A popular screen figure of the 1980s and '90s whose casting in HBO's runaway
hit series Sex and the City provided her career with a solid second wind,
Emmy-winning actress Kim Cattrall has endured to prove that older women can
retain their sexuality and femininity while simultaneously maintaining a vital
screen presence. Born in Liverpool, England, Cattrall's parents immigrated
the family to Vancouver Island, British Columbia, when the future actress
was three years old. After returning to England at age 11 to study at the
London Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts, Cattrall finished high school in
Vancouver, and at age 16 struck out on her own after winning a scholarship
to the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York.
Though director Otto Preminger would sign Cattrall to a five-year contract
and give the actress her film debut in Rosebud (1975), Universal would soon
step in to buy out her contract, making Cattrall one of the last actors to
participate in the now defunct Universal Contract Player System. Following
with television appearances in Starskey and Hutch and Charlie's Angels, and
turning up in such features as Deadly Harvest (1977), it appeared as if good
things were in store for Cattrall in the future. The dawn of the 1980s found
Cattrall's star ascending in such features as Porky's (1981), and with the
release of Police Academy in 1984 her face was becoming a familiar one to
film and television audiences.
Following up with such typically '80s fare as Turk 182! (1985), Cattrall
essayed the role of the green-eyed girl whose fate was questionable in John
Carpenter's Big Trouble in Little China (1986), the year before her most famous
(until Sex and the City of course) role in Mannequin (1987). Essentially a
typical '80s throwaway comedy, Cattrall's effervescent presence, combined
with Starship's catchy title tune "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now,"
gave the film such a boost that it even spawned a Cattrall-less sequel. It
was following Mannequin that Cattrall's career began to stall in the wake
of such instantly forgettable films as Honeymoon Academy (1990) and the Gary
Busey actioner Breaking Point (1993), though her role in 1995's Live Nude
Girls proved a curious precursor to her role on Sex and the City.
A frank and funny HBO series based on the writings of New York Observer
columnist Candace Bushnell, Sex and the City gave Cattrall a chance to shine
as a lusty an unabashedly sexual PR executive whose confidence in the bedroom
rivals only her confidence in the boardroom. Sex and the City once again made
Cattrall a household name as it influenced everything from fashion to the
drinks of the New York scene. Cattrall's character proved so popular that
in mid-2003 it was announced that once Sex and the City drew to a close, she
would star in her own spin-off series. Though she would inexplicably continue
to release such vapid feature fare as Baby Geniuses (1999), appearances in
such efforts as the Britney Spears road drama Crossroads ensured that Cattrall
would remain a familiar face to young audiences. Next up, Cattrall can be
seen in 2005's Ice Princess with Joan Cusack.
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