Cynthia Nixon

Cynthia Nixon is an Emmy and Tony Award-winning actress best known for her role as Miranda Hobbes on the TV and film series ‘Sex and the City.’

Who Is Cynthia Nixon?

Cynthia Nixon was born on April 9, 1966, in New York City. She made her Broadway debut in The Philadelphia Story in 1980. She played Miranda Hobbes in the HBO series Sex and the City, for which she won an Emmy in 2004. In 2006 she won a Tony for her performance in Rabbit Hole. Nixon was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2006, but kept her treatment secret until 2008. The mother of three children, she announced her candidacy for governor of New York in 2018.

Wife and Family

Nixon has two children from her long-term relationship with English professor Danny Mozes. The couple split in 2003. Since then, she has married education activist Christine Marinoni, with whom she has had another child.

Early Life and Education

Cynthia Nixon was born April 9, 1966, in New York City to parents Anne, a Chicago actress, and Walter, a radio journalist. 

After graduating from Hunter College High School, Nixon attended Barnard College.

Movies, TV and Broadway

Early Career

A versatile performer, she began her career on the New York stage as a teenager. She made her Broadway debut in The Philadelphia Story in 1980. That same year, Nixon appeared as a hippie child in the film Little Darlings, with Tatum O’Neal.

Over the next few years, Cynthia Nixon played a variety of roles on stage, television, and film. She appeared in a few television after school specials as well as juggled roles in two Broadway plays — Tom Stoppard's The Real Thing and David Rabe's Hurlyburly — at the same time in 1984 and 1985. She also made time to film a small role in Amadeus (1984). 

In the 1990s, Cynthia Nixon kept up her hectic work schedule. She made television and film appearances and performed in several productions, scoring her first Tony Award nomination in 1995 for her work in Indiscretions.

'Sex and the City'

In 1997 Nixon auditioned for what would prove to be the biggest project of her career so far. She won the role of lawyer Miranda Hobbes in a new HBO comedy series Sex and the City, based on a newspaper column by Candace Bushnell. Sarah Jessica Parker played the columnist, named Carrie Bradshaw in the show. The show followed the lives and romantic misadventures of Bradshaw, Hobbes, art dealer Charlotte York (Kristin Davis) and public relations expert and man-eater Samantha Jones (Kim Cattrall).

Filled with sharp dialogue, genuine characters and interesting fashions, Sex and the City became a huge hit. Cynthia Nixon played Miranda: a smart, sarcastic and successful woman, who was also fearful, defensive and mildly neurotic at times, adding a layer of vulnerability to the character. During the course of the series, her character goes through a transformation, softened somewhat by her experiences as a mother and later a wife. Nixon won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for her performance in 2004.

After Sex and the City went off the air in 2004, Cynthia Nixon continued to remind the world of her great acting range. She appeared as Eleanor Roosevelt in the HBO film Warm Springs (2005) opposite Kenneth Branagh as Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Critics praised Nixon's interpretation of the legendary first lady and humanitarian.

In 2006 she won her first Tony Award for her performance as a grief-stricken mother in the play Rabbit Hole.

Cynthia Nixon for Governor

On March 19, 2018, Cynthia Nixon announced that she would challenge incumbent New York Governor Andrew Cuomo in the upcoming Democratic primary. "I love New York, and today I'm announcing my candidacy for governor," she tweeted. 

Nixon had been active in education policy in recent years and criticized Cuomo over his handling of public education issues. However, she faced an uphill battle, as a poll released that day showed Governor Cuomo holding a commanding lead of 66 percent to 19 percent over her among Democratic voters.

Personal Life

Nixon revealed April 15, 2008, that she was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2006, but decided to keep her treatment secret. "I didn't really want to make it public while I was going through it," she said on Good Morning America. "I didn't want paparazzi at the hospital, that kind of thing."

Nixon, who reprised her role as neurotic Manhattan attorney Miranda Hobbes in a 2008 movie version of Sex and the City and its 2010 sequel, was diagnosed while she was starring in the off-Broadway play The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie. She scheduled her surgery on a Sunday to avoid missing a performance and then underwent six and a half weeks of radiation.

Nixon had firsthand experience with cancer as a child. Her mother, Ann, battled the disease twice, said Nixon. "As the daughter of a breast cancer survivor, knowing my personal risk made me more aware and more empowered when I faced my own diagnosis," she said in a statement.

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