Chris
Noth (rhymes with "both", not with "moth")
has been working on TV and in films for nearly 20 years, most memorably
as a homicide detective on NBC's acclaimed drama "Law and Order"
from 1990 to 1995.
But only since playing Mr. Big, the guy Sarah Jessica Parker can't stay
away from on HBO's hit series "Sex and the City", has
he become a sex symbol. Now CBS has cut a deal with Noth
that will allow him to produce and star in his own TV project.
Meanwhile, he has three films due for release this year - Texas Funeral,
in which he plays a cousin to Martin Sheen; Getting to Know You,
in which he portrays an Atlantic City high roller; and Searching
for Paradise, in which he's a Hollywood star who is the object of
a teenager's obsession.
And don't count on his recent exit from Sarah Jessica Parker's life
on "Sex and the City" being permanent - it's been rumored
he may pop up next season.
Movieline:
Are you frustrated that even though you've appeared in 12 movies, you're
best known for your TV work?
CN:
As mundane as it sounds, it's frustrating not getting the kind of parts
that make me feel alive. It's hard having to be in that food chain where
the great parts are beyond your grasp until you're in that movie that
makes $100 million.
But then again, I'm happy with the three small movies I have coming
up, because they show my acting range better than anything I've ever
done on TV.
Movieline:
When you were filming "SATC", did you ever wake up in the
morning and think, "Time to go get in bed with Sarah Jessica Parker
again?"
CN:
(Laughs) I guess we were in bed a lot. Sex scenes are usually
not that much fun, but they were fun with Sarah because we were like
kids in a sandbox --- we just really played.
Movieline:
Can Sarah ever be bitchy, like her character?
CN:
I have never once seen her in bad mood. Not that she's Miss Pollyanna
- she can get pissed off, but then the next minute she's laughing. She's
got an extraordinary life force in her. Some actors can be nice and
everything, but there's always that, "I'm gonna take what's mine"
thing. I haven't worked with anyone more generous than Sarah, period.
Movieline:
You play Mr. Big so well. Did you take to the role easily?
CN:
The first season, I didn't really know how to play Big. All the other
characters on the show are incredibly dysfunctional, which means they're
incredibly funny. I would say to the creators, "All you have
me doing is opening up another good bottle of wine and being remote."
But I'm a wild man. I'm woolly, hairy, crazy, nuts, you know?
Movieline:
Not many people know that you grew up seeing your mom on TV - she was
a news reporter in New York.
CN:
It was weird. We lived in Connecticut and when we'd come into New York
City, she was like the Queen. She knew all the interesting people.
She was really beautiful, so some of my rougher friends would say, "Man,
I'd love to have sex with your mom." (Laughs)
Movieline:
What famous women were you hot for as a kid?
CN:
Faye Dunaway. God Almighty. You jerked off to the James Bond girls,
but Faye Dunaway was unbelievable.
Movieline:
What was high school like for you?
CN:
I went to a co-educational high school for the arts called The Barlow
School and it was wild, man! All the girls were into skinny-dipping.
We'd go out in the cornfields, smoke herb, build teepees in the woods
and fuck.
Movieline:
Were you a troublemaker?
CN:
Oh yeah, I drove my mother crazy.
Movieline:
Are you single?
CN:
Yeah, I've had a lot of intense, crazy love affairs. I think that
as you get older and you're comfortable in your own skin, you're not
afraid of being alone. But it's not as easy to fall in love.
I don't know if I'm a very good catch - I love women and that gets me
into trouble.
Movieline:
Have you ever had phone sex?
CN:
I met this Australian lady doctor who used to leave these extraordinary
sexy messages, which were like phone sex. I had to listen very
carefully because of the thickness of her accent. It was like,
"All right, mate, my pussy's wet", and you're going, "Whoa."
I don't know what it is with women doctors. I've met two who were
very kinky. (laughs)
Movieline:
Do you date actresses?
CN:
I had a very deep relationship with an actress, not a known actress.
She was probably the love of my life. It was right before I went
to Yale Drama School and we were both very poor.
Movieline:
Now that you're famous, what's your favorite perk?
CN:
Getting upgraded to first class on an airplane. And I consider
it a perk to have people come up to me and tell me how they love my
work.
Movieline:
Who has been your most surprising fan?
CN:
Dionne Warwick. When I was walking to Starbucks she drove by,
and she got out of her car and ran up to me. I turned to her and
said, "You're Dionne Warwick." I started singing her
songs because I grew up on her and she stopped me and said, "You're
not a fan of mine, I'm a fan of yours! I love "Law & Order!"
Peter Fonda came up to me on a plane. That was really moving to
me, but in the back of my mind I thought, "God, I haven't even
done the roles yet." I still feel that my big parts await
me.
Movieline:
At the end of last season on "Sex and the City" Mr. Big was
engaged to another woman. I think a lot of fans are hoping he doesn't
go through with it.
CN:
I was just on the Universal lot and these two girls pulled up and said,
"Don't you marry her!" People are obsessed with this show.
I'm not allowed to say if Big's coming back, but I think that
he's like a satellite in Carrie's life. He disappears for a while,
then all of a sudden he's back.
Movieline:
Why is your character called Mr. Big?
CN:
They never really say. It can mean a lot of different things;
her biggest relationship, or a man who's very successful, a big shot.
Movieline:
Do you get teased for having that as a character name?
CN:
Not very much. I'm waiting for some drunk girl in a bar to say,
"Does that mean you have a big cock?"
Movieline:
And your reply would be?
CN:
Big enough, baby!