'X-Files' Cast and Crew Say Bittersweet
Goodbye
Thu,
May 16, 2002 05:49 PM PDT
by Rick Porter
Zap2it.com, TV
News
LOS ANGELES (Zap2it.com) - Gillian Anderson says it won't hit her for a
couple of months.
She'll take some time off after "The X-Files" ends its season,
as she's done for the past nine years. Then, as TV production starts up again
toward the end of the summer, "my body will want to start seeing this other
person again. It's like an old friend."
Only then, she says, will she likely realize in full that "The X-Files"
isn't coming back to FOX. The conspiracy-laden, extraterrestrials-among-us
drama, which grew from cult hit to mainstream success without ever really --
pardon the pun -- alienating its loyalists, ends its run on Sunday (May 19) with
a two-hour finale that promises to answer a lot of the questions it's posed
about aliens and coverups and just what the heck the government is hiding.
"It really is an example of a mixed
blessing," Anderson said as she walked down the alien-green (not red) carpet at
the series wrap party a few weeks ago. "I'm really looking forward to the
future, and I'm excited about getting out into the world again. On the other
hand, I don't think I really get for one second that it's over."
Still, Anderson, series creator Chris Carter and other cast and crew members
agree that now is the right time to wrap up the series. Ratings have dipped
since David Duchovny left the cast for good this season, and the show faced
stiffer competition in NBC's "Law & Order: Criminal Intent" and ABC's
"Alias."
"It's good to go out while we're still smelling good," says Kim Manners, a
co-executive producer who also directed more than 50 of the show's 200 episodes.
"I'm very proud to have been a part of it."
Few involved with the show had any idea of how big the show become when it
premiered on a Friday night in September 1993. Executive producer Frank Spotnitz
joined "The X-Files" in
its second season, and he says at the time, few people he know had heard of the
show.
"It was like a pleasant dream, where every year we got bigger and bigger,"
Spotnitz says. "But we never expected the phenomenon it would become."
Indeed, the show made a star out of the previously unknown Anderson (whose
biggest previous role was a guest shot on FOX's "Class of '96" ) and cult
figures out of recurring characters like the Cigarette Smoking Man (William B.
Davis) and the Lone Gunmen (Tom Braidwood, Dean Haglund and Bruce Harwood).
"We didn't know each other when we got asked to [play the
characters]," says Braidwood, who played Gunman Melvin Frohike after starting
out as an assistant director on the show. "So we met, and we did the scene. Then
we got a call the next year and they said we'd like you to come back and do
another gig -- it was such a surprise."
Cast and crew members had a tough time picking out favorite episodes,
although more than one, including Mitch Pileggi (FBI Assistant Director
Skinner), cited the controversial 1996 episode "Home."
Pileggi also counts season 1's "Ice" and season 3's "Clyde Bruckman's Final
Repose," for which guest star Peter Boyle won an Emmy. "I'm not in any of them,"
Pileggi says, laughing. "I don't know what that says."
Sunday's finale is titled "The Truth," and it features the return of
Duchovny's Fox Mulder, who faces a murder charge at a military tribunal. Carter
promises that much of the series' complicated mythology will be wrapped up. But
as the show has done throughout its existence, it will probably some things open
to interpretation.
"There's so much going on" in the episode, says Annabeth Gish, who plays
Agent Monica Reyes. "A lot of people return. Things are answered and tied up,
but always leaving more."