Her iconic character Miranda changed up her life on And Just Like That... by ditching her husband Steve and dating the nonbinary comedian Che Diaz.And Cynthia Nixon revealed to Varietyin an interview for its Pride issue that she thinks Miranda was coded as 'queer' even going back to the original Sex And The City series, which ran on HBO from 1998 to 2004.Although the 56-year-old star acknowledge the series didn't have much representation for gay women, she thought Miranda was a 'stand-in' for them thanks to what she saw as 'lesbianic qualities.' Old news: Cynthia Nixon, 56, shared with Variety in an interview published Wednesday that she though her Sex And The City character Miranda had always been queer, even before she came out on And Just Like That; seen May 24 in NYCNixon suggested there were hints that Miranda was queer back in the first series.'Even though she was only really interested in men, I think that Miranda had many other queer and frankly, lesbianic qualities about her,' she opined. 'And I think for a lot of gay women, she — we didn’t have a gay woman!
But she was a stand-in for the gay women we didn’t have.' Michael Patrick King, the showrunner for both the original show and its continuation, asked Nixon if she wanted her character to be queer like her in the new show.'I was like, "Sure, why not!"' she recounted. 'If we’re trying to do different stuff, and show different worlds, and show different aspects of these characters, why not do that?' Hints: 'Even though she was only really interested in men, I think that Miranda had many other queer and frankly, lesbianic qualities about her,' she opined; still from And Just Like That...
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