SPOILER ALERT: This story comprises spoilers from “Celebration of One,” the sequence finale of “And Just Like That,” now streaming on HBO Max.
New York’s final single lady is single as soon as extra — and, finally, she’s at peace with it.
The sequence finale of “And Simply Like That” — the revival sequence following “Intercourse and the Metropolis” and the 2 theatrical sequel movies — introduced Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker) in for a smooth touchdown. After a difficult and awkward Thanksgiving dinner, throughout which Charlotte (Kristin Davis) tried to set her single pal up with the pompous gallerist Mark Kasabian (Victor Garber), Carrie returns house. (She’s solely spared additional interplay with Mark because of a well-timed rest room explosion dousing his sneakers in excrement.)

She’s been going via a tough patch: Carrie started the episode having been seated throughout from a child-sized doll at a ramen store, the restaurant’s try and ease her solitude that solely emphasised that she was, properly, a celebration of 1. However, invigorated by time with associates and reflection that she has it fairly good, Carrie blasts Barry White — and even sings alongside! — and finally ends up the epilogue to her season-long-gestating novel. “The lady,” about whom Carrie has been writing all season, “realized she was not alone — she was on her personal.” As she struts down her hallway like a catwalk and turns a nook, we start to zoom in on her mirror… after which the credit roll, switching the music to the theme from the unique “Intercourse and the Metropolis” sequence. The story, maybe, has come full circle, as Carrie can lastly see her state of affairs clearly.
Adjustments within the finale in her associates’ lives appear extra evolutionary than revolutionary: Charlotte, who, earlier within the episode, lastly rekindled her intercourse life with Harry (Evan Handler), lastly feels safe in Rock’s (Alexa Swinton’s) gender id. Miranda (Cynthia Nixon) will get the possibility to deepen her dedication with Pleasure (Dolly Wells) after exhibiting up when her canine has a medical emergency — a well-timed little bit of emotional help as Miranda prepares to develop into a grandmother. And Lisa (Nicole Ari Parker) and Seema (Sarita Choudhury) recommit to and decide to, respectively, exploring additional their very own relationships, Lisa by affirming that she can’t cheat on Herbert (Christopher Jackson) and Seema by embracing the oddity of life with Adam (Logan Marshall-Inexperienced).
Michael Patrick King is able to speak about all of it. The showrunner of “And Simply Like That,” King directed and co-wrote (with Susan Fales-Hill) the ultimate episode, simply as, in 2004, he wrote the ending of “Intercourse and the Metropolis.” Again then, Carrie’s series-ending contentment got here from understanding that she was sufficient… whilst she couldn’t deny that Large returning to New York to be along with her was fairly thrilling, too. Twenty-one years later, Carrie ends her story very deliberately not paired off. And, King says, it is going to be left to followers to think about what lies forward for her. Whereas this franchise has proven a Shoe-the-cat-esque nine-lives resilience up to now, King says that this ending needs to be taken as his final name for Carrie and firm. “Anybody else might hold going,” he says. “I can’t.”
Selection spoke with King forward of the Aug. 14 finale. In dialog, King was animated and reflective, concerning why now could be the time to finish “And Simply Like That,” how this finale speaks to criticisms the ending of “Intercourse and the Metropolis” obtained — and why Carrie’s remaining half-hour included an overflowing rest room. Pondering aloud about what this franchise and its protagonist have meant specifically to single folks — “it’s principally for somebody who feels unhealthy as a result of they don’t have somebody” — King acquired choked up, and tears appeared in his eyes. His mind-meld-like connection to the character and to her journey out and in of singledom over many years is a part of what followers have responded to, and its ending is emotional for extra than simply King.
I’m happy to be chatting with you, however sorry in regards to the circumstances.
Properly, I at all times like the truth that you want you have been getting extra. The thought of leaving a celebration whereas it’s nonetheless occurring is essentially the most elegant factor you possibly can say for a TV sequence. I by no means wished to be like, Oh, that storyline once more — which is the one rule we’ve had within the writing room: Don’t repeat. And we’ve performed quite a bit. The one factor we haven’t performed was get Carrie to the purpose the place she says, “Perhaps I’m sufficient.”
Earlier than we get to that, I wish to talk about how the choice to finish the present was made. Was it earlier than this season was written?
The fact is, the choice was not made originally of the season. The third season was going gangbusters within the writing room. And because the tales go, and the tales go, and the tales go, there’s a purpose I began saying, “Don’t repeat.” You begin to notice — and it’s half muse, half smarts — “That is the place it’s going.” When Susan Fales-Hill and I have been writing the final episode, which is within the center [of the season’s production], impulsively we got here up with that second for the top of the sequence and the season. “The lady realized she was not alone — she was on her personal.”
The resonance of that felt so profound that I knew it was a really vital finish to the season as we wrote it. After which… wait, extra is coming? Can we do extra? I talked to Sarah Jessica and mentioned, “I feel that is it. This appears like the place we must always go away Carrie Bradshaw.” She mentioned, “Then we cease.”

Courtesy of Craig Blankenhorn/HBO
How did she take it?
Properly, she’s my associate! We’ve constructed the present collectively. I had the very same expertise along with her once we have been doing “Intercourse and the Metropolis.” Season 6 — it couldn’t have been a warmer present. And I mentioned to her, “I feel we have now to cease,” and she or he mentioned, “OK.” It’s as a result of we don’t simply wish to do it. We wish to do it properly, or do it when there’s one thing type of harmful and thrilling to say.
Casey [Bloys, CEO of HBO,] is at all times very involved in regards to the model and the standard. After we went to him to do “And Simply Like That,” he was at first hesitant. He doesn’t wish to duplicate something both. And I mentioned, “Let me let you know: Mr. Large dies within the first episode and Carrie’s single at fiftysomething.” He goes, “OK, that’s new.” After we went [to tell him the show was ending] this time, he mentioned, “I feel you introduced all of them to an important place. No matter you need.”
Proper.
That’s why you’re employed at HBO! The numbers are insane, the chatter’s off-the-charts, the conversations are large, it’s memes, it’s every thing. They usually went, “OK.”
After which we didn’t inform the press — folks do inform, to get a bump. And I didn’t want the bump, and I didn’t need folks wanting on the Carrie-Aidan relationship with the phrase “remaining” over it. I don’t suppose they’d have invested. They might have mentioned, “All proper, simply finish it.” If the phrase “remaining” had been within the combine, you’ll have seen every thing in another way. You’d have seen Harry’s prostate most cancers as remaining. And we by no means wished that to be remaining.
If we had informed the press on the premiere “remaining,” they’d have mentioned “How does it finish?” Guess what? We didn’t know. Not one of the actors knew. We have been simply following the emotions of the writing and story and the place we might deliver Carrie that will be sufficient of a end that individuals might proceed with their fan fiction writing on their very own.

I do know that you’re very alert to what followers are pondering and feeling, and that there was a line of criticism of the 2004 finale of “Intercourse and the Metropolis” that it ends a present about feminine friendship with all 4 girls paired off romantically. Is that this “on her personal” ending for Carrie conscious of that?
Sure, it’s a name and response. It’s one thing that I’ve at all times thought of. As a result of, as a lot as I made positive within the “Intercourse and the Metropolis” finale that they weren’t all married — as a result of the anarchy of “Intercourse and the Metropolis” was that, at the moment, that being 34, with somebody, however single, was unacceptable…
It’s the Time cover. “Who Wants a Husband?”
So Samantha was not married. That was my loophole. However Carrie did say that lovely final speech about essentially the most vital relationship of all being the one you could have with your self — whereas holding a cellphone, with Large calling. My step ahead was to make him actual by calling him “John.”
So this [on “And Just Like That”] is the true, actual, this-is-now Carrie. Many, a few years later, having gone via deaths, heartbreaks, new romances, saying, “I’m grown-up sufficient to face this, as a result of I’ve created a life that’s so magnificent for myself.” She’s on her personal. And that sentence is for everybody who has somebody, and for everybody who doesn’t have somebody, and — I’m going to get emotional — it’s, primarily…. Wow. I’ve by no means mentioned this. It’s principally for somebody who feels unhealthy as a result of they don’t have somebody.
That’s actually what it’s. It’s to say: Take a look at her, how fabulous she is, and she or he’s precisely the place you’re. That’s what it’s for.

Seeing how emotionally related you’re to Carrie, I’ve to ask if there’s any openness to her ever coming again. Not anytime quickly, after all — however is that this the pause on the finish of a chapter, or the top of her story?
It’s closed. As a result of I care a lot about what we’ve performed. And I acquired emotional not due to letting go of Carrie, however due to the those that care about Carrie. I simply realized “care” is in “Carrie.” Individuals care a lot about her that I really feel for them. That she’s this this hero in her late 50s, sporting a Hindenburg hat and consuming sherbet in Washington Sq. Park. She’s made her mark, and, as a author, I really feel we’ve made our mark. I by no means thought as soon as about persevering with. Telling it like it’s: It’s an intuition. Anybody else might hold going. I can’t.

Craig Blankenhorn
The dialog across the present you talked about earlier — folks love the present, query choices you’ve made, like to hate it, really feel indignant, attempt to give Carrie recommendation via the display… Will you miss that chatter?
That could be a actual double-edged sword. What I’ll miss is the truth that we created one thing that was so alive that there was a dialogue with the followers on the time — or the viewers, or the non-fans. If I didn’t need a response, I’d write haikus and put them in a drawer. Sadly, I’m within the Colosseum. I run on the market and go, “Right here we’re once more!,” and other people have a response, and it’s thrilling and harrowing.
It’s not Zen, however it’s a mirror to quite a bit. The great mirror is: It’s a mirror to the work. It’s a mirror to the great thing about what your complete solid and crew is doing, the magnificence of these actresses, the laughs, the heartbreak. That’s all thrilling. The cracked mirror is: “This isn’t my present. What did they spoil [“Sex and the City”] for”? You have a look at your self in a cracked mirror — it’s not enticing!
One factor that feels true about “And Simply Like That” is a sure pie-in-the-face sensibility — every time a personality is flying excessive, they’re introduced down just a little. And, to not be crass, however I’d shut by observing that I by no means anticipated Carrie Bradshaw’s remaining moments along with her associates in New York Metropolis to contain an overflowing rest room.
At any time when anybody on this universe, “Intercourse and the Metropolis” or “And Simply Like That,” stands on a soapbox to make a speech, the soapbox breaks. We can’t take ourselves too significantly. For the gorgeousness of Carrie’s pink, sparkly prime and tulle skirt — that’s the excessive — the low is a rest room stuffed up with shit. As a result of guess what? Being single, there’s a whole lot of shit, and relationships are a whole lot of shit. It’s the comedy, with the drama, with the romance, with the fairy story. I assume it’s a response to the fairy story.
This interview has been edited and condensed.















































