Samantha Jones (Sex and the City)
Samantha Jones | |
---|---|
First appearance | Print: "Loving Mr. Big" (1995) (The New York Observer) Television: "Sex and the City" (1998) (Sex and the City) |
Last appearance | "The Last Supper Part Two: Entrée" (2023) (And Just Like That...) |
Created by | Candace Bushnell |
Portrayed by | Kim Cattrall (Sex and the City, films, And Just Like That...) Lindsey Gort[1] (The Carrie Diaries) |
Screen duration |
|
In-universe information | |
Nickname | Sam Jonesy Sammy Joe |
Gender | Female |
Occupation | Public relations |
Family | Unnamed parents Two siblings[2] Nephew[3] Donna LaDonna (cousin)[4] |
Nationality | American |
Samantha Jones is a fictional character created by Candace Bushnell who appears in the Sex and the City media franchise. The character first appeared in Bushnell's newspaper column Sex and the City, which was published in The New York Observer from 1994 to 1996, and as a book of the same name in 1996. A semi-fictionalized version of one of Bushnell's real-life friends, Samantha is a confident and sexually liberated woman in her forties with a propensity for dating multiple men. Author Louise Perry has claimed that Samantha's character was based on a stereotypical portrayal of the life of a promiscuous gay man.[5]
Sex and the City was adapted into a television series of the same name that aired on HBO from 1998 to 2004, where Samantha was portrayed by Kim Cattrall. Cattrall received two Screen Actors Guild Awards and a Golden Globe Award for her portrayal of the character. She reprised the role in the films Sex and the City (2008) and Sex and the City 2 (2010), and for a cameo appearance in the Max streaming series And Just Like That... (2021-present). Samantha also appears in Bushnell's young adult novels The Carrie Diaries and Summer and the City; the novels were adapted into a series of the same name that aired on The CW from 2013 to 2014, where Samantha is portrayed by Lindsey Gort.[6]
Character overview
[edit]Jones is one of four single friends, a public relations professional who is a proud, confident, highly sexual woman. Most of her story lines revolve around the frequent sex and brief affairs she has. She is outspoken and a self-proclaimed "try-sexual". She is portrayed as brash, straightforward, highly protective of her friends and unafraid of confrontation. She also displays nonchalance toward dating and monogamy and becomes uncomfortable whenever her sexual relationships take an emotional turn.
Not much is known about Samantha's younger years. It is known that she came from a working class background, and she spent most of her teenage years selling Dilly bars at Dairy Queen to earn pocket money. Season 3 implies that she has at least two siblings when she mentions that at her age, her mother "was saddled with three kids and a drunk husband". She later mentions partying at Studio 54 during its heyday, implying she moved sometime in the mid-to late-1970s from wherever she grew up to New York City. She has mentioned having had at least two abortions, one of which occurred while she was in college.
Samantha is the oldest of the four friends (in the final scene of the Sex and the City film, her 50th birthday is celebrated), though it is implied during the early seasons that the other three are not aware of how much older Samantha is than they are. She has her own public relations company. In the book's prequel series, it is revealed that Carrie met Samantha first.
Character history
[edit]Newspaper columns
[edit]Jones originally appeared in Candace Bushnell's column "Sex and the City" in The New York Observer, where she is introduced as a "40-ish movie producer" known for dating a multitude of younger men.[7] Bushnell based the character on a friend she described as "kind of an expert on men and dating".[8]
The Carrie Diaries
[edit]In the second season of the prequel series, Samantha is introduced in her mid-20s; she is portrayed by Lindsey Gort. As Carrie's enemy Donna LaDonna's brash and outgoing older cousin, Carrie befriends her. Jones is depicted as part of Manhattan's music scene, where she used to work at a bar as a bouncer. Samantha and Carrie move in together at the end of season 2.[9][10][11]
Sex and the City
[edit]Jones, the oldest of the group, is an independent publicist and a seductress who avoids emotional involvement at all costs, while satisfying every possible carnal desire imaginable. She believes that she has had "hundreds" of soulmates and insists that her sexual partners leave "an hour after I climax." In the early part of the series, she lives on the Upper East Side but ends up moving to an expensive apartment in the Meatpacking District in season three. The move is provoked after one of her late-night visitors lets in a mugger who attacks one of her older female neighbors and Samantha incurs the wrath of a tribelike commune of her elderly neighbors.
In the show's last season, Samantha is diagnosed with breast cancer. She faces the challenge head-on, playing with her look by wearing outrageous wigs, hats, and headscarves after she loses her hair to chemotherapy. In one of the final episodes, she gives a speech for a cancer benefit dinner, and receives a standing ovation for removing her wig onstage and admitting that she was suffering with hot flashes. The audience appreciated her candor and honesty, and many of the women in the audience stood up and removed their own wigs.
Sex and the City: The Movie
[edit]Four years later, Samantha has moved to Los Angeles with Smith to further his acting career. Samantha, who visits New York City as much as possible, finds herself attracted to a hunky exhibitionist neighbor, Dante. Dante's escapades remind Samantha of her sexual past. While she remains faithful to Smith, she finds herself questioning whether or not her strained relationship with him should be continued as she simultaneously uses food as an outlet for her sexual desires for Dante, flagrantly gaining weight in the later stages of the movie. Samantha, realizing her true unhappiness, breaks up with Smith. Samantha seemingly returns to reside in New York City. She is last seen celebrating her 50th birthday in Manhattan with Carrie, Miranda and Charlotte.
Sex and the City 2
[edit]Samantha is approached by an Arab sheikh to devise a PR campaign for his business, and he flies her and her friends on an all-expenses-paid luxury vacation to Abu Dhabi. When the girls are picnicking, they meet an architect named Rikhard Spirt. While on a date with him, Samantha is detained for having sex on the beach. With the Sheik's intervention Samantha is released, leaving her with a permanent police record. The PR meeting is cancelled, and their luxurious perks are no longer paid for. They quickly pack their bags and attempt to leave but have to retrieve Carrie's passport that she unknowingly left at the souk. They leave Abu Dhabi and return to New York City. At the end of the movie, Samantha has sex with Rikhard in "the land of the free and home of the hormones", at an East Hampton sand dune.
And Just Like That...
[edit]Samantha did not appear in the first season of And Just Like That..., the sequel series to Sex and the City. She is mentioned as having moved to London and being estranged from the group after Carrie dropped her as her publicist. After Mr. Big's death, Samantha sends flowers to Carrie. Carrie thanks her and is occasionally shown conversing with Samantha via text message. When Carrie travels to Paris to spread Big's ashes, she texts Samantha, who agrees to meet in London and rekindle their lost friendship. In the second season, Samantha briefly appears when she calls Carrie to tell her she will miss the "last supper" dinner party in her old apartment.
Sexuality and relationships
[edit]Samantha's main love is men – many of them.[12][13] Over the course of the series, she sleeps with plenty of interesting characters, including a man who will only "swing" with her if she takes an HIV test, a college student from the Midwest with the same name (Sam Jones) who is eager to lose his virginity, a guy with "funky spunk", and a trainer from her gym who brands her by shaving her pubic hair into a lightning bolt. She never lets the men stay for long, usually requiring them to leave "an hour after [she] climaxes". One of her sexual antics includes making a sex-tape to disprove tabloids' claims that she is a fag hag. She once said that she frequently loses underwear because she leaves them at the guys' places and never returns. She even slept with her good friend Charlotte's brother, prompting an angry Charlotte to call Samantha's vagina "the hottest spot in town: it's always open". Samantha rarely dates men more than once or twice. She does, however, have a few "serious" relationships throughout the run of the series, and it was being said that before the Pilot, she was once ‘heartbroken’ by a man named Dominic Delmonico, whom she briefly met again during series.
James
[edit]Samantha meets a man named James (James Goodwin) in a jazz bar at the end of season one. Unusually for Samantha, she doesn't have sex with him immediately, taking a leaf instead from Charlotte's book, because she felt he was a man she would marry. After declaring that she was in love with him, the two finally have sex, only for Samantha to discover that James was seriously under-endowed, to the point where she could not enjoy sex. In the last episode of season one, ("Oh Come All Ye Faithful") she tells Carrie, Charlotte, and Miranda that he is only three inches long when hard, and that she does not even receive any pleasure out of giving him a blowjob because his penis is so small. Though she tries to work through it, she eventually ends things with him when they attend a couples' counseling session. She confesses she is unable to feel someone "as small as a baby carrot", to which he replies angrily by saying that maybe her vagina is too big.
In a funny counterpoint to her predicament with James, in the second season episode "Ex and the City," Samantha meets Mr. Too Big, who warns her of his huge endowment as he undresses. Samantha squeals with delight as the story segues to another character. Later in the episode, when Samantha reappears, she is slowly guiding Mr. Too Big between her legs. After much hesitation, she seems to finally relax while drawing him in (she thinks), only to be asked if he can start. A shocked and fearful Samantha pushes him away with her foot on his chest and begs off the encounter. At the end of this episode, she unexpectedly yells "I miss James!" while her friends sing "The Way We Were" in a crowded restaurant, suggesting that her feelings for James may have been legitimate.
Maria Reyes
[edit]In season four, Samantha flirts with lesbianism, entering into a brief but serious relationship with an artist named Maria Reyes (Sônia Braga). The girls are completely shocked by this, more so that she is in a relationship than the fact that it is with a woman. Charlotte proclaims, "She's not a lesbian, she probably just ran out of men!" Samantha feels she is not a relationship person, and she initially only wants to be friends with Maria. Maria tells Samantha she cannot continue being just friends with her, and Samantha decides to take a chance and kisses Maria. Samantha seems intrigued about learning the act of pleasing another woman, thus learning more about her own sexuality. Once the sex begins to dwindle and they spend a lot of time talking, Samantha begins to tire of their relationship. Maria also becomes upset when Samantha's sexual past catches up with them. Samantha ultimately misses men too much and, although Maria decides to try strap-on dildos, the two break up due to Maria's belief that Samantha has "intimacy issues".
Richard Wright
[edit]Later in season four, Samantha meets and falls in love with hotel magnate Richard Wright (James Remar). Though the two seemed well-matched, as they are both confident, highly successful, and like sleeping around and are uninterested in relationships, Samantha finds herself becoming increasingly attached to Richard. The two eventually agree to try for a monogamous relationship. However, Samantha is heartbroken when she catches him cheating on her. Despite giving Richard a second chance, she decides to end the relationship when she realizes she does not trust him. In the last season, she runs into Richard while out at a party with her new boyfriend, Smith, and Samantha and Richard go upstairs to have sex. During intercourse, Samantha is seen looking uninterested and pained at being with Richard. Smith waits for her downstairs, knowing what she has done, and she breaks down in his arms, apologizing to him.
Jerry "Smith" Jerrod
[edit]Samantha sees a 28-year-old waiter/aspiring actor (Jason Lewis) while dining with the girls at a new restaurant called "Raw". She later returns to the restaurant alone, with the sole mission of taking him home; she succeeds, outlasting numerous other women who are there for the same purpose. At first it seems he is to be just another notch on her bedpost, and she does not even know his name, referring to him as "Smith" in the elaborate sexual scenarios they enact. They have adventurous, "out-of-the-box" sex, which Samantha finds exciting and refreshing. She is turned off by learning anything personal about him, such as that he is a recovering alcoholic. But she finds she is enjoying her time with him so much that she keeps seeing him.
Seeing that he is broke and struggling, Samantha uses her PR skills to jump-start Jerry's modeling and acting career, and, once she learns his birth name (Jerry Jerrod), changes it to Smith Jerrod. Samantha likes that he is not intimidated by her success (in contrast to Carrie's ex-boyfriend, Jack Berger), and with her assistance, he quickly becomes a celebrity. He first gains attention when he models naked in an Absolut Vodka ad in Times Square, in which he appears as the "Absolut Hunk".[14] This publicity leads to a role in a Gus Van Sant film.
Reluctant at first to admit she cares about him; Samantha misses him while he is on location. Smith returns from his film and shows her true affection, which Samantha finds unsettling. Samantha struggles with Smith's status as a teen icon and their age difference. She ends up deliberately humiliating him by hooking up with her ex-flame Richard at a party she went to with Smith. After a quick bout of clearly meaningless sex with Richard, during which he talks about himself, Samantha seeks out Smith, who has been waiting for her to realize she made a mistake and come back. She tearfully confesses that she hates what she just did to him. Eventually, she begins referring to Smith as her boyfriend. It appears that the two live together, since Smith refers to her place as "home," and he has keys to the apartment.
Smith supports Samantha through her brush with cancer, even shaving his hair when her hair began falling out, and then shaving hers. Samantha has no sexual libido during chemotherapy and encourages Smith to have sex with anyone he wants while he is in Canada filming his next movie. Smith refuses. While he is away, he sends her unbloomed flowers. She calls him to tell him she changed her mind about Smith having sex with other women, and Smith happily complies. Smith returns to New York in the middle of the night, flying back after their phone call to say that he loves her. Samantha replies that he "means more to [her] than any man [she's] ever known," which, for Samantha, is a huge statement. Their last scene together in the TV series shows the two having sex and Samantha enjoying herself; the previously unbloomed flowers have now begun to open.
In the movies, four years later, the pair are still together, with Samantha giving up her job and home to live in Los Angeles with him and be his publicist supporting his booming acting career. But Samantha has become restless with monogamy and resents that Smith's career has taken over her life. After a struggle with her weight and self-control, Samantha eventually decides to end their relationship. She explains that she loves herself and that’s the one relationship she needed to work on. As seen in the Sex and the City 2 movie, the two remain friends, with Smith inviting her to be his date to the premiere of his summer blockbuster, saying “my career would have never happened if it’s not for you”; and introduces her to the film's Arab financier, who invites Samantha to visit his resort in Abu Dhabi so she can plan an advertising campaign for his businesses.
Reception
[edit]As Jones, Cattrall gained international recognition; she capitalized on her success by appearing in television commercials promoting Pepsi One. For her role, she was nominated for five Emmy Awards,[15] and four Golden Globe Awards, winning one in 2002. She also won two ensemble Screen Actors Guild Awards, shared with her co-stars Sarah Jessica Parker, Kristin Davis and Cynthia Nixon. She was ranked number eight in TV Guide's 50 sexiest stars of all-time list in 2005.[16] In 2008 she was honoured by the Cosmopolitan UK Ultimate Women Of The Year Awards with the Ultimate Icon Award.[17] She was also awarded the NBC Universal Canada Award of Distinction.[18]
References
[edit]- ^ Hibberd, James (2013-07-20). "'Carrie Diaries' scoop: Samantha Jones cast | EW.com". Insidetv.ew.com. Retrieved 2015-03-10.
- ^ Season 3 episode 10
- ^ Season 3 episode 1
- ^ Slezak, Michael (July 20, 2013). "The Carrie Diaries Scoop: Meet Young Samantha!". TV Line. Retrieved July 21, 2013.
- ^ "Bari Weiss' big L.A. debate was less 'free expression' than self-promotion". Los Angeles Times. 2023-09-14. Retrieved 2023-10-10.
- ^ "Lindsey Gort Brings Samantha Jones To A New Generation In The Carrie Diaries". Huffingtonpost.com. 2013-10-25. Retrieved 2015-03-10.
- ^ "Loving Mr. Big | The New York Observer". The New York Observer. 2008-01-26. Archived from the original on 2008-01-26. Retrieved 2022-02-06.
- ^ "SATC Author Candace Bushnell On What The "Real Life" Samantha Jones Is Like". Marie Claire. 31 January 2022. Retrieved 2022-02-06.
- ^ Bucksbaum, Sydney (August 15, 2013). "'Carrie Diaries' Season 2 scoop: How will Carrie Bradshaw meet Samantha Jones?". Zap2It. Archived from the original on February 14, 2014. Retrieved February 2, 2014.
- ^ Bricker, Tierney (July 20, 2013). "The Carrie Diaries Casts Samantha Jones For Season 2". E! Online. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved July 20, 2013.
- ^ Slezak, Michael (July 20, 2013). "The Carrie Diaries Scoop: Meet Young Samantha!". TV Line. Archived from the original on July 23, 2013. Retrieved July 21, 2013.
- ^ Keck, William (2008-06-01). "Celeb Watch: Sizing up Kim Cattrall and Samantha Jones - USATODAY.com". Usatoday30.usatoday.com. Retrieved 2015-03-10.
- ^ "Nicolette Sheridan vs. Kim Cattrall - Chicago Tribune". Articles.chicagotribune.com. 2004-12-31. Retrieved 2015-03-10.
- ^ "Column: Absolut Hunk". Pitchfork Media. 2007-11-20. Retrieved 2007-11-21.
- ^ "Kim Cattrall". Television Academy.
- ^ "TV Guide: 50 sexiest stars of all-time". geocities.ws. Retrieved 14 June 2014.
- ^ CelebsNow (6 November 2008). "Kim Cattrall named Ultimate Icon at awards do". CelebsNow. Retrieved 2 December 2020.
- ^ Rhodes, Ted. "-Kim Cattrall, the Canadian of Sex and the City fame, was the star attraction Monday at the Banff World Television Festival at the Fairmont Banff Springs Hotel. She is pictured doing a round of interviews prior to receiving the NBC Universal Canada Award of Distinction at the festival". www.vancouversun.com. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
External links
[edit]- Sex and the City characters
- Fictional characters from New York City
- Television characters introduced in 1998
- Fictional socialites
- Fictional LGBTQ characters in television
- Fictional bisexual women
- Fictional characters with cancer
- American female characters in television
- Fictional businesspeople
- Fictional characters from Florida
- Fictional characters based on real people