Category: Interviews

Feb 13, 2014

Sarah Jessica Parker Reveals Hidden Talents in Marie Claire March 2014

With her highly anticipated shoeline set to hit Nordstorm stores this spring, Sarah Jessica Parker scored a feature in the March 2014 issue Marie Claire.

During the interview, the “Sex and the City” star dished about herself, including her hidden talents and superstitions.

Highlights from Miss Parker’s Q&A session are as follows. For more, be sure to visit Marie Claire!

On her acting talents no one knows about
“I can do a good working-class English accent.”

On one thing that surprises people about her:
“I can tie a beautiful bow and a proper necktie, and I’m an excellent ironer.”

On her first dollar:
“When I was 8, I was paid $500 to play [the lead in] The Little Match Girl for a week, but I was more excited about the $5 lunch stipend.”

On the superstition she believes in:
“On the first of every month, I say, ‘Rabbit, rabbit.'”

Source – Hollywood Gossip

Feb 11, 2014

Sarah Jessica Parker Visits “The Wendy Williams Show”

Hey everybody! Sarah Jessica Parker stopped by “The Wendy Williams” show earlier today (February 11), which just so happens to be her very first time ever guest appearing on the show. She dishes about her family, living in NYC and her guilty pleasure. Not only that, but she dishes on whether there will be another “Sex and the City” movie, how she deals with the constant paparazzi attention, and she shows off her new SJP Collection line.

Feb 4, 2014

Sarah Jessica Parker Visits MSNBC’s “Morning Joe”

Sarah Jessica Parker stopped by MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” earlier today (February 4) to promote her various new projects. She talks about her role in “The Commons of Pensacola” and her new shoe line. Not only that, but she also talks about the role of a working mom in today’s society. You can check out the 11-minute interview below:

Jan 28, 2014

Sarah Jessica Parker Reflects on a “Wonderful” Run Off-Broadway in “The Commons of Pensacola”

It’s a daunting prospect, coming back to the stage after a prolonged absence. For Sarah Jessica Parker — a multi-award-winning, internationally renowned star of a television series that defined a generation — the pressure was on. Not only was Amanda Peet’s The Commons of Pensacola the first theatrical job Parker took on in 12 years, but it was an untested play receiving its world premiere via the esteemed off-Broadway Manhattan Theatre Club (at New York City Center – Stage I).

It’s easy to see why the piece would be attractive to an actress of Parker’s caliber. Her character, Becca, is a juicy one: the grown daughter of a Madoff-like businessman and his possibly complicit wife (played by Blythe Danner), who must come to terms with her family’s situation. Not only that, but it was the opportunity, after 18 years, to reunite with Danner, an actress whose praises Parker is elated to sing; the two had last appeared onstage together in MTC’s 1995 production of Sylvia.

As her extended and extended-again run in The Commons of Pensacola comes to a close on February 9, TheaterMania chatted with Parker about her off-Broadway return, her offstage love of her onstage mama, and her own family’s place in dictating the jobs she takes.

What was it that attracted you to the piece and the character?
The challenge of it every night — trying to figure out a person who seems rather uncomplicated, who proves very quickly to be not only very complicated, but in real despair…rudderless, at sea, lost, and really perfecting the sort of mediocrity that is pretty paralyzing.

You have a long history with Manhattan Theatre Club. How does it feel to be back performing on one of its stages again?
It’s wonderful. This is the fourth time I worked there. I did my first play there in 1978. Obviously I have affection for [Artistic Director] Lynne [Meadow] and [Executive Producer] Barry [Grove]. I’ve had successful experiences there and less successful experiences there, but I certainly feel that it’s a home of sorts.

The concept of this play seems very topical — ripped from the headlines, even. But then it delves a lot deeper.
I think the headlines are a mere jumping-off point, they’re really rather peripheral very quickly. In many ways it’s really less related to headlines than to familial complexity. What it’s about is a mother and a daughter. How do parents love and how are children disappointed by that love? When do we recognize our own complicity in our disappointments? At what age do you step into adulthood and no longer have the opportunity? Coming to terms with favoritism in a family. I think that’s what people connect to in the play. They enjoy the conversation of what would you do? But what we find most impactful is the despair, and the attempts at love that are missed. That’s what we hear people blowing their nose over every night.

You and Blythe have such a palpable chemistry on stage, and you’ve worked together before, at MTC, on Sylvia. How did you go about forming a mother-daughter bond?
We didn’t plot any path. I really wanted her to do this…I just love her. I begged her to do a table read just to consider it. I hold her in very high regard. When I did Sylvia, I genuinely fell in love with her. When she left — she couldn’t extend — and when that play was extended, on the first day she was gone, I literally turned upstage and was just weeping, missing her. A lot of people who play opposite each other and have to illustrate love don’t love each other. It’s not our job to plot out how to be affectionate; we’re supposed to tell the story and whether or not we feel that is immaterial. It just so happens we do. [laughs]

What have the audiences been like? I know a lot of young people who don’t usually see theater who have gone to see the play, owing to your being in it.
We’ve had really wonderful, generous, very demonstrative audiences. Lots of people of all different ages from all over the world have been coming. We have people who’ve said to us, “I’ve never seen a play before.” People with wonderful accents from Australia and Peru and Scotland and Germany. Some of them have made the trip to see the play and built a week around it. The [show] plays differently at night because they’re a different audience. [But] I’ll say this about the seniors [audience members]: They have kept that theater alive and I’m enormously grateful to their dedication. They’re deeply committed, loyal, and thoughtful. I’m really delighted with the audiences we’ve had to play for.

Do you think that performing off-Broadway is a less pressure-filled environment than, say, if you were doing this on Broadway?
I think I have felt an appropriate amount of pressure because the role is so challenging. I don’t know that I would have distinguished it differently from one venue to the other. The pressure one feels about the role is the most important thing. Not the pressure — the challenge of fulfilling an opportunity. I think I like the fact that we were on this stage, so we could extend. They wanted to move the play to Broadway but there are no theaters available at this late date that would be suitable. It’s a little disappointing for us, because it’s such a marvelous piece and it seems to be making such a connection with audiences. But I don’t know that it would be different one way or the other. The pressure that I put on myself seems as pregnant as it could have been. [laughs] I don’t know how much more pressure I could have felt elsewhere.

If they came to you next season and asked you to move with it to Broadway, would you?
I don’t know how all that works…I wonder about momentum. Also, we all have these other things that were obligated to. Getting everybody back together might be complicated.

Has this experience whet your appetite for more stage work?
This was extraordinary, and I have loved it, even at my most terrified moments. But it has been challenging for my children. I’ve been gone at times they’ve been very accustomed to me being with them. It sounds like not a big deal but it has proved to be a big deal for them.

They’re young, that’s understandable.
My son is much more circumspect about it, but my daughters who are four-and-a-half are not particularly amused by my absence. Every time it’s been extended and that date has changed on the calendar has been a little bit of a hardship for them. I have to think about that. Movies and television are slightly different, because you can shoot during the day and be home at night for bedtime. Bedtime is really important to them and it’s important to me. So I have to figure it out. I would certainly like to and I’ve just recently read another great play, but I have to think about how it fits into my family’s life.

Source – Theater Mania

Jan 15, 2014

Gayle King Takes You Behind the Scenes of Sarah Jessica Parker’s New Shoe Line

In our February issue (on newsstands Tuesday, January 21), the unabashedly shoe-obsessed Sarah Jessica Parker gives fellow sole sister Gayle King a walking tour of her new line of fabulous footwear. Check out our sneak peek of their conversation below!

Sarah Jessica Parker on the heel height of SJP, her first foray into shoes:
“These heels are high, but not like you’re on stilts. There’s nothing sexy about not being able to walk.”

On the price point ranging from just under $200 to just under $500 a pair:
“Those are hard-earned bucks so I really tried to give women beautiful silhouettes and colors and excellent quality for their money. I didn’t want to do anything that says, ‘Oh, these shoes are 2014.’ I want my shoes to be a part of the world for a long time to come.”

On the thin touch of grosgrain ribbon on each shoe:
“The thing is, when I was growing up, we really didn’t have two nickels to rub together, but my mother always made sure that my sisters and I had two grosgrain ribbons in our hair. The rule was that we ironed them every single morning. We even had a special bureau dedicated to hair ribbons. I have them for my own daughters now, and my nieces wear them too. The grosgrain ribbons make SJP’s really identifiable to others and really personal to me.”

George Malkemus, CEO of Manolo Blahnik USA on how this collection came to be:
“Sarah called me and said she’d been thinking a lot about shoes. Before she could finish that sentence, I said, ‘Be in my office tomorrow morning.'”

The collection, with shoe prices ranging from $195 to $485 and bags $375 and under, will be available exclusively at Nordstrom starting February 28th.

Source – Oprah.com

Jan 7, 2014

Sarah Jessica Parker Covers “InStyle” February 2014

Sarah Jessica has yet again graced the cover of “InStyle” magazine! She is featured on the February 2014 issue this time. You can check out a sneak peek of the cover below, as well as snippets from the interview. She looks beautiful, doesn’t she? Magazine scans will be uploaded soon, as well as the photoshoot. Enjoy!

Sarah Jessica Parker is colorful as can be in a Prada dress on the cover of InStyle magazine’s February 2014 issue, on newsstands Friday.

Here’s what the 48-year-old actress had to share with the mag:

On age appropriate fashion: “People should dress the way they want. Any rules for age or shape are silly. If you walk out the door feeling good about yourself, that’s what counts.”

On her words to live by: “The Golden Rule – do unto others as you would have them do unto you – that’s my religion, my dogma. As soon as my son could recite it back, I’d repeat it to him.”

On her success: “The real success happened after I was grown, and that saved me. I was appreciative of all of it, and continue to be – my gosh. I don’t think my success has ever defined me; it’s just this thing that I carry around and then shepherd in a hopefully graceful way, you know?”

On a possible Sex and the City reunion: “A part of me thinks there is one last chapter to tell. But timing is a peculiar thing. It isn’t a decision that can wait forever. I don’t want to have to wear muumuus!”

FYI: Sarah Jessica is also wearing David Yurman earrings and Fred Leighton bracelets.

Dec 19, 2013

Video: “Watch What Happens Live” After Show Clips

As mentioned, Sarah Jessica stopped by “Watch What Happens Live” last night. If you haven’t seen the 4 Must-See Moments from the show, you can check them out here. Afterwards, you can view the 3 after show videos. In part one, Sarah talks about her dog Kissy and her nightly “date” with Andy’s dog Waca. In part two, Sarah tells the WWHL audience her thoughts on the HBO hit series “Girls.” And in part three, a caller asks Sarah to name her favorite “Sex and the City” outfit. They are all great videos and it’s so awesome to see Sarah out and about again making appearances. Enjoy!

Dec 19, 2013

Video: Sarah Jessica Parker Stopped by “Watch What Happens Live”

Hey everybody! Things have been quite slow with Sarah Jessica Parker these days, but she did make an appearance on “Watch What Happens Live” last night. I have yet to get my hands on a full episode, but in the meantime, you can catch 4 video clips from the show. Enjoy!