Re: David complimenting Gillian on her work. Remember also the one or two people who got to meet David not very long after he went to see Gillian in Streetcar and them asking about her to him, and him smiling and saying she was great… Obviously he’s impressed by her acting, no matter if he watches everything she does or not.

Yes, I remember that story! I’m still so impressed that David went to see Streetcar and never talked about it publicly or in the press. It was their moment, and it’s so much better like this. He has seen The Fall, he went to Streetcar, I’m sure he watches AG too. He’s very supportive of her work, and this is beautiful. 

Just looking at some lovely gifs/photos someone’s reblogged from Paley…oh how good that was😩 2013 was such a good year…why haven’t we had anything as good as this since then?! Oh how I wish the Webby’s would have been like Paley…I’m so ungrateful😂

You’re so very ungrateful!! lol! The Webbies were really awesome, most of all because we didn’t expecting them to be so good! They weren’t less good, they just were less long. If they’ve lasted one hour, I’m pretty sure they’d have overcome Paley. Okay, maybe not. But they’d have been as good, at least. We just need them to attend a con or whatever they want to attend, just the two of them, for more than 5 minutes. My hopes are high for the next season promo!

Gillian Anderson: Best of both worlds – Star2.com

Were you worried when you first moved to Britain that you might be sacrificing a Hollywood career?

I didn’t worry about it then. But at times, I lapse into thoughts of “Should I have worried about it?”. But I love my lifestyle here. I love the time that I get with my kids. I love that I don’t have paparazzi outside my door. I love the multicultural aspects of the city, multiracial aspects of the city, and that my kids are exposed to every walk of life in a way that they would not if we were living in Los Angeles. And I’ve had extraordinary opportunities over here in the work that I’ve gotten to do. It’s very different work than perhaps I would have had if I had stayed on. I was 24 when I got that job (Scully in X-Files), I had a child at 25, and that was my priority beyond having to show up to work. I’ve never sought celebrity. I don’t go on Facebook. I don’t have MySpace. I don’t Tweet. I like living a very private life, and I’m proud of the choices I made.

You hardly have a trace of an American accent. Was that a conscious effort?

You forget I grew up in England. I moved here when I was two and spent my formative years here. My parents always retained a flat here; so in the summertime we would come back. Essentially, it was my first language. When we first moved back to the United States, it took me a little while to get rid of my British accent. And I didn’t really lose it until maybe at the end of high school or beginning of college. It’s always been my first language so to speak, so it is near impossible for me not to fall into it when I moved here. And my kids are British and my partners have all been British. (She’s been married twice, divorced twice, has a daughter from her first husband, and two boys from a third relationship which she ended in 2012.)

How easy is it for you to juggle career and family?

It takes a lot of effort, a very careful consideration of the choices you have to make, although it’s become easier over time. When you’re younger and you’re pulled in so many different directions and you don’t know what’s right and what feels right – there are so many things in this business that can make you feel uncomfortable – you feel you’re selling your soul in a sense. And that makes you feel depleted, that you’re doing things that aren’t genuine. But as you get older it gets easier to make those decisions and to identify what feels comfortable in your skin and what’s important to you.

You are about to start shooting the new season of The X-Files. Are you surprised the fans are still here?

We know the fans are still here. What is surprising are the new fans.

There’s a whole other generation of fans who’ve discovered the series (through streaming services) so to be met by 13-year-olds who are talking about how they have seen all the episodes and they can’t wait for the new season, that I think was surprising. It’s had a longevity far beyond what we ever imagined.

You say living in London you’re shielded from the paparazzi. How do you feel about the media in general?

I think of the years that I used to disdain it. If you look at those pictures of me when X-Files was breaking, I always had this look on my face of disdain. But over time, as I have gotten older, I have learned to appreciate how we can be of service to each other, and the importance, when working on great projects, of getting it out there in the right way so that it is perceived in the way that you would like it to be perceived.

Speaking of projects, your new series American Gods offers you a chance to play David Bowie, Marilyn Monroe and Lucille Ball. You must have jumped at the opportunity.

Absolutely. It really has been a gift. But I wasn’t sure, when I first jumped into it, whether I embraced the fact that I had such an opportunity, or was I thinking, “What have I done?”. But after I figured out the logistics exactly of how to do each of them, I relaxed a little bit and then realized that this can be a lot of fun, and I just need to make the most of it.

Who was the most fun to play?

Probably Marilyn, because she’s so bright and lighthearted and I am not. I tend to be so serious; so it was nice to embody someone who’s bubbly and bright spirited and flirty and stuff, so it was fun to jump into her.

Are you a sci-fi junkie?

You know, it’s interesting. I have never been a sci-fi reader, I appreciate certain kinds of sci-fi films; I think Close Encounters (Of The Third Kind) was a big deal for me when I first saw it, but I have never specifically been drawn to the genre. But it keeps finding me. I keep being presented with (sci-fi) things and I keep thinking no, I don’t want to go there, but they are things that I just can’t say no to. I mean, when (executive producer) Bryan (Fuller) approached me to do American Gods with the opportunity to play different characters, I mean, you really can’t say no to that.

And so, as much as I think I need to start mixing it up a bit more, I keep being shown that maybe (sci-fi) is where I need to reside a bit longer. So, I am a reluctant fan.

Gillian Anderson: Best of both worlds – Star2.com

I’m so damn excited to experience every single piece of interaction between Gillian and David, and also between Scully and Mulder yet to come, but what is even more important, I’m really really really looking forward to share it with you guys. You are awesome and inspiring bunch of wonderful and insane people and I’m truly blessed to have found you after all these lonely years of loving x-files on my own 🙂 Stay strong and united, we are undefeated!

this is a submission from @jenya1313, but I could have written that myself! She’s right!!

Omg JHH I watched WWHL for the first time (thanks for the link!) and it is so awkward! I’m happy we have gifs cos I never want to watch that again! WWHL is to television what the Webbys is to award ceremonies – utter trash – but I am eternally grateful for them giving us gillovny moments 😉

They both worship both Kim Kardashian and Gillovny. I don’t know if there’s a link, but if the next step is a Gillovny reality tv show on E!, I’d watch that shit everyday. 

(submission from @dontpointdownthere )Why do I have two pictures of that, one blurrier than the other? In one of them I can see David’s arm on the chair but I can’t remember where it came from. I know the clearer one is from David twitter but the other… I have no idea.

I think those two are the same picture but coming from a different source, hence why one of them is clearer. Still, it looks different from the one they took on this video. They’re not in the same position, especially David. 

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