Sex and the City actresses, from left to right: Kristin Davis, Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Cattrall and Cynthia Nixon -

Landmark / Starface

Even today, Cynthia Nixon is uncomfortable because of the lack of diversity in

Sex and the City

, the series that made her famous.

“I have always been troubled by the heterogeneity of the show.

Certainly on the racial level, but also by the way in which the slice of New York that it showed was incredibly rich, affirmed the one who embodied the character of Miranda Hobbes during an interview granted to

Grazia

and relayed by

Metro UK

.

View this post on Instagram

Thank you @TheSTStyle and @cassblackbird for a fabulous cover.

A post shared by Cynthia Nixon (@cynthiaenixon) on Sep 1, 2020 at 6:00 am PDT

In fact, for Cynthia Nixon, only one character was more or less realistic: that of bartender Steve, played by David Eigenberg, and whose situation was still precarious.

"Miranda's husband was the only portrayal of someone who had no money," the actress remarked.

No hope for the third film

Despite everything, Cynthia Nixon is still "proud" to have been able to participate in the same way as the two films.

And very unfortunately, the actress confirmed that a third feature film had very little chance of seeing the light of day given the deplorable relationship between Sarah Jessica Parker and Kim Cattrall.

People

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  • Actress

  • Sarah jessica parker

  • Diversity

  • Series