Gillian Anderson Rewatches The X-Files, Sex Education, Scoop & More
Released on 04/25/2024
Actually, I'm looking forward to working with you.
I've heard a lot about you.
Oh, really?
This is probably the most cringey scene I've ever done.
When I look at it, it just looks awful when I see it.
Hi, I am Gillian Anderson
and today we're gonna be watching some scenes
throughout my career.
[upbeat music]
[tape rewinding]
I was under the impression
that you were sent to spy on me.
If you have any doubt
about my qualifications or credentials-
You're a medical doctor.
You teach at the academy,
you did your undergraduate degree in physics.
Einstein's Twin Paradox, a new interpretation,
Dana Scully's senior thesis.
Now that's a credential, rewriting Einstein.
This is in the pilot episode.
This is the first time that Scully and Mulder meet.
It was my first series.
It wasn't the show
that Fox thought was gonna be their popular show.
They had all their eggs
and their money on something called Briscoe County
or something like that, and this crazy, strange,
unique, dark show ended up the number one show.
It would get 42 million viewers on a Friday night.
Did you bother to read it?
I did, I liked it.
It's just that in most of my work,
laws of physics rarely seemed to apply.
Mulder's pinboard behind him became as famous
as almost anything else in in the series,
and particularly that I wanna believe poster.
I probably have signed about 6 million
I wanna believe posters in my life.
[Mulder] This is the substance found
in the surrounding tissue.
It's organic.
I don't know, is it some kind of synthetic protein?
Beats me, I've never seen it before either.
I don't think it was maybe until the second season
that we realized how big it was.
And I went from complete obscurity to, I mean,
I don't even know how to talk about it.
We won't talk about it right now.
We're just gonna watch, watch,
watch this scene in my squeaky voice.
I'm a baby, this is me, the baby.
Do you believe in the existence of extraterrestrials?
Logically, I would have to say no.
David Duchovny and I met while we were auditioning
for the pilot episode.
There were a few actresses for Scully,
and there were maybe three actors for Mulder.
In the first week, Mulder was cast and it was David.
And so in the second week,
they were gonna cast the actresses to match up with David,
and they weren't satisfied
with the ones that they had, including me.
They flew in some actresses from New York City to audition,
and that included Jill Hennessy and Cynthia Nixon,
who ended up on Sex and the City.
What I find fantastic is any notion
that there are answers beyond the realm of science.
The answers are there, you just have to know where to look.
We shot the first five seasons up in Vancouver, Canada.
I think that fact went a long way to keeping us sane.
When we would come down to Los Angeles,
we couldn't go anywhere.
We couldn't go to restaurants, we couldn't leave our houses.
There was paparazzi everywhere.
In the summers,
I would sometimes go and do press around the world,
and there was one year where I showed up at, you know,
these book signings, I mean thousands and thousands,
like 15, 20,000 people in each of the malls.
I became aware of how big the show was.
Well, that, and when somebody came up
to the desk that I was sitting at and dropped his trousers
and showed me the tattoo of my face on his butt cheek,
and David was on the other butt cheek.
[upbeat music]
Jesus Christ, mom, get out, please.
While you are still under my roof,
you are not to shut me out.
[music blaring]
[Otis growling]
Why are you so angry?
You're a hypocrite.
What, how?
This was the first time that I was offered a role
that was comedy.
It's always a shock when people offer me comedy
because my resting face is serious.
I really appreciated the fact that they thought
that I might be able to play Gene Milburn,
who is a sex therapist.
She's a single mother of Otis, her son,
and she is a bit morally ambiguous and a bit chaotic,
and proceeds to get more and more chaotic
as the season goes on.
You say you're all about honesty and clear communication,
but you're not honest at all.
You invade all your way into everything I do
and then act like it's an accident.
You cross multitudes of parental boundaries
on a daily basis.
You are a sneaky, sneaky woman.
Asa Butterfield's an extraordinary young actor.
I think he was already 30 at this point
when he was playing 16.
I don't how, but he was a child star
and just is a phenomenal actor.
And so anytime that we actually came together
to shoot scenes, it was such a joy
to just throw everything at the wind
and just be as inappropriate and as big and as crazy,
and you know, slightly over the top.
I'd never been asked to be over the top before,
I think in my career, so that was fun.
I thought you were finally listening to me,
that you were letting me be independent,
but you just can't help yourself.
It's like you want to consume me.
You are like the spider moms that eat their own offspring.
Like you think I'm somehow part of you.
Well, you are part of me.
I remember Asa and I were sitting in LA,
doing press for it,
and the woman who was interviewing us was Polish,
and she was saying that there was no sex education
in schools in Poland, and that this was her sex education.
You know, that's quite a big bit of information.
That's a big responsibility.
And I don't think any of us necessarily,
when we took on these roles,
thought that a responsibility of that kind
would be ours in saying yes to this,
but because of the nature of the series
and the fact that everything was on the table,
it was so frank, it was bold.
And we talk about pretty much everything to do with sex.
And it shows the pain and the sorrow and the heartbreak
and the joy and the messiness of life,
and in a way that I don't think, you know,
we'd ever actually really seen before on television.
And playing Gene Milburn, her influence on my life
as an actor and on my conversation
started to influence my Instagram feed,
and I started to post penis of the days
and yonis of the days,
and people would send images from nature to me
that I would post about.
And so it started this ongoing conversation
that was embracing all kinds of sex
and all kinds of human beings.
[upbeat music]
[Photographer] Thank you.
The way those men patronized me, lectured me,
the squires and grandies.
[Aide] Up in the clouds bastards.
I was cast in the show
about a year before I was going to be acting in it,
and, in wanting to get it right
and the pressure of playing somebody
who is both revered and despised, particularly in the UK,
an incredibly divisive character
that people feel very strongly about
and know very well because of their strong feelings.
And their ideas,
their solutions to the problems this country faces,
so unimaginative and cautious and wet.
It was important to me
that I try and make it as accurate as possible.
So I started a year in advance,
probably reading everything I could.
She has a very compelling book that she wrote,
but she also reads it herself.
So it was an opportunity to hear about her life
through her own words, which I found fascinating.
My father used to give a sermon,
God needs no faint hearts for his ambassadors.
They are faint hearts,
and I should have kicked them out when I had the chance.
The degree to which religion played
in her and her sister's lives.
All of those things I found fascinating,
and so I really kind of started from the beginning
and then started working on physical
and working on Thatcher's voice.
And one of the best pieces of advice that I got
was to not try and disappear too much into her.
It was important that I keep an aspect of myself
that makes sense for my casting
and makes sense for the character.
So to not try too hard to force myself into something
that might become either rigid or inaccessible
because it was trying to be too perfect,
I could let it go a bit more
and maybe be a bit more spontaneous.
I found her incredibly fun to play.
[upbeat music]
Observe or participate.
[foreboding music]
What?
Are you in this very moment
observing or participating?
Observing.
I played Dr. Bedelia Du Maurier, Hannibal's psychiatrist.
I was just gonna come in and do three episodes
in the first season.
Ended up doing a few episodes of the second season,
and then did the third season.
And it was just fun to play this very enigmatic,
odd, sexy, possibly complicit psychiatrist.
Did you know what he would do?
I would prefer your answer honestly.
I was curious.
We didn't know the direction
that the writers were going to take our relationship.
Every time a script came, it was new information.
I think the writers were just having a ball.
Brian Fuller, the exec producer and creator,
said to me at one point
that they would come up with the craziest paragraphs
for me to say out of fun,
to see whether I could make sense of the gobbledygook.
Is this what you expected?
Yes.
Important to get across was the degree
to which she is aroused by what is happening.
Why on earth is she there?
I mean, I know she's titillated by him,
but the fact that she got on a plane
and went to Italy with him
implies that there is something deeper between them.
This is the first time he commits a murder in front of her.
It was important to see the degree to which
she is on the one hand completely terrified.
And on the other hand,
there's part of her that is definitely turned on by
and enraptured by the danger and him.
[upbeat music]
Drop the charade, Peter, own your confession.
Have the courage of your convictions.
Admit that you remember it all.
We did three seasons.
I play detective superintendent Stella Gibson,
and we finally have caught the serial killer called Specter.
I want to know the real me.
Then stop hiding behind the mask of amnesia.
We're all wearing masks to some extent.
In the series,
Stella and Specter don't really cross paths.
I am as obsessed with Specter
as he is obsessed with the act of killing these young women,
of not getting caught so that he can continue,
and of teasing me in a sense.
It's time to take responsibility for what you've done.
Stop this pathetic charade.
I was an exec producer on the series
and involved in the hiring director and casting
and had seen a lot of audition tapes,
and Jamie Dornan's audition tape for this
was above and beyond the most compelling.
A lot of the series, he doesn't talk very much,
but this was gonna be his first scene
that would potentially present his acting skills.
It was amazing because he's so good,
and he's so good in this scene,
and it was incredibly satisfying
being involved in the process to see him unveil himself.
[upbeat music]
Am I right in thinking you threw a birthday party
for Epstein's girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell at Sandranam?
No, it was a shooting weekend.
A shooting weekend.
Yes, just a straightforward,
straightforward shooting weekend.
I play the journalist who interviews Prince Andrew,
Emily Maitlis, and Emily is very well known in the UK.
She's an incredibly formidable, very intelligent,
very prolific journalist, and the fact that the BBC
was able to secure an interview with the royal family,
who rarely do interviews
and had never before done an interview like this.
But Prince Andrew agreed to do it,
thinking that he would be able
to clear his name from his relationship
with the sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein.
It went incredibly wrong, and he put his foot in his mouth
so many times during the interview
that he ended up having to step down from public office.
But during these times
that he was a guest at Windsor Castle,
at Sandranam, the shooting weekend,
we now know that he had been procuring young girls
for sex trafficking.
Emily is very much a part of life in London,
and she's in my proximity.
She has a particular way of dressing.
Her hair is known, her constant tan is known, you know,
they're all part of the news cycle somehow.
And so taking her on when she's in my midst
felt like it was even more risky potentially
than Margaret Thatcher, who was deceased.
Once I said yes, obviously the biggest part of this job
was the interview itself.
We now know that.
At the time there was no indication to me or anybody else.
[Gillian] The director had asked Rufus and I,
Rufus Sewell plays Prince Andrew,
if we would do it all in one go.
This is Rufus's first day of work.
They had recreated the south drawing room
at Buckingham Palace to the T.
We walk into this room, it is massive and it is identical.
We sat down and got mic'd up
and made sure that legs were crossed in the right way
and paper was on the lap and pen was in the right hand,
and then, you know, we were ready and he said, Action.
And what was crazy in the moment,
it was the first time
that I was hearing Rufus playing Andrew.
And so as I'm saying my lines and asking questions,
he is responding as Andrew, exactly as Prince Andrew had.
I'm inside my head looking at him going, holy fuck.
Like it's really good, it is like identical.
I'd seen this interview so many times,
and it was identical, but I can't react to it
'cause what I have to focus on
is doing exactly what Emily did,
and looking down at the right times, looking up,
gesturing, writing, all that kind of stuff.
I wonder if you have any sense of guilt, regret, or shame.
Because we were held in this framework,
essentially the real interview,
the boundaries around that didn't allow me
to fall off the side of it at all.
There were moments where I felt so in it
because I was being supported by, you know,
this actor on the other side who was feeding me
exactly what you would have wanted him to.
It enabled it to just kind of turn over and turn over
and keep going, and you could stay in it
and ride this scene as if it was something
that you had been rehearsing together,
and there was an audience,
and it just kind of flowed and carried itself.
It's like we were on a wave
that rolled all the way to the shore,
and it was really cool.
[tape rewinding]
Thank you so much for watching.
[logo chiming]
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