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  Gillian Leigh Anderson was born in Chicago, Illinois 
        on August 9, 1968. Soon after her birth, the family relocated to Puerto 
        Rico for 15 months and then moved to England. Gillian spent the next 9 
        years of her childhood growing up in London's North End - first in Stamford 
        Hill and later in Crouch End - while her father Edward studied film production 
        at the London School of Film Technique in Covent Garden for 2 years. Eventually 
        the family moved back to the U.S.A. and settled in Grand Rapids where 
        her father ran a film post-production company and her mother worked as 
        a computer analyst. 
 
  Gillian's 
        love for acting began when she decided to audition for a community play 
        while attending City High School in Grand Rapids, Michigan. 
 "Somehow, I have no idea how the transition was made from wanting 
        to be an archeologist or a marine biologist, to wanting to be an actress, 
        but it just kind of happened," says Gillian.
 
 As a child, Gillian showed a flair for drama but was more of a tomboy 
        who harbored dreams of becoming a Marine Biologist rather than those of 
        movie stardom. "I loved digging up worms and cutting them up into 
        little pieces. In the interests of science, of course!"
 
 Her mother Rosemary recalls, "From the start Gillian had a real flair 
        for the dramatic. That has simply always been her personality. But the 
        first time I knew something was really up with her and acting was when 
        she was 14 and a teacher assigned her the "Romeo And Juliet" 
        balcony scene. Gillian had no background in Shakespeare, acting or anything 
        remotely like it. Nobody on either side of our family had any experience 
        with acting. Her father was interested in film production, but that had 
        mostly been connected with industrial training films and commercials. 
        But she studied that scene and mastered it with no effort whatever. When 
        she performed it for me my jaw just dropped."
 
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
Before the acting bug hit, Gillian dabbled in the punk rocker scene. "I
  fainted when it was inserted. My father was furious about it," Gillian
  tells of her and her father's reactions regarding her nose ring. 
 "I was confused," is how Gillian puts her somewhat wild teen years.
  "I was arrested on graduation night for breaking and entering into the
  high school," she confessed in an interview for TV Guide.
 
 Of course, growing up in England and then moving back to the U.S.A. was not
  a simple thing, as her mother recalls: "The contrast was just incredible.
  Plus she missed all the friends she had grown up with in London. And her classmates
  all thought she talked funny because she didn't have an American accent. Gillian
  had to learn to speak like an American for the first time in her life, just
  to fit in."
 
 
  Gillian 
        herself admits: "I was angry and it was my way of keeping people 
        at a distance." In a different interview, Gillian remembers, "I 
        was always off in my own little world or being sent to the principal's 
        office for talking back." When the acting bug hit, "My outlook 
        changed, my grades went up and I was voted 'most improved student'." 
 After graduating from City High School in 1986, Gillian studied acting 
        at the prestigious DePaul University's Goodman Theater and graduated with 
        a Bachelor's degree in Fine Arts. In the summer after her freshman year, 
        Gillian was selected to attend a three-week workshop run by the National 
        Theatre of Great Britain at Cornell in Ithaca, NY. Upon obtaining her 
        degree, Gillian headed to New York at the age of 22 to pursue a career 
        in acting.
 
 Gillian's first big break came when she landed a role in the off Broadway play
  "Absent Friends." She won a Theater World Award in 1991 for her performance
  in this production.
 
 She did one more play, "The Philanthropist," at the Long Wharf Theater
  in New Haven, CT and a low budget film starring Tess Harper and Karen Allen
  called "The Turning" before relocating to Los Angeles to pursue a
  career in film.
 
 "First of all, I swore I'd never move to Los Angeles, and once I did,
  I swore I'd never do television. It was only after being out of work for almost
  a year that I began going in [to auditions] on some stuff that I would pray
  that I wouldn't get because I didn't want to be involved in it." Nevertheless,
  she landed a guest appearance in the short lived TV series "Class of 96."
  The title of the episode was "The Accused" (episode No. 8).
 
 In 1993, Gillian auditioned for a TV pilot of a newly formed Fox Network show
  called "The X-Files." It was for the role of Special Agent Dana Scully.
  "I couldn't put the script down," Gillian remembers. During the auditions,
  there was a bit of 'behind the scenes' action. The executives at Fox wanted
  someone with less radiance and more sex-appeal cast in the role of Scully, but
  writer-director Chris Carter insisted that Gillian had the no-nonsense integrity
  that the role required. "I sort of staked my pilot and my career at the
  time on Gillian. I feel vindicated everyday now," says Chris Carter about
  his decision to stand firm on his choice for Scully.
 
 As luck would have it, on the day Gillian's last unemployment check arrived, 
      she found out that she had won the role of Agent Scully and immediately 
      flew to Vancouver to begin shooting the pilot. "I didn't foresee at 
      all that it was going to become as popular as it has. I often thought, 'What 
      have I gotten myself into?' The first year was the hardest in terms of getting 
      into the grueling hours and sleep deprivation and having to perform constantly, 
      day in and day out," Gillian recalled of the first season.
 
 
   
 
  
 
   On set, Gillian met Clyde Klotz, the series assistant art director at 
        the time. "It wasn't quite love at first sight," Gillian says 
        of their three-month affair. "It was Clyde's smile that first attracted 
        me. He was very quiet, rugged and cool, but I soon realized he had a lot 
        to say and that he was a very intelligent man." On New Year's Day 
        of 1994, Gillian and Clyde flew to Hawaii and got married on the 17th 
        hole of a golf course. The only other person present was the Buddhist 
        Monk that performed the ceremony. "We sent a letter to my Mum and 
        Dad, with a strict instruction not to open it until New Year's Day. Mum 
        had already met Clyde and my Dad was in a good mood that day, so they 
        were happy."
 
 Gillian was back on the set of "The X-Files" two days later. A few
  months later came the news that she was pregnant. She already knew what she
  wanted to do, but conceded to "not completely thinking ahead about the
  consequences of that decision." The first person she told on the set was
  co-star David Duchovny.
 
 Her pregnancy came as shocking news to the Fox executives but Chris Carter
  once again stuck by Gillian and refused to have Scully recast. "Part of
  the show's success is the audience's investment in these characters," he
  said.
 
 Gillian said, "It was a bit of a bombshell for them [the Fox executives].
  It wasn't in my contract not to get pregnant, but it is now."
 
 Chris Carter then created an alien abduction storyline that kept Gillian off-camera
  long enough for labor, delivery, and a 10-day maternity leave. "My feet
  were swelling and I was exhausted, sleeping between scenes," Gillian remembers.
  Her daughter, Piper, was born on September 25, 1994. Gillian had to undergo
  an unexpected cesarean section that required her to spend the next six days
  in the hospital. Four days later, Gillian was back on set shooting scenes for
  the episode "One Breath."
 
 Of the experience, Gillian said, "During the first season, I didn't know
  who the hell I was, let alone who this character was. I feel stronger as a person
  in the world now. I remember, after going through the birthing process, feeling
  that no cut, no abrasions, no knock on the head will make me whine again."
 
 The proud new Mom happily declared, "I can't imagine not having Piper."
  She chose Chris Carter to be her daughter's godfather.
 
 
   
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