Waiting for Prince Charming
To understand what Sex and the City says about women, it helps to understand what it says about men. It's simple men are dogs.
This is not necessarily an insult. Sex (Sundays, 9 p.m. E.T. on HBO, which is owned by TIME's parent company, Time Warner) likens even its finest men to man's best friend. Sex columnist Carrie (Sarah Jessica Parker) meets her lover Aidan—a shaggy, happy-go-lucky golden retriever of a guy—when his dog cheerfully buries his snout in her crotch. Lawyer Miranda (Cynthia Nixon), cohabiting with scruffy bartender Steve, agrees to buy a pooch with him, and it becomes a metaphor for their unworkable relationship. Husband-hunting Charlotte (Kristin Davis) learns to control her fiancé with a hand on the wrist: Roll over, boy! Then there's Carrie's on-and-off-and-on squeeze Mr. Big (Chris Noth), a sexy, powerful (and married) alpha wolf.
Dogs are adorable—in theory. Take one in, though, and it can shed, stray, and worse. In its first two seasons Sex became a pop-culture icon for its astute bedroom politics, for the saucy Seinfeld banter (laced with corny double entendres) of its glam foursome, but above all for recognizing that a woman can live well without being at either end of a man's leash.
Its exceptional third season, though, has complicated the arch social comedy by experimenting with—gasp!—committed relationships. "What if Prince Charming had never shown up?" Carrie asks. "Would Snow White have slept in that glass coffin forever? Or would she have eventually woken up, spit out the apple, got a job, a health-care package and a baby from her local neighborhood sperm bank?" Maybe. But this year our heroines are considering another option: settling down with Prince Almost-Charming. (All but Samantha—the deliciously vulpine Kim Catrall—who episode after bed-hopping episode takes Manhattan like, well, a man.)
It proves these women's ability to cut deep that they've been called both "evil, emasculating harpies" (USA Today) and male fantasies. Sex is fantasy, but not that kind. The high-powered Sexettes can afford Maolo Blahnik shoes, La Bernardin dinners and swank Manhattan apartments. Their charmed circumstances would sweeten the solo life for a man or a woman.
But their conflicts are real and honest. Sex avoids p.c. feminism and love-conquers-all romanticism. These over-30 women can read the New York Times wedding section—"the single woman's sports pages"—with both envy and contempt for the 24-year-old brides nabbing investment bankers and ditching their careers. It also avoids pat sitcom situations. When Miranda and Steve parted, he wasn't wackily written off but instead left as he showed up—a decent guy who proved her wrong.
Love—or lust—in Sex is no '70s-style war between the sexes. It's a border negotiation over personal space, customs and autonomy. It's an accomplishment that Sex holds out the possibility of saying no to changing your life for a man. It is an equal one that it can also imagine, just maybe, saying yes. —By James Poniewozik
Is Sex and the City a realistic portrayal of the single life?
WOMEN
Yes 54%
No 41%
MEN
Yes 39%
No 60%
Asked of Women:
Do you have sex as much as the women in Sex and The City?
Yes 21%
No 73%
Which of the main characters do you most identify with?
Carrie, the introspective writer 36%
Charlotte, the art dealer looking to get married 25%
Samantha, the blond who's out to have a good time 10%
Miranda, the readhead with hang-ups 9%
Don't identify with any 13%
*Asked of 186 never-married single adults comprising 88 women and 98 men who watch the show. Sampling is +/-7.2%
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