
This site is determined to bring you the most up to date information on this talented actress and her career.
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Over the coming weeks, we’ll be listening to a series of curated audio articles, exploring a range of deeply human stories of social challenges, sexual liberation, phenomenal women and much more. Join us every other Thursday for new episodes as we go on a collective journey of discovery, asking ourselves to truly question, ‘What do I know?!”
On 10th June 2021, the fansite world stopped when the news of our dear friend Angie passing away started to spread. She was an angel, a beautiful soul, a generous heart and a loyal friend.
There are no words to express the deep sadness we are all feeling, but we as a community thought that Angie would want her fansite to keep living, to go on and to grow. It is my honor to keep doing this with her baby that this fansite was, and I promise I will do my best to bring it on, although I know I will never be as good as she was.
To you Angie, may you inspire us all to be always better, more open to others and not judging at all. I want to remember your smile and beauty shining into the days and making them much better.
Women for Women International created ‘sister-to-sister’ connections between isolated women in Bosnia and individual ‘sponsor sisters’ around the world.
A letter exchange provided these Bosnian women with solidarity and emotional support, along with small amounts of financial aid to help them meet their basic needs as they began to rebuild their lives.
At SAYes Mentoring we want to end social poverty by helping individuals, business teams, educational institutions and community groups to “do good better”. If you think like we do, then meaningful and effective social change is something that you want to do, both for your community and for yourself. Our promise is to support that interest by offering you an authentic, personalised and professionally supported mentorship experience with a young person.
The NF Network is a non-profit organization founded in 1988 by a group of people who were in some way affected by neurofibromatosis. Its main goal is to eradicate the health issues, pain, isolation and uncertainty that the diagnosis of NF inflicts.

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If you have photos or videos of Gillian Anderson you have taken personally or collected during the years and you wish to donate them to the site, read how to do and get in touch with us.
- Maintained by Angie & Claudia
- Online Since June 11, 2013
- Contact the owner via form
- @RadiantGillian
- Previously run by Chanel & Mandy
- Read our disclaimer & privacy policy
- Visitors

This fansite is strictly against any paparazzi or stalkerazzi pictures. We will not support any kind of bashing or privacy intrusion into Gillian’s life and/or the one of people around her. We will also not post any gossip or rumors on private life matters.
Special to the Brooklyn Eagle
Diane Arbus, who certainly knew a thing or two about risk-taking, once said, “My favorite thing is to go where I’ve never been.” Judging from the bold choices Gillian Anderson has made as an actress, she also lives by this credo.
In the course of her almost 30-year career, Anderson has been fearless and determined in her pursuit of difficult, demanding roles. She refuses to be pigeon-holed; it would have been easy and safe to have dined out on agent Dana Scully for the rest of her career and to have coasted: another series, tent-pole movies, vanity projects.
Instead, she chose Arbus’ route. In the past 10 years, on stage and television, Anderson has tackled such challenging roles as Nora in “A Doll’s House,” Ms. Havisham in “Great Expectations,” Lady Dedlock in “Bleak House” and Anna Pavlova Scherer in “War & Peace.”
Now, following an award-winning, sold-out 2014 run in London, and marking the first collaboration between the Young Vic and St. Ann’s Warehouse, Anderson will be reprising her acclaimed performance as Blanche DuBois in Tennessee Williams’ “A Streetcar Named Desire.” She is rejoined by fellow London cast members Ben Foster, Vanessa Kirby and Corey Johnson. Benedict Andrews once again directs.
Recently, via email, theBrooklyn Eagle had a chance to catch up with the actress before the play’s opening night.
Eagle: Elia Kazan is quoted as having said “Tennessee [Williams] is Blanche.” What’s your take on that?
Gillian Anderson: From everything I’ve read about and seen of Tennessee, I would say that is likely! I think, however, his woven fantasy was on the page, rather than in life. But certainly that life bore the weight of tragedy, the bouts of alcoholism, the flamboyance, the vanity. Kazan saw that firsthand.
Eagle: I read in The Guardianthat you told a London-based producer that “Streetcar” was the only play you were interested in appearing in and that you also stipulated that it be done in the round. Why?
GA: I have always felt very separate from the productions of “Streetcar” that I have seen and I yearned to be inside it as an audience member. Also, these characters are trapped in this moment of time in this one tiny apartment. How better to perpetuate the claustrophobia of their particular hell than to have it surrounded by an unseen, looming presence — the audience?
Eagle: I’ve also read that you deliberately have never seen Kazan’s film version of “Streetcar” and that you didn’t even allow yourself to watch “Blue Jasmine.”
GA: Well, I have seen bits of the film over the years, never in its entirety. As for “Blue Jasmine,”
I will wait to see it until I’ve finished our run. I am so admiring of Cate Blanchett and I don’t want to think for a second that I am picking up on or emulating her work.
Eagle: You’ve played some iconic roles — Lilly Bart in “House of Mirth,” Nora in “A Doll’s House.” What attracted you at this point in your career to playing perhaps the iconic female role in American theater?
GA: It is clear to me now that, from the moment I first read Blanche on the page, something inside me said, “I know what that is!” Somehow, something in me recognized something in her and I became determined to play her. I cannot tell you definitively what that “something” was, except that she is so complex and her journey, whatever the truths or falsehoods of it, so easy to empathize with. And, of course, she meets such a devastatingly sad end.
Eagle: You’ve had, and continue to have, a diverse career, alternating work in film and television and theater, in the States and in England. Conscious choice?
GA: Yes! What a blessing to get do it all and on many continents! I am very lucky.
Eagle: Finally, this is the first time you have performed in Brooklyn. Do you know the borough at all? Have you spent any significant time in Brooklyn?
GA: I lived in New York for a short time in the ’90s, playing in off-Broadway productions. Of course, I have visited many, many times over the years. For some reason I always had in my mind that Brooklyn was Manhattan’s smaller suburb! I am so sorry! I had no idea Brooklyn was so big, that there are so many fantastic neighborhoods, all with very different personalities. I am very much enjoying the opportunity to explore and yet I’m gob-smacked at how long it takes to get from one point to another. Who knew?
Eagle: Well, if you happen to get lost, you can always rely on the kindness of Brooklynites to give you excellent directions.





Over the coming weeks, we’ll be listening to a series of curated audio articles, exploring a range of deeply human stories of social challenges, sexual liberation, phenomenal women and much more. Join us every other Thursday for new episodes as we go on a collective journey of discovery, asking ourselves to truly question, ‘What do I know?!”
On 10th June 2021, the fansite world stopped when the news of our dear friend Angie passing away started to spread. She was an angel, a beautiful soul, a generous heart and a loyal friend.
There are no words to express the deep sadness we are all feeling, but we as a community thought that Angie would want her fansite to keep living, to go on and to grow. It is my honor to keep doing this with her baby that this fansite was, and I promise I will do my best to bring it on, although I know I will never be as good as she was.
To you Angie, may you inspire us all to be always better, more open to others and not judging at all. I want to remember your smile and beauty shining into the days and making them much better.
Women for Women International created ‘sister-to-sister’ connections between isolated women in Bosnia and individual ‘sponsor sisters’ around the world.
A letter exchange provided these Bosnian women with solidarity and emotional support, along with small amounts of financial aid to help them meet their basic needs as they began to rebuild their lives.
At SAYes Mentoring we want to end social poverty by helping individuals, business teams, educational institutions and community groups to “do good better”. If you think like we do, then meaningful and effective social change is something that you want to do, both for your community and for yourself. Our promise is to support that interest by offering you an authentic, personalised and professionally supported mentorship experience with a young person.
The NF Network is a non-profit organization founded in 1988 by a group of people who were in some way affected by neurofibromatosis. Its main goal is to eradicate the health issues, pain, isolation and uncertainty that the diagnosis of NF inflicts.

image source
If you have photos or videos of Gillian Anderson you have taken personally or collected during the years and you wish to donate them to the site, read how to do and get in touch with us.
- Maintained by Angie & Claudia
- Online Since June 11, 2013
- Contact the owner via form
- @RadiantGillian
- Previously run by Chanel & Mandy
- Read our disclaimer & privacy policy
- Visitors

This fansite is strictly against any paparazzi or stalkerazzi pictures. We will not support any kind of bashing or privacy intrusion into Gillian’s life and/or the one of people around her. We will also not post any gossip or rumors on private life matters.