Kristen Johnston quips her iconic ‘Sex and the City’ line will follow her to the grave
New York may be over, but Lexi Featherston will live on forever.
Kristen Johnston — whose “Sex and the City” character boldly declared she was “so bored she could die” before plummeting to her death — loves the idea of being remembered for her one-episode arc on the hit ’90s show.
“It probably will go on my gravestone, that quote of ‘New York is over,’” she tells exclusively tells Page Six while promoting her new Netflix show, “Leanne.”
She added, “And you know what? I’m totally OK with that, if that is my legacy, Lexi Featherston.”
In the sixth season episode, titled “Splat,” Johnston plays socialite Featherson, who is reunited with her old pal, Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker), at a chichi party.
After being told not to smoke indoors, Featherston stands near a cracked floor-to-ceiling window to smoke a cigarette while going on a rant about the state of New York nightlife.
“When did everybody stop smoking? When did everybody pair off? This used to be the most exciting city in the world,” she vents. “New York is over. O-V-E-R. Over. No one’s fun anymore. Whatever happened to fun? God, I’m so bored, I could die.”
Featherston twists her ankle and, while trying to grab the curtains, falls out of the window.
The “3rd Rock From the Sun” star will soon be seen in “Leanne,” a Netflix sitcom starring comedian Leanne Morgan, whose life is upended when her husband of 33 years leaves her for another woman.
Johnston plays Leanne’s sister, who, if given “a choice between going to church and going to a bar, will always choose the latter.”
In real life, Johnston has been sober for over a decade.
She wrote about her addiction to alcohol and pills in a 2013 memoir, “Guts: The Endless Follies and Tiny Triumphs of a Giant Disaster.”
In it, she frankly revealed that her addiction began in high school and at its height, saw her drinking two bottles of wine nightly.
Johnston tells us that she decided to be brutally honest because “I wanted to write the book that I wished I could have read in rehab.”
The “Mom” alum adds that she found 12-step programs and AA literature “boring, “so I was like I would love for these rehabs to carry a book like I want to write, like something that’s funny and you can connect to.
“And so I didn’t really intend to write it so honestly, but it just sort of came out that way.”
“Leanne” begins streaming on July 31.
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