The actress always adds a clause in her contracts in which she makes it clear that she is not going to take off her clothes, and it is not something that she considers reconsidering.
At the beginning of January it was confirmed that 'S-x and the City', the legendary series from the late 90s and early 2000s starring Sarah Jessica Parker, will have a continuation in the form of ten episodes that will premiere on the HBO Max platform. Both Parker and the rest of the original cast members (with the exception of Kim Catrall, who played Samantha) will return for this long-awaited reunion.
The production is about to start shooting, and this has led Parker to reaffirm her famous 'no n-dity' clause, something that set her apart from her co-stars from the beginning, all of whom starred in at least several scenes of high voltage and few clothes throughout the six seasons that the series lasted. A decision that will not change, much less in the face of the spin-off.
Speaking about the demands of movie stars, Parker says that his is far from delusional. "A lot of people have a legendary list of requirements. They ask for white candles in the room. I don't have a crazy list of those. I just always had a 'no n-dity' clause. I'm a modest person," the actress said. newspaper The Sun.
Parker has also pointed out that he has never considered the option of resorting to a double: "You couldn't pay me enough to accept someone pretending to be me in a n-de scene. No body doubles, that's part of my contract too.
The interpreter has recalled how, when the series began to air, the pressure for her to undress was constant. To the point that her agent sent her a car and a plane ticket to the set asking that if someone "forces you to do something you're not comfortable with, don't do it." And she didn't. Nor, as she has again made clear, does she plan to do so in the future.