Kim Cattrall denies ever being friends with her Sex and the City co-stars
THEY were best friends on screen for years, but the real-life feud between the stars of Sex and the City is getting nastier.
SEX And The City actress Kim Cattrall has revealed she was never friends with her co-stars.
The actress, 61, who played Samantha Jones in the TV show and spin-off films, recently hit the headlines after saying Sarah Jessica Parker “could have been nicer” after Cattrall turned down a third Sex And The City movie, The Sun reports.
Speaking about her three co-stars, she tells Piers Morgan’s Life Stories: “We’ve never been friends. We’ve been colleagues and in some ways it’s a very healthy place to be.”
Cattrall has said, in comments previously reported, that the relationship had become “toxic” and hit out at being portrayed as a “diva”, adding of Parker: “I really think she could have been nicer. I don’t know what her issue is.”
The actress also discussed Donald Trump’s cameo in Sex And The City before he became President.
“He didn’t want anyone to touch his hair. He did his own make-up which was decidedly orange ... it hasn’t been enhanced,” she said.
“And we were shooting at the Plaza (Hotel) and he owned the Plaza at the time, and part of the deal with shooting in the Plaza was he had to be in it.
“He wasn’t supposed to say a line because if you are sort of basically an extra you get paid a certain amount, but if you say a line you get more money — and of course he said a line,” she said.
During the interview, the actress was asked about the most embarrassing sex scene she ever worked on as Samantha Jones.
“We were doing the scene and he is on top of me and then he collapsed and then he farted, and I thought, ‘is this an acting choice he has made?’ I didn’t really understand what was going on,” she said.
“And what had happened was he had been working out so much and so frantically, and had been on a diet, he had forgotten to eat and when he fell on me he passed out. It was pretty gross.”
This story originally appeared in The Sun and is republished here with permission.