Cynthia Nixon

Actress

Birthday April 9, 1966

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Manhattan, New York City, U.S.

Age 57 years old

Nationality United States

Height 1.7 m

#2765 Most Popular

1966

Cynthia Ellen Nixon (born April 9, 1966) is an American actress, activist, and theater director.

1979

She began acting at 12 as the object of a wealthy schoolmate's crush in The Seven Wishes of a Rich Kid, a 1979 ABC Afterschool Special.

1980

Nixon made her Broadway debut in the 1980 revival of The Philadelphia Story.

She made her feature debut co-starring with Kristy McNichol and Tatum O'Neal in Little Darlings (1980).

She made her Broadway debut as Dinah Lord in a 1980 revival of The Philadelphia Story.

1982

Alternating between film, TV, and stage, she did projects like the 1982 ABC movie My Body, My Child, the features Prince of the City (1981) and I Am the Cheese (1983), and the 1982 Off-Broadway productions of John Guare's Lydie Breeze.

1983

Her other Broadway credits include The Real Thing (1983), Hurlyburly (1983), Indiscretions (1995), The Women (2001), and Wit (2012).

1984

She acted in the films Amadeus (1984), James White (2015), and A Quiet Passion (2016).

Nixon was an actress all through her years at Hunter College Elementary School and Hunter College High School (class of 1984), often taking time away from school to perform in film and on stage.

Nixon also acted in order to pay her way through Barnard College, where she received a B.A. in English Literature.

In 1984, while a freshman at Barnard College, Nixon made theatrical history by simultaneously appearing in two hit Broadway plays directed by Mike Nichols.

They were The Real Thing, where she played the daughter of Jeremy Irons and Christine Baranski; and Hurlyburly, where she played a young woman who encounters sleazy Hollywood executives.

The two theaters were just two blocks apart and Nixon's roles were both short, so she could run from one to the other.

Onscreen, she played the role of Salieri's maid/spy, Lorl, in Amadeus (1984).

1985

In 1985, she appeared alongside Jeff Daniels in Lanford Wilson's Lemon Sky at Second Stage Theatre.

1986

Nixon was also a student in the Semester at Sea Program in the Spring of 1986.

Nixon's first onscreen appearance was as an imposter on To Tell the Truth, where her mother worked, at 8, pretending to be a junior horse riding champion.

She landed her first major supporting role in a movie as an intelligent teenager who aids her boyfriend (Christopher Collet) in building a nuclear bomb in Marshall Brickman's The Manhattan Project (1986).

1988

Nixon was part of the cast of the NBC miniseries The Murder of Mary Phagan (NBC, 1988) starring Jack Lemmon and Kevin Spacey, and portrayed the daughter of a presidential candidate (Michael Murphy) in Tanner '88 (1988), Robert Altman's political satire for HBO.

On stage, Nixon portrayed Juliet in a 1988 New York Shakespeare Festival production of Romeo and Juliet, and acted in the workshop production of Wendy Wasserstein's Pulitzer Prize-winning The Heidi Chronicles, playing several characters after it came to Broadway in 1989.

She was the guest star in the second episode of the long running NBC television series Law & Order.

1993

She played the role of an agoraphobic woman in a February 1993 episode of Murder, She Wrote, titled "Threshold of Fear".

1994

Nixon succeeded Marcia Gay Harden as Harper Pitt in Tony Kushner's Angels in America (1994), received a Tony nomination for her performance in Indiscretions (Les Parents Terribles) (1996), her sixth Broadway show, and, although she originally lost the part to another actress, eventually took over the role of Lala Levy in the Tony-winning The Last Night of Ballyhoo (1997).

1998

For her portrayal of Miranda Hobbes in the HBO series Sex and the City (1998–2004), she won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series and reprised the role in the films Sex and the City (2008) and Sex and the City 2 (2010), as well as the television show And Just Like That... (2021–present).

2002

She met her wife at a 2002 gay rights rally, and announced her engagement at a rally for New York same-sex marriage in 2009.

2004

She reprised the role for the 2004 sequel, Tanner on Tanner.

2005

She portrayed Eleanor Roosevelt in Warm Springs (2005), Michele Davis in Too Big to Fail (2011), and Nancy Reagan in Killing Reagan (2016).

2006

She went on to receive two Tony Awards, the first for Best Actress in a Play for Rabbit Hole (2006) and the second for Best Featured Actress in a Play for The Little Foxes (2017).

2008

She won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series for Law & Order: Special Victims Unit in 2008 and a Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Album for An Inconvenient Truth in 2009.

2010

Her other television credits include The Big C (2010–2011), Ratched (2020), and The Gilded Age (2022–present).

2018

In 2018 Nixon ran for Governor of New York as part of the Working Families Party challenging Democratic incumbent Andrew Cuomo.

She went on to lose the Democratic primary to Cuomo on September 13, 2018, with 34% of the vote to his 66%.

Nixon has been an advocate for LGBT rights in the United States, particularly the right of same-sex marriage.

She received the Visibility Award from the Human Rights Campaign in 2018.

Nixon was born in Manhattan, the only child of Walter Elmer Nixon Jr., a radio journalist from Texas, and Anne Elizabeth (née Knoll), an actress originally from Chicago.

She credits her mother with "indoctrinating" her into theatre.

She is of English and German descent.

Her grandparents were Adolph Knoll, Etta Elizabeth Williams, Walter E. Nixon, and Grace Truman McCormack.

Nixon's parents divorced when she was six years old.

According to Nixon, her father was often unemployed and her mother was the household's main breadwinner: Nixon's mother worked on the game show To Tell the Truth, coaching the "impostors" who claimed to be the person described by the host.