That's it! Thanks to everyone who asked a question
And on that much-rumoured X Files reboot...
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shanghaisputnik asks:
I saw Streetcar at the Young Vic in July and later how they chose to present it live-to-tape when shown in cinemas via NT Live, so I feel now I’ve seen three unique iterations of this production. I assumed the decision to go with a wide static frame and the long takes to compliment and keep you in the tone of the live theatre experience. But can you talk a bit about your directorial choices after reading O’Hagan’s script in terms of picking your deliberate filmic moments in The Departure? I mean the choreography within that wide static frame (i.e. -- staging yourself quite far from camera for the 1st scene, only CU is cop lighting your cig, doing all the catcalling balcony stuff o.s, etc.)
Keeley Lindkvist asks:
You have a very good ear for different accents. It got me thinking; if you could have been brought up speaking any language you chose, which language would it be and why?
catherineverney asks:
How did you feel seeing Blanche for yourself when you directed The Departed? After a summer of being her on stage what was it like looking? Was she as you expected her to be from your inside perspective?
"I'd love to do a comedy with Jason Bateman"
MessyCat asks:
Any comedy roles in your near future? I know you’re hilarious, so it’s time to let everyone know it, don’t you think :) Who would be your pick to play your leading man (or woman!) in a romantic comedy?
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"There seems to be an upswing of negative perception about feminism"
Einsteinstwinparadox asks:
I wanted to tell you that you were my role model as a young girl in the 90s and still are now as I approach 30. I know many countless others have also been inspired and moved by you over they years; “The Scully Effect” and your influence on women is often spoken about, but I was curious what you would hope to be the most lasting impression you leave on young women. Popular culture and history will likely point to characters like Scully and Stella, but what would YOU most like to be remembered for as a feminist figure?
"I'd do a timelapse prequel for Miss Havisham"
insteinstwinparadox asks:
If you could do a prequel for any other character you’ve played on stage, TV or film, which role would you choose and why?
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eugoogoolizer asks:
Writing is something that I always have so much want to do but very little motivation to actually get up and do it until I read something that makes me think, “Wow, that is so beautiful! I want to create something beautiful.” Are there any particular writers or books that make you feel this way?
Jodie Whalan writes:
If I tell you a joke will you tell me one? (I already know your 0 and 8 one :P)
There’s an inflatable boy who goes to an inflatable school, where everything is inflatable. The buildings, the teachers and all the students, everything!
One day the boy gets into trouble, for bringing a pin to school. The Principal says “You’ve let me down, you’ve let yourself down, you’ve let the whole school down.” LOL
Your turn Gillian :)
You’re not like that schoolboy with a pin, you are an INFLATOR! Thank you. Love you and your work!
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Einsteinstwinparadox asks:
What for you as an actress was the biggest discovery you made about Blanche? Did playing her bring about any discoveries about yourself?
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hicheung aks:
Like many, I’ve been a fan since the X-files. My two year old daughter is now a fan too, because of your role as the Witch in Room on the Broom. How did you get this part?
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Vicky Jackson asks:
Hello from New Zealand,
I have been mulling over which question I would like to ask you and to be honest they all seem rather pointless and dull, what on earth do you ask someone who you do not know and yet have at times used as a form of escape, it sort of feels like I am going up to that girl I like at the bar, hoping not to make a fool of myself and that she may like me back... anyway I digress...
I would like to ask if your work, the fact that people you do not know do in fact know who you are (or at least think they do) has ever made you feel like your life is not your own or if strangers have seemed to think of you as some kind of public property?
Thank you for your time and I hope that you have a wonderful day.
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diamantez asks:
First of all Gillian, let me take my hat off to you. I have loved everything you have done and I am still a major fan of The X Files. Didn’t you get into Duncan Lomax’s music – English guitarist? Ex-school friend of mine and band member? My friend saw your Blance in Munich. I couldn’t go but she told me it was outstanding, definitive. WOW.
Professor Boxhill’s book on Tennessee Williams changed everything for me. He talked about the heroines and heroes as archetypes whose tragedy is the way in which they hear, ever more loudly, the ticking of the clock, like Brick to Big Daddy, “Time just outran me – Big Daddy. Got there first”. I wonder whether Blanche sees herself as a victim - apart from other forces -of time, both in the sense that she can not escape her past, and the social pressure of the late 1940’s to conform? She’s getting on, isn’t she? Marriage and love are becoming phantoms in a cruel world. And now that Belle Reve is gone she does not have the protection of her family wealth to protract her. She is exposed now to economic injustices. Is this an element you found in the play? What for you is the heart of Blanche’s tragedy? The sources of her delusional state and self-deceit?
Thanks and I love The Departure. It seems to me that there is a tradition of looking at the play as though it hinges on Brandon and it is very hard for a female character to be strong enough and sophisticated enough to emerge from the shadow, Personally I don’t think Vivian Leigh did this, great as the performance is. But in my view The Departure really shows that the play is about the tragedy of Blanche, and how the past will ineluctably become stronger and more menacing in the present.
You are amazing Gillian!!!!
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BigDukeSix asks:
Hi Gillian,
If you smelled gas in the street would you telephone the gas authorities, or would you assume somebody else would?
After seeing your astonishing performance in The Fall, I suspect you’d call them.
Forest Sainte Marie asks:
What is the most beautiful trip you have done in your life? (can be a real trip or a spiritual one)
And also:
What is your favourite memory of last year?
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georginaturner asks:
Hi Gillian,
Which film makes you cry every time you watch it? (For me it’s The Children’s Hour, and I think you’d be excellent in the Audrey Hepburn role if it was remade.)
Thanks!
"Paolo Nutini is a living genius"
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msfi01 asks:
I learned so much from you about strength and feminism when I was a young woman. You seem to have so much confidence - what advice would you give to women who are in their 30s and 40s now?
(On a personal note – I ran the Desk for Dana Fund website back in the 90s which campaigned for Scully to get her own desk, a bit frivolous like so many fan sites, but I learned so much about advocacy, community building, and met my husband. Seeing Streetcar last year was brilliant. So, thanks!)
"Parenthood is the most rewarding and most infuriating journey. And it gets easier"
DaniMagic asks:
Best advice you would give to a mother?! Loving this journey, but have to admit it can sometimes be a struggle ... So always up for tips, tricks and wisdom from fellow mamas!
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TDGS41 asks:
Dear Gillian,
You’re an inspiration to women of all ages. If you weren’t an actress, what would you be? Could you imagine doing an ordinary job ?
"I can be thinking about shopping and look like I am trying to work out a mathematical problem"
sprice2394 says:
Hello! I’m an 18 year old Drama School hopeful, what would be the most important advice you would give to a young performer? Thanks. (PS I was lucky enough to see at NTlive broadcast of Streetcar – it blew me away, you were superb!)
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ancie75 asks:
Your career has spanned a range of roles from the X-files tv star to the incredibly strong and demanding Street Car on stage. Where do you see your next challenge? You are a force to be reckoned with and an important role model to women at a time when current aspirational women are reality stars and the wives of the rich and famous. Do you feel a responsibility to maintain your profile as an actor to be taken seriously?
Here is Gillian
... all smiles in the Guardian offices.
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"I can't actually talk about the wildest thing I've ever done. Not that I'd get arrested, but I'd never live it down"
And we’re off!
Forest Sainte Marie asks:
Do you sometimes make new years’ resolutions? If yes, what was this one’s? :)
Post your questions for Gillian Anderson
Actors often talk of a role getting under their skin, but rarely as much as Gillian Anderson with her performance as Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire. Following her much-admired run at the Young Vic last year – where she “captured both Blanche’s airy pretensions to grandeur and her desolate loneliness” according to Michael Billington – she has now directed her first film, The Departure, a short prequel to Streetcar focused once again on Tennessee Williams’s troubled heroine.
It’s another daring leap for an actor whose career has been full of vivid, uncompromising characters. From her breakthrough as Agent Scully in The X Files, to her interpretations of Dickens in Bleak House and Great Expectations, and her dogged detective in current TV hit The Fall, she’s brought an unforgettable blend of resolve and vulnerability. But she’s still eager to reject any comfort zones, even lobbying for a comic part in the forthcoming Ghostbusters film.
To mark the arrival of The Departure on the Guardian’s website, she’s joining us to answer your questions at 1pm GMT on Monday 9 February. Post yours in the comments below, and she’ll try and answer as many as possible.
Thank you everybody for joining me this afternoon - thanks for all the questions, and for making me think, and have a great day!