From her career-defining role as the much-loved Samantha Jones in Sex And The City to her theatrical turns in the likes of Anthony and Cleopatra and Private Lives, to her latest project Sensitive Skin, Kim Cattrall is passionate about the importance of telling stories that actually reflect female experience โ rather than just re-hashing tired old โtwo-dimensionalโ stereotypes of โa woman my age whoโs wanting to sleep with a hot young thing,โ as she puts it herself.
Itโs for this reason that Cattrall fought to get Sensitive Skin, originally a BBC Two black comedy, remade for HBO. As well as lending her expertise as executive producer, Kim stars as Davina, a 50-something woman who is attempting to navigate the โunchartered watersโ of middle age.
โHer life has been a certain way for so long [โฆ] I thought, โWow, this is a story about a woman who went right instead of left during her life, and now sheโs examining that,โ and well, Iโm examining that in my life, too,โ she explains.
Here, Cattrall talks about why we need to see older womenโs stories on screen and the secret to Sex And The Cityโs longevity.

How she picks her roles
โWhen I was younger, I just wanted the experience of getting in front of the camera, but now, especially as a producer, I look at projects and think โWhat do I want to say? Does this talk to me?โ When I first saw the BBC version of Sensitive Skin, I was really taken aback because it was a story I had never seen told, that was interesting, unique and original. Iโm not looking to play a stock character of a woman my age whoโs wanting to sleep with a hot young thing; none of that really interests me. Iโm interested in self-reflection, especially in my work as a producer.โ
WATCH: Kim Cattrall discusses Samantha Jonesโ best scenes (story continues after video)
Why we donโt often see an older womanโs story told on screen
โIf it does get told, itโs so two dimensional. Youโll either see women as dowdy and masculine looking, or obsessed with plastic surgery and you think โUrgh, thereโs got to be more to it than that.โ
โI think we still need more [opportunities]; I think we need to go deeper with some of them, and thatโs why Sensitive Skin has been so important to me. We need more stories about women this age; it will help younger women understand more about getting older, and inform the decisions that theyโre making now.โ

On breaking down gender barriers
โWe need more female writers to tell those stories. Womenโs stories should be a reflection, as they were in Sex and the City. We had a lot of female writers in the room, so the storylines were the self-examination of what those writers were dealing with. Itโs been fascinating for me to be in a show and also produce it โ my collaborators are two men, and though we never cross swords, there have been times when I am so clear in the discussion [about my character, about female experience] but for them, it still feels like an enigma. Thatโs part of the battle, part of the reason for telling a story โ to break down those gender barriers and make it a human story rather than โjustโ a womanโs story.โ

The SATC gang back in 1998, at the screening of their then-new show called Sex and the City.
The secret behind SATCโs longevity
โItโs really well written. The first story you hear is Cinderella, and you spend the rest of your life trying to get rid of the programming of that story in your head: who are you if youโre not married? Who are you if youโre not a mother? Who are you if youโre not an aunt? The stories that we tell have to have some kind of staying power. There are so many things that youโll forgive as a viewer, but ultimately itโs not going to last, itโs not going to resonate if the writing is not good.โ
This story originally appeared on Grazia Daily.
