‘And Just Like That’ stars talk race, fashion and whether *that* college scene worked

And certainly when you’re back together with so many of the original people on screen and some really crucial ones behind the camera, it just really feels like you’re putting on a suit of clothes that’s made to fit.

Karen Pittman: Yeah, and it feels like the best party to crash, right? I mean, I think part of my goal as an actor and as an artist is to work on material with collaborators who are interested in saying bold and daring things and great stories with great storytellers and actors.

And the first encounter between the two of you is like Miranda putting her foot in her mouth and then putting it deeper down and then like, swallowing the whole thing.

Was it meant to be a train wreck? And I’m asking because, you know, some critics have panned that scene and said it kind of hits the wrong note.

I’ve dealt with that.” I think because we live in this society that our audience has experienced so much of this cancel culture, we’re under the impression that Miranda’s in danger, but she’s not.

And I mean, I think that’s kind of the idea of the show is like, we don’t want to show these characters doing things that they know how to do, right? We want to pull the rug out from under them a little bit and actually put them in new situations and watch them work.

That very awkward scene we just heard, you know, you’re fishing around in your bag for your reading glasses, Cynthia, and your gray hair is like it’s its own plotline.

And I wanted to have that conversation with the Sex and The City audience to talk about what it looks like to be an African-American woman in New York City with natural hair.

In And Just Like That, Cynthia Nixon, Sarah Jessica Parker and Kristin Davis reprise their roles as Miranda Hobbes, Carrie Bradshaw and Charlotte York from the original Sex and the City series.

While many things have changed, the topline fashion has not.

One thing that has not changed from the original series: The clothes, the shoes.

Nixon: I mean, I think the clothes are beautiful and have always been beautiful and have all the actors and actresses looking amazing.

So I think, Nya in a lot of ways – I talked to Molly Rogers and Danny Santiago, who are the costume designers for the show about exploring, you know, sort of street fashion and street culture.

I mean, I feel like you could take the seven of us, you could line up seven racks that had all of our clothes.

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