PROFESSIONS
Actor
SOMETIMES CREDITED AS
Clare Woodgate, Kim Victoria Cattrall
BIOGRAPHY
Screen and stage actress Kim Cattrall was best known for her role as New York PR agent and femme fatale Samantha Jones on the hit HBO series "Sex and the City" (1998-2004). But prior to her lusty adventures in Manolo Blahnik shoes, Cattrall built up a long list of credits in forgotten low-budget features and TV movies during the 1980s, earning some notoriety for playing....
Screen and stage actress Kim Cattrall was best known for her role as New York PR agent and femme fatale Samantha Jones on the hit HBO series "Sex and the City" (1998-2004). But prior to her lusty adventures in Manolo Blahnik shoes, Cattrall built up a long list of credits in forgotten low-budget features and TV movies during the 1980s, earning some notoriety for playing sexpots in “Porkys” (1982), “Police Academy” (1984) and “Mannequin” (1987). However her lackluster film career belied her classical theater training in London and New York, where her early acting days were marked by appearances in heavy dramas. These seemingly at-odds career paths finally converged to create the charismatic, sexy, and intense character that earned the actress an Emmy Award and the respect of countless women who felt that Cattrall’s performance as the unapologetically lustful Samantha laid waste to preconceived views of just how sexual a woman could or should be.

Born outside of Liverpool, England, on Aug. 21, 1956, Cattrall and her family moved to Vancouver, Canada, before she was a year old. Her parents added two more kids to the family (for a total of four) by the time the Cattrall clan returned to England to be near an ailing grandmother. The 11-year-old saw her first play, Oscar Wilde’s “The Importance of Being Earnest,” on London’s famed West End and decided then and there to become an actress. She took drama courses at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts and around this time, debuted in regional theater. When Cattrall returned to Canada at the age of 16, she continued her studies at the Banff School of Fine Arts, and upon graduating in 1972, headed to New York City, where she had earned a scholarship to the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. She made her feature film acting debut for producer-director Otto Preminger in one of the great director’s final (if least-admired) films "Rosebud" (1975). Soon after the film’s release, she signed a television deal with Universal and was up and running.

Cattrall enjoyed an auspicious start with over a dozen guest spots on 1970s staples like “The Incredible Hulk” (CBS, 1978-1982) and “Charlie’s Angels” (ABC, 1976-1981) and several movie(s)-of-the-week. But it was not until 1980 that she landed a truly showy part; that of the young woman hand-picked by Jack Lemmon to bring his stuffy son Robby Benson alive in "Tribute." The teen sex comedy “Porkys” (1982), however, really put Cattrall on the map with her portrayal of a sex-starved coach in what became a classic of an intriguingly awful genre. Two years later, she played a sexy cadet in the blockbuster ensemble comedy "Police Academy" (1984) before reigning in the broad comedies to play an idealistic young public defender and love interest of an anti-establishment prankster (Timothy Hutton) in “Turk 182!” (1985). That same year, Cattrall appeared on stage as Masha in an acclaimed production of "Three Sisters" before going on to make her Broadway debut opposite Ian McKellan in an unsuccessful adaptation of Chekhov’s "Wild Honey."

In one of her better dramatic film roles, Cattrall played a sharp lawyer in John Carpenter's "Big Trouble in Little China" (1986), but offset that success by morphing into a department store mannequin brought to life to fulfill the fantasies of a doe-eyed Andrew McCarthy in 1987’s "Mannequin." She was excellent as a bitchy socialite in Bob Swaim's stylish thriller "Masquerade" (1988) and enjoyed some notice for her turn as villainous Justine DeWinter in the otherwise uninspired reunion film "The Return of the Musketeers" (1989). Cattrall returned to stage in “The Misanthrope" in 1989 at Chicago's famed Goodman Theatre and appeared as the Park Avenue wife of a New York power broker (Tom Hanks) in the failed adaptation of Tom Wolfe’s “Bonfire of the Vanities” (1990). Following a high-profile role as Mr. Spock's protégé Valeris in "Star Trek IV: The Undiscovered Country" (1991), the actress’ career suffered from a string of low-budget flops that capitalized on her fluency with steamy material. With the exception of the Oliver Stone-produced "Twin Peaks"-style miniseries, "Wild Palms" (ABC, 1993) and the adaptation of Wendy Wasserstein’s "The Heidi Chronicles" (TNT, 1995), her increasing appearances in TV movies and miniseries was generally overshadowed by the sharks, aliens, and murderers the plots revolved around.

Cattrall was fresh off of a few straight-to-video features when she was approached by Darren Starr about a stylish new series chronicling four single, professional women in New York City. The newly-40 actress famously rebuffed his offer several times, leery of committing herself to potentially years on one show and hesitant as to whether she could still pull off “femme fatale.” It turned out that the role of Samantha Jones was be the best fit that she had found in years, and “Sex and the City” instantly became a pop culture phenomena. Her vampy public relations maven was the most carnally adventurous of the group – which included Sarah Jessica Parker, Cynthia Nixon and Kristin Davis – and Cattrall brought an exceptionally self-assured performance and natural joie de vivre to her portrayal of the straight-talking socialite. Samantha was easily the show's most outrageous – if sometimes cartoonish – character, which made her integral to the show's comedic success. Her invaluable contribution was recognized with five Emmy nominations and one Golden Globe win during the show’s six seasons.

Cattrall’s attempts to parlay her new television success into a revived film career were unsuccessful, however. One needed to look no further than then "Baby Geniuses" (1999) to get a whiff of its stink, and only needed to know that "Crossroads" (2002) starred Britney Spears to surmise the quality of that offering. On a lighter note, Cattrall became a sexy spokeswoman for Bacardi and Pepsi and co-authored a sex-tip tome entitled Satisfaction: The Art of the Female Orgasm with then-husband Mark Levinson. When HBO retired “Sex and the City” in 2004 – amid unpleasant rumors that Cattrall’s clashes with lead actress and producer Parker had something to do with its demise – Cattrall returned to London where she appeared in a revival of Brian Clark’s “Whose Life is it Anyway?” and David Mamet’s “Cryptogram.” In 2008, she revisited her role of Samantha Jones in the highly-anticipated “Sex and the City: The Movie” (2008), following rumors that she had held up the production over salary disagreements.



Family

Father:  Dennis Cattrall  
Husband:  Larry Davis  (Canadian; married from 1977-1979; marriage to Davis was annulled)
Husband:  Mark Levinson  (Born c. 1947; married Sept. 4, 1998 in East Hampton, NY; divorced in 2004)
Husband:  Andreas Lyson  (German; married from 1982-1989)
Mother:  Shane Cattrall  

Companions

Daniel Benzali (Born in 1950; briefly engaged in 1996; no longer together)
Jonathan Silverman (Dated in late 1980s; no longer together)
Pierre Trudeau (Briefly dated; no longer together)
Cuttino Mobley (Played for the Houston Rockets; briefly dated in 2004; no longer together)
Alan Wyse (Canadian; Wyse is 20 years her junior; together from 2004-2009)

Education

London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art London, England
The Banff School Alberta, Canada fine arts
American Academy of Dramatic Arts New York, NY
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