on the power of representation in identity politics because 'people cannot feed themselves and their family on someone looking like them'. When the Observer caught up with him at an anti-Tesla protest, he said 'it was important that when we turn the page on Elon Musk, we also turn the page on all those who empowered and emboldened the accumulation of this kind of wealth through public policy and public subsidy'. Mamdani said New Yorkers 'have a role to play in fighting back against the wealthiest man in the world, who has purchased the president of the United States. It's critically important that we do so, and we show ourselves standing alongside New Yorkers from all walks of life who are saying that this cannot happen on our watch and our dime.' Sign up to Headlines US Get the most important US headlines and highlights emailed direct to you every morning after newsletter promotion But key to Mamdani's ­candidacy may be that he's a good ­communicator, appearing in comedy clubs, ­grocery stores, diving into the freezing Atlantic on New Year's Day to illustrate his rent freeze proposal and talking to New Yorkers about why they voted for Trump; and going virtually anywhere to meet young voters that, as Gothamist noted, 'need a jolt to stop doomscrolling'. In short, he's on a mission, alongside Ocasio-Cortez, to revive the Democrats as the Trump presidency marks 100 days in office next week. But New York is also home to the largest Jewish population outside Israel, and Mamdani has faced criticism for accusing Israel of committing American-funded genocide in Gaza. Cuomo, a moderate Democrat, has gone to great lengths to portray antisemitism as a central campaign issue, calling it 'the most serious and the most important issue' in New York , and portraying himself as a 'hyper aggressive supporter of Israel and proud of it'. Mamdani has the capacity to win, says Sheinkopf, but his anti-Israel stance could be a problem: 'Is Mamdani's run a worthwhile demonstration of how healthy a democracy is? Yes. But he's got to convince people his ­behaviour is within the bounds of what [they] consider appropriate.'

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