People
Sarah Jessica Parker suffered from comments to her exterior
Copy the current link
Add to the memorial list
In “Sex and the City” she played the confident columnist Carrie Bradshaw. But at that time she suffered from comments about her appearance for a while, as she says.
US actress Sarah Jessica Parker had to struggle with comments at “Sex and the City” during the time. “I was not prepared for public comments,” said the 60-year-old in the podcast “Call Her Daddy”. It didn’t feel like a real conversation in which she could answer.
“I didn’t have the feeling that I could sit in one room and someone would say to me:” You are really unattractive “, and then I could say:” Wow. So, firstly, it’s hard to hear something like that. But secondly, why do you seem angry about it or why do you think it is necessary to comment on that? ‘””.
“Enter the gastric pit”
At once, she made it crying, said Parker. “I was drawn to the fact that a magazine said something really in common about me and my appearance,” said Parker. “And that was like a kick in the stomach pit.” At that time she called two of her friends “and I sobbed because it felt so targeted,” said Parker. “I think it was the only time that I really cried because of it.”
Overall, it was “simply the sum of comments of this kind – over a whole season”. “And at some point it just comes close to you.” And even if nobody wanted to meet her with it – they were simply “so cruel” to her, adds Parker.
Parker played the relationship columnist Carrie Bradshaw in the cult series “Sex and the City” from 1998 to 2004. Together with her old serial colleagues Cynthia Nixon and Kristin Davis, she can also be seen in the new edition “And Just Like That …”. The third season of the series around a group of New Yorkers started in Germany in Germany on Sky and Wow.
dpa
Source: Stern

I am an author and journalist who has worked in the entertainment industry for over a decade. I currently work as a news editor at a major news website, and my focus is on covering the latest trends in entertainment. I also write occasional pieces for other outlets, and have authored two books about the entertainment industry.