Dana Scully, the power-dressing strawberry blonde half of The X-files'
paranormal investigating FBI team, is the smartest woman on TV. She's a
trained medical doctor, a dab hand with an autopsy scalpel and the finest
student in her FBI class. And she's sexy too, in a sultry and appealingly
natural way.
She's
the calming influence on The X-files, reacting in a motherly fashion to
Mulder's excitable and outlandish boy scout theories about man-eating worm
beasts - raising just an eyebrow to register her utter disbelief. And although
she has an infuriating habit of looking the wrong way whenever aliens land
or ghosts appear, she's always prepared to blow away perps to save Mulder's
arse when he gets in too deep. So far she's been chased by pre-historic
bugs and flesh-eating cavewomen, experimented on by sinister government
forces, been terrorised, shot at and kidnapped by aliens. And yet, despite
everything, she manages to keep a cool head - offering a plausible solution
when the implausible seems the only answer. And did you know that she's
laughed only once, and that was in the pilot episode more than two years
ago? So perhaps because she does it so infrequently, one of her smiles
is worth a million of anyone else's.
Trying to think of an equivalent anywhere on TV is near on impossible;
there are few enough heavyweight roles for women, even less that don't
require some kind of contractual cleavage shots in every episode. Scully
is renowned for her wits, not her tits. Even in such contemporary top-rated
shows such as ER and Friends, the females are seen before they are heard.
If real-life nurses looked like the ones in ER, no one would get saved
- male doctors would just stand around all day gawping at them; and isn't
it just fantastic that three leggy, sexy, drop-dead stunners (a blonde,
a brunette and a dark-haired one) would end up sharing an apartment in
Friends? And what of the almost obligatory 'caught in the shower' and 'waking
up in the middle of the night to answer the door' scenes that most shows
have to deal with? Nobody knows if Scully sleeps with her gun and we'll
probably never see. But there are plenty of guys who'd like the chance
to find out.
The X-files is unique in many ways, not least because it's the first TV
show in living memory where the sexual tension between the leads is destined
to go unconsummated. The tide of TV history is against them; tradition
demands that Mulder and Scully get the shags in. But let's hope not; remember
the tragic way that Moonlighting fell apart once David and Maddie got it
together between the sheets, or how Cheers hit the skids once Sam and Diane
did the dirty? By comparison, the relationship between Mulder and Scully
remains simmering in its underpants.
Gillian Anderson's most ardent supporters, the Internet-based Gillian Anderson
Testosterone Brigade call her "a role model for women and an object of
complete, unabated affection for men". Furthermore, their motto runs "Gillian
Anderson Is Intellectually Drop Dead Gorgeous". And they're not wrong.
Yet all we know of Anderson is her portrayal of Scully. She has risen seemingly
without a trace to star in the coolest cult hit on TV and yet there are
no salacious tabloid rumours of a pre-X-files career as a Hollywood stripper,
and no lurid ex-lover's tales of coke-fuelled orgies to spice up the gossip
columns. The Gillian Anderson Testosterone Brigade would have us believe
that Anderson and Scully are one and the same person. Let's find out, shall
we . . .
Some facts about Gillian Anderson. She can juggle, "But not very well."
She won a World Theatre Award for her role in Alan Ayckbourn's Absent Friends.
The song that means the most to her right now is Hand in my Pocket by Alanis
Morissette. The first boy she kissed was called Adam and her favourite
actors are Robert De Niro, Jessica Lange, Meryl Streep and Gary Oldman.
She's 27, married to a man called Klotz, has a daughter (Piper, 18 months
old), her hair colour is naturally ash-blonde and she wears black jeans,
white T-shirts and scuffed tan cowboy boots on her days off. And her favourite
expletive is 'fuck me'.
"Fuck me," she says, rolling the words around. "It's really satisfying
saying it." She says it again, louder: "FUCK ME! It's my favourite swear
word," she laughs. "I say it a lot, really quickly, like 'fuckme!' Okay.
What's your favourite swear word?"
Fuck is always a winner.
"Do you ever call anyone a wanker?"
All the time.
"What about bollocks?"
Yeah, bollocks. Bollocks.
"Hahhahaha! I was very into swearing as a child. I remember asking my mom
what fuck meant, what fucking was, and I can't remember on my life what
her response was. I remember hearing it in the playground when I was eight,
off a kid who was 12. He fancied me and I fancied him but I was scared
to death because his affection was like grown-up affection - he may have
even done the fuck word. And I had no idea what it meant."
For nine months of the year, North Shore Studios in Vancouver (chosen for
reasons of economy) is home to The X-files' cast and crew. Set off the
main drag, the studio lot is made up of a handful of gargantuan, grey and
white sound stages the size of aircraft hangers. Today it's minus 10 and
the air is best described as bracing. A gunmetal grey trailer home, parked
just to the left of the main X-Files set, is Gillian Anderson's sparsely
furnished, functional home-from-home. Inside, Cleo, a large, black, slavering
hound of undetermined breed is throwing toys from one end of the trailer.
And she's farting. "Oh Cleo!" says Gillian. And then to me, "It's the food
we're giving her." Through the glass-panelled door we can see extras garbed
as SWAT team members milling around, their breath turning into instant
mist. Gillian plonks herself down on the sofa, dressed in her drab regulation
FBI suit, cross legged, munching on a banana.
Face to face the first thing you notice about Gillian Anderson is that
she's smaller and prettier than she photographs - she's classy looking
and beautiful in a Fifties movie-star kind of way. She stands maybe five-foot
three and is spectrally thin. It's no secret that as an FBI agent in The
X-files her sexuality is purposely downplayed, her curvy figure hidden
in drab suits and big coats. For someone whose star is rapidly on the ascent,
she's endearingly bullshit free, displaying not an ounce of Hollywood head-swelling
or big-star hauteur. She's fun, approachable and easy to warm to. She seems
genuinely flattered when I ask her what it feels like to be a fantasy woman
for men around the world.
"The first time I heard it, I was surprised," she admits, leaning over
and dumping her banana skin in the bin behind me. "Because I'm not sure
how people get the sex symbol thing from Scully. But somebody can be very
sexy and not be attractive to look at. There's an aura they have."
Do you like the way you look?
"I'm comfortable with my looks," she muses. "I've had to live with them
for 27 years. I've been called 'an unconventional beauty' which is a strange
kind of compliment, but I know I'm not a marketable beauty in TV terms.
I'm attractive in a different kind of way."
You've become the Anti-Pammy
"I guess so," she laughs. "I've been called 'thinking man's crumpet', which
is hysterical. But it's better than being called a bimbo like Pamela Anderson
who is only famous for her body - if it is her body. I'd prefer to be known
for something a little more worthwhile ."
When Gillian originally auditioned for the role of Scully, she had no idea
what to expect and turned up at the producer's office looking scruffy,
her hair half way down her back. It was only later that she discovered
they were originally looking for a "leggy, blonde, model type" and had
to go out on a limb to persuade the studio to give her the role. When she
married production designer Clyde Klotz and got pregnant six months into
the first series, the producers though of bringing in a new female lead,
but decided the Mulder/Scully chemistry was too good to throw away. Hence
the unflattering big coats of the last series.
There's a knock at the trailer door. A production assistant tells her she's
needed back on the set. "Come on," she says grabbing her overcoat. "Let's
see what they want."
It's just after lunch and we're playing make-believe (it's interesting
to note that she took her place in the food queue outside the catering
van behind extras, technicians and assistants without fuss). The sun warms
our backs as we sit on a picnic bench outside her trailer. Ostensibly we
should be talking about the incredible burgeoning success of The X-files,
with series three due to start its 24-week run on Sky One on March 5, but
getting her to talk about the show isn't proving easy. She eats, drinks,
sleeps, breaths X-files up to 16 hours a day, five days a week. So we're
playing make-believe: pretending for the sake of conversation that we're
in a bar. "Our eyes meet," I say. "I smile. You smile back. It's looking
good. What happens next?"
"I probably wouldn't do anything," she says. "I might make eye contact
with somebody, but I would expect the other person to make all the moves."
"And if I were to chat you up?"
"Do it without me knowing you were doing it."
"And how should I treat you?" "Becompletely selfless. Be un-egotistical,
un-egocentric and also not like 'on me' all the time, if you know what
I mean? And just let the conversation go where it needs to go. And, umm,
ignore me, ha ha! No, don't ignore me, but be your own person and not come
up to the bar just because I'm sitting there."
If I said you had a beautiful body would you hold it against me?
"That's certainly not the way - and if you tried that I'd probably throw
a drink over you."
What about bedroom tactics - do you like being bossed around or does the
Scully in you take over?
"Both. Initially I like the battle play. I like switching back and forth
between being in control and being submissive. It's fun that way, that
kind of role-playing, because you never know what to expect. It's more
exciting."
Are you adventurous?
"Uh huh." And as my imagination goes into overdrive picturing exactly what
'adventurous' could possibly mean, I decide I need clarification. I mean,
Gillian, do you, er, 'break the law' as Paula Yates so memorable put it
recently.
"Yes," she says without a moment's hesitation. And then she bursts into
fits of laughter: "Ha ha! Yeah. Umm, how did we get into this conversation,
ha ha?"
On set. Shooting is in progress. The Pusher, as this episode is called,
concerns a brain cancer patient who discovers his tumour has unlocked the
latent areas of his mind, lending him heightened extra-sensory powers.
In today's big scene, he forces Mulder and Scully to play Russian roulette.
The director motions for action and Scully explodes. "You bastard! Damn
you! Damn you!" she screams, diving out of the way of a gun shot. The scene
calls for Gillian to run full pelt at a wall, wearing a bullet-proof vest.
She is called upon to do it time and time again as camera angles and lighting
are adjusted. She does this without complaint. Filming The X-files is no
picnic; the days are long and conditions are on the Spartan side. Consequently
there's no room for inflated Hollywood egos, tantrums, mollycoddling or
star hand-holding. Everybody involved with The X-files loves the show.
Still, it doesn't look that much like fun.
"It can be," she says unconvincingly, after a suitable pause, back at the
trailer. It's getting late and the strain is starting to tell. We find
out later that shooting continues till after 2.30am. "It can be fun," she
says, "but not always. It's pretty gruelling most of the time, actually."
Being cocooned away in Vancouver for most of the year mean that the stars
of The X-files live in a bubble and have little idea of the show's popularity.
When talk turns to Gillian's 'real-life' she raises an eyebrow. "What life?"
From Gillian Anderson's personal file. Born: Chicago, 1968. Father: Edward.
Mother: Rosemary. Raised in Puerto Rico, England (from two till 11) and
the American Midwest. Went to school in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Schoolmates
thought she had a funny accent and bullied her. An old child until she
was 13, she remembers being "withdrawn" and "unpopular at school. I was
always off in my own little world or being sent to the principal's office
for talking back." Her parents had two further children in quick succession
(a boy and a girl) which, she says, only served to further her sense of
alienation. She shaved her head, got a three-foot purple mohican, a nose
ring and wore $2 dresses. She hints darkly at times of loneliness and despair,
of identifying with Jane Horrocks' character in Life is Sweet, and mentions
"hurting myself in different ways."
When she was 13 she lost her virginity to "a punk guy who has since become
a Neo-Nazi. It was awkward, stupid, unadulterated crap."
I think you'll find that most people's first times are less than mind-blowing.
"Yeah, I can't imagine saying at 13 that it was incredibly romantic and
that the best lay I've ever had was at 13. No, that's not the case."
When she was 14, she went the whole hog and shacked up with a penniless
punk muso, ten years to her senior. They used to sleep rough "in warehouses
with no heating and on friends' apartment floors," she remembers. "I guess
I felt comfortable in that relationship because I felt dirty and grungy
and angry. I used to not like myself," she says matter-of-factly. "I spent
time overweight, underweight, wearing black, hiding. But in the past couple
of years I've started to open up. What's scary is that I'm doing it in
front of millions of people."
Were you promiscuous as a teenager?
"I was, yes. During college I was somewhat promiscuous. Not in a bad way.
But it wasn't fun. I like the real stuff, I love the romance of the first
courting period, all that kind of stuff appeals to me."
So why did you do it?
"I think I felt that if somebody liked me, then I was supposed to. I didn't
realise I had a choice in the matter. If they liked me, even if they were
a complete asshole, I thought that I had to sleep with them! It was another
way of getting attention. I think that people really didn't find me attractive
- or I never really felt attractive - or I never really felt attractive
for years and it was only when I started to shave my head and dressed differently
that I realised I had a voice as to who I was and what I stood for, and
that made me feel attractive and made people attracted to me. I always
dressed in black and in combat boots and had hair that stood up six feet,
but still guys were attracted to me and so it was like, "Oh, okay, sure,
why not?"
Presumably you were having a good time then. "No, actually, I wasn't. I
didn't really enjoy it. I'm not sure that I've ever enjoyed it, ha ha ha,"
she laughs loud but not long. "No, I'm joking. But I don't think I enjoyed
it back then at all. When did I start enjoying sex? Umm ... For a long
time I felt it was something I had to do, and it wasn't really a place
where I could be free and experiment and enjoy. It was something that one
did, you know. So I think it wasn't until I was about 22 that I started
to realize that, "Hey, I can enjoy this.' Yeah ..."
The week before her 21st birthday, she gave up drinking.
"I loved alcohol," she says. "I actually like alcohol a bit too much. I
gave up because it was becoming ... it was just getting too much," she
falters. "I just realised that all I wanted to do was drink."
Were you a good drunk or a bad drunk.
"I was very introverted. It would've been fine after the first three drinks
if everybody just left. But also it was a sexual stimulant
for me. It made me feel much stronger and more confident and sexier and
I relied on that for a while."
How much were you drinking.
"Too much. But that's another story and I don't want to talk about it."
Her road-to-Damascus moment came at college when she made a startling discovery.
She could act. "My outlook changed, my grades went up and I was voted 'most
improved student'," she recalls. Later, graduating with a Bachelor of Fine
Arts degree from Chicago's DuPaul University, she moved to New York and
"did theatre". After moving to LA on the urging of a friend, she spent
a year auditioning, doing the odd bit-part in a soap or TV ad and generally
getting nowhere fast. She was about to jack it all in and move back east
when she heard about The X-files casting call. She got the part the day
her last dole cheque arrived.
Today she says she feels comfortable with herself, and generally considers
herself a "positive person. I have to be. I still sometimes have silent
freakouts," she says. "But I'm not as hard on myself as I used to be."
And then the intercom crackles into life, summoning her back on set to
play Russian roulette again. She tells me that the TV standards people
are having trouble with the scene they're filming. Apparently it's against
TV guidelines to point a gun at someone if only one round is chambered.
Six bullets is fine, mind you, but one is a no-no.
"This is very un-Scully." It's two days later in a bright, secluded Hollywood
photo studio. Gillian has flown down to audition for a major film role
and to be shot for the FHM cover. Right now, wearing little more than an
indecently low-cut black lace number, she looks every inch the movie star
she's about to become in real life. She wanders past, muttering something
about having "a big butt". Nothing, let me assure you, could be further
from the truth. She looks trim and in shape. Her make-up is natural and
low key, her hair tousled, free of the straight-jacket Scully bob. She
looks fantastic.
She says she wants to do a film during the early summer hiatus from shooting
The X-files. A role in action adventure with Morgan Freeman is mooted,
and also, bizarrely, someone has asked her to appear in an unlikely flick
about, ahem, a giant snake. For her part, Gillian would be happy playing
a bit-part in a big movie - just to test the water. She's yet to make the
break from small-screen TV success to big-screen movie stardom, and is
nervous about her chances. But it won't be too long now. Stardom beckons.
The X-files is only scheduled to run for another couple of series. "I just
hope it's allowed to end when it needs to, and it's not pushed beyond its
expectations," she says while the make-up and styling people fuss around
her. "I'd be happy for it to go on as long as it needs to go. But I'm sure
the sixth and seventh years would be gruelling - if it ever goes on that
long."
Someone jokingly mentions that the first shot we should do is Gillian handcuffed
to a bed. "Great," she says to gob-smacked looks all round, "where do we
start?" She picks out some classy black lingerie that she likes, jokes
that her Caesarean section scar is "too low down for you guys to see today"
and climbs the stairs into the studio room. The bed setup is first. She
lounges on the covers, "like I just rolled out of bed," she says, poking
fun at the fact that it's taken two hours to create this "totally natural"
effect. She wants her hair up for the next shots, and while it's teased
into shape, takes a peek at an Internet page showing her high school pictures.
"Some of this stuff is so embarrassing," she moans as an ex-boyfriend's
poetry comes up next to a picture of her at 16.
For someone who spends most of her time in straight-laced suits and heavy
overcoats in the pissing Vancouver rain, the opportunity to play the vixen
in the LA sunshine is a chance not to be missed.
Having seen the work-in-progress Polaroids, she's keen to carry on, fitting
in as many last-minute poses before being virtually dragged into a waiting
limo. She grabs a pair of handcuffs and asks if anyone has a gun she can
use. Somebody nervously mentions that no-one is going to believe this is
Scully. Gillian throws them a sideways glance. "Good. That's the point."
--Anthony Noguera