Metro

Cynthia Nixon reveals tax returns

Cynthia Nixon and her spouse pulled in $1.9 million last year through their incomes, investments and sale of a house, according to returns the “Sex and the City” star allowed reporters to view for just two hours Friday.

On her personal return, Nixon and wife Christine Marinoni reported a gross adjusted income of $619,799 in 2017 and paid federal taxes of $150,600 and $62,866 in state and local taxes.

But Nixon also has a separate S Corporation called the Fickle Mermaid for her acting business that pulled in $1.1 million.

She extracted $400,000 of that as wages for her personal return — leaving the rest in the corporation.

The couple made $185,786 by selling a house in Montauk for $575,000.

The duo also have a foundation called the Nixon-Marinoni Family Foundation, which last year gave $44,896 to nonprofits — including organizations like WNYC Public Radio, Trinity Place Shelter, the Bowery Mission and the Roundabout Theatre Company.

They also donated $7,979 in personal funds to charity.

The reveal came a day after Gov. Andrew Cuomo blasted her for failing to disclose her returns in April, as candidates traditionally do — a lag she’d blamed on having particularly “complicated” returns filed in several states.

On Friday, he called on her to release more than one year of information.

“One year is not enough … no one historically would release one year,” he told reporters at a stop in Battery Park, adding that the only reason you wouldn’t divulge more is “you’re hiding something.”

On Thursday, Politico revealed that the family foundation between 2012 and 2016 donated tens of thousands of dollars to progressive groups that are now supporting her campaign — including the Public Policy and Education Fund of New York, Alliance for Quality Education, and The Black Institute.

The Public Policy and Education Fund’s Albany office hosted Nixon’s tax return viewing session Friday.

The governor’s own tax returns show he earned $212,776 in 2017 — $173,046 in wages and $36,486 from investments in a blind trust — and paid 26 percent of that in taxes, according to the Democrat and Chronicle.

He paid $41,765 in federal taxes and $12,782 in state income taxes, and donated $11,000 to charity — all of which went to HELP USA, the housing charity he founded.

Additional reporting by Carl Campanile