Sunday, November 24, 2024
HomeHottest TrendsWhen Sex and the City Returns, Will It Finally Get Queer People...

When Sex and the City Returns, Will It Finally Get Queer People Right? – Vanity Fair

On Sunday, HBO Max confirmed that a Sex and the City reboot called And Just Like That… is officially in the works—an announcement that inspired fervent speculation among fans and critics. (Not least because the show is, tragically, down one lead: Kim Cattrall’s Samantha.) The original series was famously candid, and often clever, as it followed four friends—Samantha, Sarah Jessica Parker’s Carrie, Cynthia Nixon’s Miranda, and Kristin Davis’s Charlotte—snappily discussing the details of their sex lives, dating preferences, and personal aspirations. But its quippy, city-girl tone has aged unevenly. Though that approach was well-suited to a story about proudly imperfect women, the show also used it as a cheap excuse to center a very specific viewpoint: straight white affluence, as written by straight white women and gay white men.

For those who still watch the original series whenever they’ve got five hours to waste away on the couch, it’s not hard to acknowledge its wrongheadedness while enjoying its tenacity and extreme watchability. Much like its descendant Girls, SATC drilled into even the most sharply critical millennials that it may be useless to try to untangle those characteristics—and anyway, it’s all just television, right? Who doesn’t enjoy an elevated mess?

News of a reboot, though, invites us to reconsider the show’s tone and ideas—and often, Sex and the City’s jibes took the form of homophobia and transphobia. Throughout the course of the series, Samantha gleefully used a transphobic slur in a dig against sex workers; Carrie doubted the validity of bisexual men; in more than one episode, lesbians were portrayed as exclusively white, rich, and power-hungry. Stanford (Willie Garson), Carrie’s token gay male friend, was more of an accessory than a person; in the second Sex and the City movie, he ended up marrying the franchise’s only other gay male regular, even though his future husband once chastised his friend Charlotte for assuming he’d even be interested in Stanford. (“Why, because he’s gay and I’m gay?” Mario Cantone’s Anthony asked in season four. “Charlotte, let me clear something up for you…I could do a lot better.”)

Even when Samantha, the most sexually adventurous of the bunch, dated a woman (played by the beloved Brazilian actor Sônia Braga), Sex and the City fumbled. The show used lesbianism as a narrative device, painting it as a strategy born out of dating fatigue; the possibility that Samantha was legitimately curious or bisexual was never explored. Her friends’ sly, self-centered commentary about her new relationship—that Samantha was simply in a phase, that she was doing this for attention—was framed not as gossip, but insight.

To those outside of queer communities, such a reading may come as a surprise; how could Sex and the City get gay people so wrong? How could its openly gay writers—primarily creator Darren Star and executive producer Michael Patrick King—sorely misrepresent a group they’re a part of?

But it’s old news to note that (usually upper-class) white gay men have a deserved reputation for taking conservative and even bigoted positions about their trans, Black, lesbian, or fat brethren, acting as if a mix of self-hatred and disdain of the Other is a charming personality trait. Accordingly, Sex and the City’s most reactionary perspectives are never portrayed as a source of shame for the characters or their acquaintances; they’re always meant as light entertainment. Similarly, straight white women—like the bulk of Sex and the City’s writers—can often act as accomplices and avatars for this exclusion. In many ways, Sex and the City used the much-stereotyped dynamic of friendship between straight white women and gay men to prop up self-assuredly ignorant worldviews.

It’s this age-old mix of gay patriarchy and white supremacy that adds a layer of trepidation to anyone anticipating HBO’s limited-series revival of the show. Star, now helming the popularly hate-watched Emily in Paris, is out, while King, who wrote and directed SATC’s critically maligned but lucrative film sequels, is in. Star and King worked alongside each other for years on the original series; in the interim, King produced the CBS sitcom 2 Broke Girls, which received criticism for blatant racism. The skill it will take to issue a reboot that is self-aware without being self-conscious requires more than experience or self-help revelations—imagination is essential.

But And Just Like That… will be a fresh creation, existing firmly in the present—a present where, for example, Cynthia Nixon is now married to a woman and the mother to a trans child. It’s unlikely that she, at least, would sign onto And Just Like That… if its scripts were as cavalier about queer issues as the original series so often was. Could a reprisal force King to examine how his characters’ flaws were often rooted in an anti-queer mentality? Or will the new series simply paper over the show’s history by making Carrie, Miranda, and Charlotte paragons of midlife emotional and moral growth? Perhaps, in the end, our fan fiction about a lesbian New York governor Miranda Hobbes could come to fruition—as an audience-pandering plot that atones for Sex and the City’s past sins.

More Great Stories From Vanity Fair

— Inside Bridgerton’s Sexy, Modern Makeover of the Regency Period Drama
Borat’s Maria Bakalova Had a Sweet Reunion With Jeanise Jones
— Tina Fey and Robert Carlock Wrestle Clumsily With Politics in Mr. Mayor
Blazing Blonde Bombshell: Barbara Payton’s Boulevard of Broken Dreams
— Bryan Cranston Dances With the Devil in Your Honor
Meet Bridgerton’s Dreamboat Duke, Regé-Jean Page
— Stephen Colbert Answers the Proust Questionnaire
— From the Archive: San Simeon’s Child

— Not a subscriber? Join Vanity Fair to receive full access to VF.com and the complete online archive now.

RELATED ARTICLES

Most Popular

Recent Comments

pacomonkey007 on
nickrod32 on
Kate on
Gabriel Jimenez on
Boris Dorofeev on
AlexanderCostan on
Gouki249 on
Michael Schaper on
Supertomiman on
Robert Johns on
heyayup on
J.N Turner on
Cassandra Sainvilus on
mistermiah21 on
AL T on
Stjepan Vončina on
Alesandros356 on
Μαριος Κοσκολος on
Kikoushinzen on
Chanti Allen on
askvir2 on
PR3DA7EUR on
mikkita88 on
Shanoriya Robinson on
hightune21 on
s0medudeonline on
Ryan Wright on
Imcia Rens on
Garchomp Pit on
Kai Laa on
king vapor on
king vapor on
barosan jupan on
camaflauge on
Omar Doleymi on
JawNas1 on
Ibraheem Mansour on
SuperAceone on
James Darwin on
toomuchdingding on
lanciauxrayz on
curioussebastian on
Iman Farahin on
Samhain entertainment on
longsweep1 on
SuperCaffeinelover on
Rin Lee on
Samhain entertainment on
banglawaz0 on
banglawaz0 on
Chope89 on
nikos sicks on
ForZaSLaN1905 on
Kieran Murphy on
Brian Sirovey on
Enrico Baratelli on
Kenn Zesky on
Synthiotics on
ROGAN on
DJVM95 on
Corie Jacobs on
久登 寺島 on
Jakob Vlietstra on
shook one on
shook one on
Zeracan on
jarjarbinx79 on
keefkeef chiefchief on
WolfgangSenske on
Pieceofshit19 on
numbstateofennui on
The Real Witches on
Tribble Booth on
Greg Blackman on
Emily Fravel on
Daniel Baker on
Ahimsa Porter Sumchai MD on
Eden Brown on
johnboysssss on
CeeJayDee94 on
TheGoodNews01 on
jpalberthoward9 on
lakecrab on
jpalberthoward9 on
lakecrab on
jpalberthoward9 on
jpalberthoward9 on
jpalberthoward9 on
liffeybeat on
Chad Premo on
Michael E. O'Donnell on
徹 田中 on
Izzat Zainal on
InfliiKted on
angelo leslie on
Regena Daunicht on
Eddie The Liar on
DrNepal on
DrNepal on
TheGrimriftstalker on
Tatts Thompson on
Frederico Miranda Brandão Alves on
Jerry Bender on
uncle mike on
Dluv021 on
杏 唯 on
blu jonce on
lakecrab on
justin gingell on
anand- jivano on
kree8r on
Antonio Amaral on
Issam Bensoltane on
David Klonowski on
joe man on
chris badtrekkie on
Iktisam shahriar on
Hilaire Dufresne on
timthepainter1 on
immrnoidall on
Merle McDane on
Royalhighlander on
J Edge on
Mike J on
Mike J on
EarthEats Moon on
equn on
Lozial on
Grey Umopepisdn on
Adski92 on
ninjia1O1 on
murkyslough18 on
Robert Rickner on
okaminess on
stkcarm5 on
Kim Kelly on
funkymcbean on
ojibajo on
mzwickedlette88 on
neotek79 on
1ofmeNlotsofU on
aeroldoth on
TheThorne13 on
QueenLucyThe2nd on
James Gambino on