
Gillian Anderson
Actor Gillian Anderson talks to John Wilson about her most significant creative influences and experiences.
Gillian Anderson’s breakthrough television role in the sci-fi series The X Files made her a global star in 1993, and she played cool-headed Agent Dana Scully for nearly a decade. She also starred in period dramas, including an acclaimed film adaptation of Edith Wharton’s novel The House of Mirth and, on television, in Bleak House, Great Expectations and War and Peace. Her theatre credits include A Doll’s House, A Streetcar Named Desire and All About Eve, all of which saw her nominated for Olivier Awards. Gillian has won Golden Globe and Emmy Awards for the X Files, and also for The Crown, in which she played prime minister Margaret Thatcher. More recently, she found a new generation of fans for her role as a sex therapist in the series Sex Education. Her latest film is The Salt Path, adapted from the best-selling memoir by Raynor Wynn.
Gillian Anderson tells John Wilson how, after being born in Chicago, she moved with her parents to Crouch End, London, when she was five, and then to Michigan at the age of 11. After what she describes as 'rebellious' teenage years, she studied at Chicago’s DePaul University with drama teacher Ric Murphy, whom she cites as a major influence on her early acting ambitions. After a series of minor stage roles in New York, she auditioned for The X Files, and the role of Agent Scully changed her life. She also chooses the actor Meryl Streep as a major inspiration after seeing her with Robert Redford in the 1985 romantic drama film Out of Africa. Gillian also reveals how the Serbian-born conceptual performance artist Marina Abramović has also been an influential cultural figure for her.
On TV
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | John Wilson |
Interviewed Guest | Gillian Anderson |
Producer | Edwina Pitman |
Broadcast
- Next Thursday 22:30