Bloys said Sarah Jessica Parker, who plays Carrie Bradshaw on the show, and writer Michael Patrick King, who are in charge of the sequel, “are not trying to remake ‘Sex and the City'”.
“They are not trying to say that these characters are reliving their 30s. It is much more of a story about women in their 50s, and they are dealing with things that people deal with in their 50s,” said Bloys, adding that since then a long time has passed, “just like in real life, people come into your life, people go away”.
“Friendships disappear and new friendships begin,” he added. “So I think everything indicates the real stages, the real stages of life. They are trying to tell an honest story about being a woman in her 50s in New York. So everything must seem a little organic, and the friends who you have when you are 30, you may not be when you are 50. “
Bloys said the show will also incorporate more diversity into the writer’s room and the New York City show’s description, telling the publication, “They’re being very, very aware of the understanding that New York should reflect the way New York York looks like today. “
Cynthia Nixon (Miranda Hobbs) and Kristin Davis (Charlotte York) will join Bradshaw at the reboot, entitled “And Just Like That”.
HBO and CNN share the parent company WarnerMedia.