Kristin Landen Davis (also listed as Kristin Lee Davis; born February 23, 1965)[1] is an American actress and producer. She is known for playing Charlotte York in the HBO romantic comedy series Sex and the City (1998–2004). She received nominations at the Emmys and the Golden Globes in 2004 for her role as Charlotte, and reprised the role in the films Sex and the City (2008) and Sex and the City 2 (2010), as well as the revival of the show And Just Like That... (2021–present) on Max.
Davis was born on February 23, 1965, in Boulder, Colorado.[2] She is an only child, and her parents divorced when she was a baby.[2] She was adopted by her stepfather, then-University of Colorado Boulder professor Keith Davis,[3] after he married her mother, Dorothy, a university data analyst, in 1968.[4] She has three step sisters from her father's first marriage.[5] Early in her childhood, she and her parents moved to Columbia, South Carolina, where her father served as provost and taught psychology at the University of South Carolina.
After graduation in 1987, Davis moved to New York and waited tables before opening a yoga studio with a friend. In 1991, she acted in a couple of episodes of the daytime drama (soap opera) General Hospital. She later guest-starred on Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman and ER, and acted in made-for-television movies. Her big break came in 1995 when she landed the role of villainess Brooke Armstrong Campbell on the Fox nighttime soap opera Melrose Place. She left the show after one year when producers decided to kill off the character. The following year, Davis guest-starred in two episodes of Seinfeld.
In 2012, Davis starred in and produced the Lifetime television film Of Two Minds[8] In 2014, she returned to series television with starring role in the short-lived CBS sitcom Bad Teacher.[9] In 2016, she starred in Hallmark Channel film A Heavenly Christmas.[10] In 2020, she hosted Fox reality series Labor of Love.[11]
Davis appeared in 2008's Sex and the City feature film, under the direction of executive producer Michael Patrick King.[12] The film was a box office success and amassed $415 million at the worldwide box office, despite mixed reviews.[13][14] It was Davis' first movie to reach #1 at the US box office. Davis reprised her role of Charlotte York a second time in 2010's Sex and the City 2, which grossed $290 million worldwide but was widely panned by critics.[15][16] She remained interested in a third installment of the franchise.[17]
In 2009, Davis co-starred in the romantic comedy film Couples Retreat, a comedy chronicling four couples who partake in therapy sessions at a tropical island resort. Jon Favreau, who also co-wrote the script, played her husband.[18] The film opened at No. 1 during its opening weekend at the US box office, making it her second film to do so. In 2010, Davis was cast as the mother of Josh Hutcherson's character in the adventure movie Journey 2: The Mysterious Island.[19] The film opened theatrically in February 2012 and passed the $100 million mark at the US box office, being Davis' third film to achieve this.[20]
In 2015, Davis was credited as producer on the documentaryGardeners of Eden, that comments on the illegal ivory trade.[21] In 2019, Davis starred in and produced romantic comedy-drama film Holiday in the Wild for Netflix.[22] The film was pitched to her, after the producers had noticed her philanthropic work with elephants.[22] She later played a leading role and produced the 2021 thriller film Deadly Illusions about a bestselling female novelist (Davis) who is suffering from writer's block and hires an innocent young woman to watch over her twin children.[23]
Shortly after the wide release of the Sex and the City feature film, in June 2008, Belk, the nation's largest privately owned department store chain, announced a partnership with Davis. The arrangement includes a ladies' apparel and accessories line that debuted in 2008 in 125 store locations and online, with eventual plans for expanding availability to other store locations. In Belk's press release about the product line launch, Davis cited her upbringing in South Carolina as part of her inspiration for working with the chain.[27] In late 2009 Belk cancelled the arrangement, citing the difficult economic conditions prevailing, while Davis said she hoped to take the line elsewhere.[28]
Philanthropic work and recognition
Davis is a Global Ambassador for Oxfam, and has campaigned in support of their work since 2004, travelling to locations including Haiti, Mozambique, and South Africa.[29] In 2011 she gave a tearful interview with BBC News describing the situation at the Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya where she witnessed the impact of drought.[30]
The cosmetics company Maybelline named Davis as a celebrity spokeswoman in 2004.[31]
During her 2009 visit to Africa, Davis, a lifelong lover of elephants, discovered an abandoned baby elephant and arranged for it to be taken to a wildlife rehabilitation center. In recognition of the attention she has brought to the plight of orphaned African elephants, Davis won the Humane Society's 2010 Wyler Award, which is bestowed on a celebrity or public figure who has made news on behalf of animals.[32] She is also a patron of the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust which works to protect elephants and other wildlife in Kenya.[33]
Davis has worked with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and is included on their list of "High Profile Supporters".[34] In 2015 she visited the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda. Davis later filmed a fund-raising appeal supporting the UNHCR, and in 2016 visited Australia to promote the UNHCR's work, focussing on the plight of women victims of sexual violence in Congo.[35]
In 2011, Davis adopted a daughter, Gemma Rose Davis.[37] In 2018, she adopted a son, Wilson.[38] The family resides in the hills of Brentwood, Los Angeles, California.
Davis is a recovering alcoholic and says she was introduced to alcohol early as part of her Southern upbringing.[5][39] "Alcohol freed me. I was really shy and I didn't know how to come out of my shell. I drank for the same reason I loved acting. I wanted to feel things and express myself and be free. And I'm not naturally that way."[39]