On Fanlore, users with accounts can edit pages including user pages, can create pages, and more. Any information you publish on a page or an edit summary will be accessible by the public and to Fanlore personnel. Because Fanlore is a wiki, information published on Fanlore will be publicly available forever, even if edited later. Be mindful when sharing personal information, including your religious or political views, health, racial background, country of origin, sexual identity and/or personal relationships. To learn more, check out our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Select "dismiss" to agree to these terms.

Chronicle X Interview with D.A. Prewitt

From Fanlore
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Interviews by Fans
Title: Chronicle X Interview with Thalia D'Muse
Interviewer: uncredited
Interviewee: D.A. Prewitt (Thalia D'Muse) [1]
Date(s): July 1999
Medium: online
Fandom(s): X-Files
External Links: interview online here; copy
Click here for related articles on Fanlore.

Chronicle X Interview with D.A. Prewitt was conducted in 1999 or 2000 by the Chronicle X archive.

Some Excerpts

I did loads of creative writing when I was younger. Once I hit college, I concentrated on my degree -- Journalism. The creative writing went out the door. It wasn't until I (accidently) clicked into Vincent's old Gossamer archive that I caught the creative writing bug again. I read just about the whole archive, and then thought to myself, "Hey, I can do this, too!"

I'd like to see more of Mulder and Scully working as a team. I realize that lately CC & Co. have been writing storylines with M&S separated to accomodate the actors' prior commitments (i.e. movies, special appearances, etc.), but I miss the old days where M&S solved a case together, side by side.

I relate well to Mulder because of his drive and determination, his sarcastic sense of humor, and his unwillingness to take the pat answer and accept it as gospel. I relate well to Scully because of her analytical approach and her ability to weed through the muck to uncover what's really important. But I also see similarities in them that I can relate to: their passion, their need to know. Both are simple and complex at the same time. Both are a challenge and a joy to write. So... I guess, in a round-about, verbose way, the answer is... it's a tie: Mulder *and* Scully.

References