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{{Short description|Fictional character in the television series The X-Files}}
{{Xfiles character
{{Use American English|date=October 2020}}
|image = ]
{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2020}}
|name = Dana Scully
{{Infobox character
|affiliation= ]
| species = ], ]
|first = "]"
| name = Dr. Dana Scully
|last = '']'' (movie)
| series = ]
|family = William Scully (father)<br>Margaret Scully (mother)<br>Bill Scully Jr. (brother)<br>Melissa Scully (sister) (deceased)<br>Charles Scully (brother)<br>William Scully Jr. (son)
| image = Scully2016.png
|religion = ]
| first_major = The X-Files
|portrayer = ]
| first_minor = ]
| first_date = September 10, 1993
| last_major = The X-Files
| last_minor = ]
| last_date = March 21, 2018
| portrayer = ] <br>
] (young Scully) <br>
Zoe Anderson (young Scully 1976 – uncredited)
| full_name = Dana Katherine Scully
| occupation = {{Plainlist|
* ]
* ]
}} }}
| affiliation = {{Plainlist|
'''Special Agent Dana Katherine Scully, ]''' is a ] on the ] television series ''] (1993-2002)'' and in two theatrical films based on the series, played by ]. She is a ] of the ]' ], partnered most often with fellow Special Agent ]. They work out of a cramped basement office at ] in ] to investigate unsolved cases labeled "X-Files". In contrast to Fox Mulder's credulous "believer" character, Scully is the skeptic, choosing to base her beliefs on what science can prove. She was known to escape death several times over the course of the show, with multiple episodes hinting that she may be immortal.<ref>{{cite web
* ]
|url=http://www.slate.com/id/2061415/
* ]
|title=The Immortal Agent Scully: One thing that won't happen in the X-Files finale
* ]
|first=Josh |last=Daniel |date=], ]
* ]
|quote=Scully can't die |publisher='']''}}</ref>
}}
| family = {{Plainlist|
* ] (father)
* ] (mother)
* ] (brother)
* ] (sister)
* ] (brother)
* ] (half-brother)<ref name=halfbrother>{{cite web | url=http://www.xfiles.news/index.php/2-uncategorised/324-the-x-files-2016-4-ishmael-part-one-review | title=The X-Files 2016 #4 - "Ishmael" - Part One Review }}</ref>
}}
| spouse = ]
| significant_other = ]
| children = {{Plainlist|
* ]
* ]
* Unborn child
}}
| religion = ]
| home = ]
}}
'''Dana Katherine Scully, M.D.''', is a fictional character and one of the two ]s in the ] ], ] television series '']'', played by ]. Scully is a ] (FBI) ] and a medical doctor (]), partnered with fellow ] ] for seasons one to seven and seasons 10 and 11, and with ] in the eighth and ninth seasons. In the television series, they work out of a cramped basement office at ] in ] to investigate unsolved cases labeled "]s." In 2002, Scully left government employment, and in 2008, she began working as a surgeon in ''Our Lady of Sorrows'', a private ] hospital – where she stayed for seven years, until rejoining the FBI. In contrast to Mulder's credulous "believer" character, Scully is the skeptic for the first seven seasons, choosing to base her beliefs on what science can prove. She later on becomes a "believer" after ] at the end of ].


Scully has appeared in all but five episodes of ''The X-Files'', and in the ] films '']'', released in 1998, and '']'', released 10 years later. The episodes in which she does not appear are "]," "]," "]," "]" and "]" (excluding archive footage). The ] marked Anderson's final time portraying the character.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.tvguide.com/news/gillian-anderson-confirms-the-x-files-exit/|title=Gillian Anderson Confirms She's Leaving The X-Files|last=MacDonald|first=Lindsay|date=January 10, 2018|work=]|access-date=January 17, 2018}}</ref>
Dana Scully is 5'3" (160 cm) and has blue-green eyes. Her work as an FBI agent takes up a major part of her life, and as a result she rarely dates or spends time with friends. She formerly lived in ], in ] at the address: 107 E. Cordova St. Apt. 35 Washington, DC.

She has appeared in every episode of "The X-Files" except "]", "]", "]", "]", and "]," as well as the ] films '']'', released in ] (sometimes subtitled ''Fight the Future''), and '']'', released 10 years later.

] has stated that he named the character after sportscaster ], but coincidentally (or perhaps not) Scully was previously a known name in ] lore. In 1950 the less than credible ''Behind the Flying Saucers'' was published; written by ] columnist ]. The name Scully was also used in 1976 film ], an obvious inspiration for the show, in a list of names who work for the campaign to reelect the president.


==Background== ==Background==
Dr. Dana Katherine Scully was born on February 23, 1964, in ], to ] (]) and ] (]), into a close-knit ] family with ] ancestry.<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Miracle Man (The X-Files) | title=Miracle Man | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] & ] (writers) | network = ] | season = 1 | number = 18}}</ref><ref name="One Breath">{{cite episode| episode-link=One Breath (X-Files Episode) | title=One Breath (X-Files Episode) | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] & ] (writers) | network = ] | season = 8 | number = 2}}</ref> She has an older brother, ], an older sister, ], and a younger brother, Charles, who is never seen on the show except in flashbacks.<ref name="Lazarus">{{cite episode| episode-link=Lazarus (The X-Files) | title=Lazarus | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] & ] (writers) | network = ] | season = 1 | number = 15}}</ref> In the canonical ], published by ], the two-part issue "Ishmael" revealed Scully had a paternal half-brother, named Tam Minh Nguyen.<ref name=halfbrother /> Scully's father was a ], who died of a heart attack in early January 1994.<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Beyond the Sea (The X-Files) | title=Beyond the Sea | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] & ] (writers) | network = ] | season = 1 | number = 13}}</ref> Dana Scully grew up in ] and later in ]. As a young girl, Scully's favorite book was '']'' and she came to nickname her father "]" from the book, and in return, he called her "]." Due to this, she named her dog ].<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Quagmire (The X-Files) | title=Quagmire | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); Kim Newton (writer) | network = ] | season = 3 | number = 22}}</ref>
{{tv-in-universe}}
===Early life and education===
Dana Scully was born on ], ], to Margaret and William Scully, into a close-knit ] family. She has an older brother, William Jr., an older sister, Melissa, and a younger brother, Charles, who is never seen on the show (except in flashbacks). Scully's father was a ] in the ], who died of a heart attack in 1994. Dana Scully grew up in ] and later in ]. As a young girl, Scully's favorite book was '']'' and she came to nickname her father "]" from the book, and in return, he called her "]", due to this she named her dog Queequeg.


Dana Scully attended ], and earned a ] in ]. Her undergraduate thesis was titled "]'s ]: A New Interpretation." It is now also understood that she earned her degree in ] from ], a fact that was previously unknown and came to light in a recent interview with show co-writer, Frank Spotnitz. While lasting medical school, she was recruited by the ], which she accepted, mostly because she felt she could distinguish herself there. Upon being partnered with ], she maintained her medical skills by acting as a ], often performing or consulting on autopsies of victims on X-Files cases. Scully attended the ], and in 1986, received a ] degree in ]. Her undergraduate thesis was titled '']'s ]: A New Interpretation.''<ref>{{cite episode| title=Musings of a Cigarette Smoking Man | series=The X-Files | credits =] (director); ] (writer) | network = ] | season = 4 | number = 7}}</ref> Just out of medical school at ], she was recruited by the FBI; she accepted the agency's offer of employment because she felt she could distinguish herself there. After two years in the bureau, Section Chief Scott Blevins assigned her to work with agent ].


===Faith=== ==Storylines==
]
Throughout the series, her Catholic faith served as a cornerstone in her life, although at times a contradiction to her otherwise rigid skepticism. Upon her career in science and medicine, she drifted from her Catholic upbringing but remained somewhat entrenched in her faith.
Upon being partnered with Mulder, Scully maintained her medical skills by acting as a ], often performing or consulting on autopsies of victims on X-Files cases.<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Pilot (The X-Files)| title=Pilot | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] (writer) | network = ] | season = 1 | number = 1}}</ref>


In ], Scully was kidnapped by an ex-FBI agent turned mental patient named Duane Barry,<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Duane Barry | title=Duane Barry | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] (writer) | network = ] | season = 2 | number = 5}}</ref> and then taken from Barry by a military covert operation that was working with the ],<ref name="Ascension">{{cite episode| episode-link=Ascension (The X-Files) | title=Ascension| series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); Paul Brown (writer) | network = ] | season = 2 | number = 6}}</ref> but was later returned.<ref name="One Breath"/> In ], she found out that a super hi-tech microchip had been implanted in the back of her neck. After having it removed, she developed ] in the ]<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Memento Mori (The X-Files) | title=Memento Mori | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ], ], ] & John Shiban (writers) | network = ] | season = 4 | number = 15}}</ref> and was hospitalized after the cancer became terminal. She was saved after Mulder broke into the ] to retrieve another chip to be implanted back into her neck. At the time, Scully was also undergoing experimental medical treatments and was having a dramatic renewal of her faith.<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Redux (The X-Files) | title=Redux | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] (writer) | network = ] | season = 5 | number = 1 & 2}}</ref>
Scully almost always wears a golden ] necklace, given to her by her mother on her 15th birthday. Upon her abduction ("]", 2x06) it was the only item left behind in Duane Barry's getaway car. Mulder wore it ("]", 2x07) in her absence until she miraculously reappeared in a DC hospital. ("]", 2x08) After she recovered, he returned the cross to her.


Scully was pronounced ] during the fifth season. In the season five episode "]," Scully discovers that she unknowingly mothered a daughter during her abduction (in season two). Her daughter Emily was adopted by another family. Emily died shortly afterwards, and they were unable to further investigate after Emily's body went missing. In the ] finale, "]," Scully mysteriously became pregnant.<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Requiem (The X-Files) | title=Requiem | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] (writer) | network = ] | season = 5 | number = 1 & 2}}</ref> The child, named William, after her own father, as well as Mulder's father, was born at the end of the ].<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Existence (The X-Files) | title=Existence | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] (writer) | network = ] | season = 8 | number = 21}}</ref> The show did not initially reveal the cause of Scully's pregnancy, but later episodes and movies would see Mulder and Scully call William "our son"; the pair had unsuccessfully tried for a child through ]. Around this time, Mulder was fired from the ] by Deputy Director ],<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Vienen | title=Vienen | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] (writer) | network = ] | season = 8 | number = 18}}</ref> and Scully left the field to teach forensics at ].<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Nothing Important Happened Today | title=Nothing Important Happened Today | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] & ] (writers) | network = ] | season = 9 | number = 1 & 2}}</ref> William was placed for adoption during the end of the ] after Scully felt she could no longer provide the safety that William needed.<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=William (The X-Files) | title=William | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ], ] & David Duchovny (writers) | network = ] | season = 9 | number = 16}}</ref> William was a "miracle child," of some importance to the alien conspirators. He demonstrated extraordinary powers, including ].<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Redux (The X-Files) | title=Redux | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] & ] (writers) | network = ] | season = 9 | number = 9}}</ref>
The abduction visibly tested the limits of her faith, when she began to exhibit symptoms of ] on a case involving a murdering ] named ] ("]", 2x13). This psychological revictimisation continues after Pfaster escaped from prison five years later and again attempted to kill her in her home, ending only after she fatally shot him, while Mulder had Pfaster covered. She struggled with what motivated her actions to kill Pfaster, and questioned whether it was God compelling her to kill Pfaster, or "something else." ("Orison", 7x07)


In '']'', she is shown working as a medical doctor at the ''Our Lady of Sorrows'', a private Catholic hospital in ]. Early on in the film, Scully is contacted by the FBI, who are looking for Fox Mulder in the hope that he will assist them with the investigation of a missing FBI agent. In exchange for his help, the charges against him will be dropped. Unlike Mulder, Scully was apparently not considered a fugitive by the FBI. However, she did continue to maintain her romantic relationship with Mulder throughout the six years that he was on the run from the American government. In the movie, they are shown to be living together in a secluded house.<ref name="I Want to Believe">{{cite episode| episode-link=The X-Files: I Want to Believe | title=The X-Files: I Want to Believe | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] & ] (writers) | network = ] | number = 2 of 2}}</ref>
About a year after the first ] incident, Scully was further conflicted when protecting a young ] by the name of Kevin Kryder, whose life was threatened by a psychotic, apparently suffering from ] ("Revelations", 3x11). Skeptical of the boy's claims but unable to deny what she has seen, Scully was unable to respond when the boy prophetically asked, "Are you the one who was sent to protect me?", implying Scully's intervention was the direct work of God. As a result of their experiences on the Kryder case, the philosophy of faith and religion caused a disagreement between Mulder and Scully that continued through out the duration of their work together.


In the first episode of ], "]" (2016), Scully is still working as a doctor for ''Our Lady of Sorrows'' hospital, now performing ] on children with severe ]. She has ] ], as the test that she performs on herself confirms. After the FBI reopens the X-Files, 14 years after their closure, she rejoins the bureau.<ref name=MyStruggle>{{cite episode| episode-link=My Struggle (The X-Files)| title= My Struggle | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files | network = ] | season = 10 | number = 1}}</ref> In "]," Scully jokes that she often enters dangerous situations alone due to the ] she seemingly obtained during the events of the episode "]." At the end of "Mulder and Scully Meet the Were-Monster," Scully steals a dog from an animal control center, named ], which is named after yet another character from '']''.<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Mulder and Scully Meet the Were-Monster| title= Mulder and Scully Meet the Were-Monster| series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files | network = ] | season = 10 | number = 3}}</ref> In "]" Dana's mother, ], dies after suffering a ].<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Home Again (The X-Files)| title= Home Again| series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files | network = ] | season = 10 | number = 4}}</ref> In the show's ] finale, "]," Scully is in a race against time to save ], creating a ] from her own extraterrestrial DNA.<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=My Struggle II| title= My Struggle II| series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files | network = ] | season = 10 | number = 6}}</ref>
Some time later, the cancer diagnosis forced Scully to begin contemplating her own mortality. However, she resisted the gentle prodding from her family priest, Father McCue, to resume attending church services. When the severity of her illness increased, and pushed her to the brink of death, Scully finally requested ministry from Father McCue, and chose to accept her remission as a miracle. ("]", 5x03)


==Characterization==
Upon the sudden discovery of her daughter Emily Sim, Scully gave the little girl her cross to wear while she petitioned to adopt her. Before her funeral, Scully retrieved the cross from Emily's casket.
Throughout the series, Scully's Catholic faith served as a cornerstone, although a contradiction to her otherwise rigid skepticism of the paranormal.<ref>{{cite book|last=Kowalski|first=Dean|title=The Philosophy of The X-Files|year=2007|publisher=University Press of Kentucky|pages=50|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=p4-l9zCtMHgC&q=X-Files|isbn=978-0813172668}}</ref> Due to her career in science and medicine, she drifted from her Catholic Christian upbringing, but remained somewhat entrenched in her religious beliefs.


Scully almost always wears a gold ]. Two conflicting stories exist of how Scully received the necklace. After Scully's abduction in season two, Scully's mother told Fox Mulder she gave Scully the necklace as a 15th birthday present.<ref name="Ascension" /> In season five, Scully recalls receiving the necklace as a Christmas present. Scully's sister, Melissa, also receives a similar necklace on that occasion.<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Christmas Carol (The X-Files) | title=Christmas Carol | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ], ] & ] (writers) | network = ] | season = 5 | number = 6}}</ref> When she was abducted by Duane Barry, a self-proclaimed alien abductee,<ref name="Ascension" /> it was the only item left behind in Barry's getaway car. Mulder wore it as a talisman of her until Scully miraculously reappeared in a Washington, DC, hospital.<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=3 (The X-Files) | title=3 | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); Chris Ruppenthal, ] & ] (writers) | network = ] | season = 2 | number = 7}}</ref> After she recovered from the trauma of her abduction, he returned the cross to her.<ref name="One Breath" />
Sometime after her recovery, Scully began to regularly attend ] again. At the request of Father McCue, Scully got involved in a case concerning a ] girl who was found dead in a kneeling position with her palms outstretched and eye sockets charred. ("All Souls", 5x17) After Scully discovered the girl was part of a set of quadruplets and two more were murdered, Father McCue shared with her the story of the ] and the ], which Scully interpreted as a possible explanation for the deformations and deaths of the girls. Scully continued to have visions of Emily, and when the last girl died, Scully believed she was returning the girl to God. Upon her return to D.C., she went to confession to gain peace of mind and acceptance for Emily's death.


The abduction visibly tested the limits of her faith{{snd}}Mulder believes that Scully was taken aboard an alien spaceship and was subjected to tests. Because of Scully's skepticism, though, she believes she was kidnapped by men, not aliens, and subjected to tests. She believes she could have been brought there by Barry, and she began to exhibit symptoms of ] on a case involving a murdering ] named Donnie Pfaster.<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Irresistible (The X-Files) | title=Irresistible | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] (writer) | network = ] | season = 2 | number = 13}}</ref> This psychological ] continued after Pfaster escaped from prison five years later and again attempted to kill her in her home, ending only after she fatally shot him. She struggled with what motivated her actions to kill Pfaster, and questioned whether it was God compelling her to kill him, or "something else."<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Orison (The X-Files) | title=Orison | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] (writer) | network = ] | season = 7 | number = 7}}</ref>
Mulder and Scully frequently disagreed on matters of religion. Scully is more inclined to believe that God has a hand in people's actions, while Mulder seems to believe that people are responsible for their own behavior.


Sometime after her recovery from cancer, Scully began to regularly attend ] again. At the request of ], Scully got involved in a case concerning a ] girl who was found dead in a kneeling position with her palms outstretched and eye sockets charred. After Scully discovered the girl was a quadruplet and two more were murdered, Father McCue shared with her the story of the '']'' and the '']'', which Scully interpreted as a possible explanation for the deformations and deaths of the girls. Scully continued to have visions of Emily, and when the last girl died, Scully believed she was returning the girl to God. Upon her return to Washington, DC, she went to confession to gain peace of mind and acceptance for Emily's death.<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=All Souls (The X-Files) | title=All Souls| series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] & John Shiban (writers) | network = ] | season = 5 | number = 17}}</ref> In confession, she regretted her decision of letting the girl go. This suggests Scully had doubts about her faith.
==]==
Six years after the events of the ninth season, Dana Scully is working as a doctor at Our Lady of Sorrows Hospital. She was contacted by the FBI who was looking for Fox Mulder to assist them with the investigation of a missing FBI agent. In exchange for his help charges against him were dropped.<ref
name=believe></ref> Unlike Mulder, Scully was apparently not considered a fugitive after "The Truth". She however maintained her personal relationship with him and in the movie they are living together in rural Virginia{{Fact|date=October 2008}}. Scully has grown particularly attached to a young boy who is dying of an incurable illness, a patient she doesn't tell Mulder about initially. During the course of the film she has a crisis of faith after she discovers a possible form of treatment for the boy, and she is unsure of whether or not to proceed.


In the sixth-season episode "]," Agent Scully's vulnerability is exposed. In this episode, the murderer takes the victim's heart out. The suspect, a writer named Phillip Padgett, has a particular interest in Scully and is fascinated by her beauty and personality. When she goes to a church to observe a painting, the writer is there and talks to her about the ]. During the conversation he says she visits the church because she likes art, but not as place of worship. Scully doesn't say otherwise and later she says to Agent Mulder the writer told her her life story. All this suggests that Scully isn't a devout Roman Catholic, although she attempted to approach again the Catholic community and the Catholic faith to which she was devout in her youth, after handling the strange case presented in ] and also after dealing with life-threatening cancer during the ].
==Relationships==
===Family===
*'''Captain William "Bill" Scully''' - Scully's relationship with her father was fairly close, but could be tense at times, in part due to his no-nonsense attitude and sense of military professionalism. Examples of this include her desire to prove to her father that she was every bit the equal of her brothers, including one instance in which she shot a snake with a BB gun at the prodding of her brothers, only to feel wracked with guilt afterwards. On one occasion as a child, she stole one of her mother's cigarettes and smoked it, half hoping her father would find out and be angry. Their relationship suffered when she decided not to pursue a career in medicine, and joined the FBI. By 1994, the two seemed to have reconciled before her father suddenly died of a ]. Only after he was gone did Scully realize that, despite their differences, her father was indeed proud of her ("]"). Following her abduction while lying comatose, Scully sees an apparition of her father. Clad in his official Navy whites, he delivers to her a message full of love as he encourages her to live ("]"). William Scully was played by ].
*'''Margaret "Maggie" Scully''' - Scully's mother provides support for her daughter's frequent health crises, but sometimes expresses quiet disapproval in Scully's choices. Margaret Scully is frequently seen meddling into Scully's life. She vigorously encourages Scully to rekindle her Catholic faith, often expresses her disapproval in Scully's dangerous job (though she seemed to harbor a certain fondness for Mulder), and insists on hiring a baby nurse for Scully towards the end of her pregnancy. After William's birth, Margaret is extremely protective of Scully and William. In her final appearance, ("Provenance"), she is also seen as reluctant to find the truth because of the danger involved. She was played by actress ].
*'''Melissa "Missy" Scully''' - Scully was extremely close to her older sister, who was first introduced when Scully lay dying in Georgetown Memorial Hospital following her abduction. Unlike her skeptical younger sister, Melissa was a free spirit who encouraged Scully to look beyond the realms of science and fact, and trust intuition and nature. Scully was deeply affected by her death, and championed hard to keep her murder investigation active ("]"). Melissa was played by ]. Younger versions were played by Christine Viner (in "Piper Maru") and Rebecca Codling ("Christmas Carol").
*'''William "Bill" Scully Jr.''' - Scully's relationship with her older brother, also a Naval officer, seemingly mirrors the disapproval she felt from her father ("]"). His childhood relationship with Scully could veer from typical sibling rivalry to outright bullying, in one case causing Scully to accidentally kill her pet rabbit in her attempts to hide it from Bill ("]"). Further complicating their relationship is his own steadfast refusal to validate her work, and belligerence towards Mulder (he feels that Mulder is directly the reason for Dana's illness and Melissa's death, and called him "a real piece of work" and "one sorry son of a bitch" to his face.) Bill's wife is named Tara, and they have one son, Matthew. The adult Bill Jr. was played by ]; ] played a teenage Bill Jr. in the episode "]", while ] appears uncredited as a younger version in "]".
*'''Charles Scully''' - Scully's younger brother who was referred to, but only seen as a boy in flashback in the episode "]".
*''']''' and ''']''' - Scully's two children. ], who died shortly after being found by Scully, was conceived during Scully's brief abduction several years earlier. William, who Scully later refers to as "our (her and Mulder's) son" ("]"), was carried to term and lived with his mother from birth. However, Scully decided to give William up for adoption in order to protect him ("]") when the child was about one year old. William was named for Mulder's father, however this also means he shares the name of his grandfather and uncle on his mother's side of the family, both of whom are also named William.


===Romance=== ===Relationships===
While in medical school, Scully carried on an affair with her married instructor, Dr. Daniel Waterston, who may have been the "college boyfriend" mentioned in "]." In the show, whether or not the relationship became sexual is never indicated. According to Anderson in the episode's audio commentary, Scully came very close to having an affair with the married Waterston, but left before she could break up his marriage. The end of her relationship with Waterston came about following her decision to go into the FBI.<ref name="Allthings">{{cite episode| episode-link=all things | title=all things | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] (writer) | network = ] | season = 7 | number = 17}}</ref> After her entrance to the FBI's Academy at ], Scully began a year-long relationship with her Academy instructor, Jack Willis, with whom she shared a birthday.<ref name="Lazarus"/>
Scully was given a reporter boyfriend named Ethan in the original edit of the Pilot episode, but he was subsequently edited out and removed from the storyline.


Towards the end of the series, her previously platonic friendship with partner Fox Mulder developed into a romantic relationship. When Mulder was injured in a boat crash, he awakened in a hospital and told Scully that he loved her.<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Triangle (The X-Files) | title=Triangle | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director & writer) | network = ] | season = 6 | number = 3}}</ref> In the season six episode "]," a ghost that seems to know the inner workings of Scully's mind suggests that her source of intimacy for Mulder comes from her desire to always prove him wrong.<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=How the Ghosts Stole Christmas | title=How the Ghosts Stole Christmas | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director & writer) | network = ] | season = 6 | number = 6}}</ref> By the end of the ], Mulder and Scully were increasingly shown enjoying more light-hearted activities together, such as practicing baseball,<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=The Unnatural (The X-Files) | title=The Unnatural | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director & writer) | network = ] | season = 6 | number = 19}}</ref> using FBI funds for a "night out" during a movie premiere,<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Hollywood A.D. | title=Hollywood A.D. | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] & John Shiban (writers) | network = ] | season = 7 | number = 19}}</ref> and watching a movie at Mulder's apartment.<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Je Souhaite (The X-Files) | title=Je Souhaite | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] & John Shiban (writers) | network = ] | season = 7 | number = 21}}</ref> In the season seven episode "]," Scully is shown getting dressed in Mulder's bathroom, while Mulder sleeps, apparently naked, in the bedroom.<ref name="Allthings"/> In "Trust No 1" a man reveals to Scully that he works for a ] like-organization, and his job requires him and a few other colleagues to spy on her around the clock. Due to this he knows intimate details of Scully's personal life, right down to her "natural hair color" (], as later confirmed by ]).<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/1z4a8e/i_am_chris_carter_creator_of_the_xfiles/cfqd5ux|work=Reddit|title=Chris Carter AMA Reddit 2014|date=February 27, 2014|access-date=June 18, 2016}}</ref> It is suggested by this man that Scully ultimately initiated a sexual relationship with Mulder, as he remarked that he was very surprised when she invited Mulder "into her bed."<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=Trust No 1 | title=Trust No 1| series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] & ] (writers) | network = ] | season = 9 | number = 8}}</ref> The last scene of the series finale featured Mulder and Scully holding each other on a bed, facing an uncertain future together in love.<ref>{{cite episode| episode-link=The Truth (The X-Files) | title=The Truth | series=The X-Files | series-link=The X-Files |credits = ] (director); ] & ] (writers) | network = ] | season = 9 | number = 19 & 20}}</ref>
While in medical school, she carried on an affair with her married instructor, Dr. Daniel Waterston ("]", 7x17), who may have been the "college boyfriend" mentioned in "Trust No 1." It is never indicated whether or not the relationship became sexual. The end of her relationship with Waterston came about following her decision to go into the FBI. After her entrance to the FBI's Academy at ], Scully began a year-long relationship with her older instructor, Jack Willis, with whom she shared a birthday ("]", 1x14).


In the film, ''The X-Files: I Want to Believe'', which takes place six years later, Mulder and Scully are still in a relationship. Scully was concerned that Mulder's continuing pursuit of the unknown was taking its toll on their relationship, and they could not be together if he could not "escape the darkness." However, the film ends with the couple sharing a passionate kiss, and in the "secret ending" after the majority of the credits, a happily-smiling Scully is seen in a small rowboat with Mulder, both clad in swimwear, in a tropical sea, having taken him up on his offer to run away together.<ref name="I Want to Believe"/> In the ], Scully and Mulder are no longer a couple, as she chose to leave him.<ref name="MyStruggle" /> At the end of the season, Scully gets a vision, which is revealed to have come from her son, William, at the beginning of season 11. Over the course of season 11, Scully and Mulder search for William. Skinner learns from the Smoking Man that the Smoking Man, who is Mulder's father, also artificially impregnated Scully, thus is William's father, as well. In the third episode of the ], "]," Scully and Mulder are intimate again. In the season 11 finale, "]," she reveals to Mulder that she is pregnant with his child.
In the episode "En Ami," (7x15) the ] says that she is attracted to "powerful men," to which Scully retorts that he is practicing "pop psychology," a reaction which seems to be more one of discomfort than actual disagreement. Considering her past associations with instructors, mentors, and father figures, this seems plausible.


==Conceptual history==
<!-- FAIR USE of scullyouroboros.jpg: see image description page at http://en.wikipedia.org/Image:scullyouroboros.jpg for rationale -->].]]Scully was set up by a friend, and went out on a date with a handsome but boring divorcé in "]" (1x04). Several years later, she encountered Ed Jerse while on a case, who showed her a strange tattoo he'd gotten to commemorate his recent divorce. Frustrated over the path her life has taken, she impulsively had drinks with Jerse, and, inspired by his, also got a tattoo of an ], a serpent eating its own tail. She spent the night with Jerse (it is unclear whether she slept with him that night), but ergot dyes in the tattoo ink drove Jerse crazy and compelled him to attempt to murder Scully ("]", 4x13).
]]]
Chris Carter named Scully after his favorite sportscaster, ] of the ].<ref>{{Citation|last=Foundatio Interviews |title=Chris Carter on the beginnings of The X-Files |publisher=EmmyTVLegends.org |date=2011-02-03|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ppi3-FdGzc8&t=106 |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/ppi3-FdGzc8 |archive-date=2021-12-21 |url-status=live|access-date=2019-06-26}}{{cbignore}}</ref> ] was likewise named after Vin Scully's longtime broadcasting partner, ].<ref name=levine20110130>{{cite news|last=Levine|first=Ken|title=Naming characters on TV shows|url=http://kenlevine.blogspot.com/2011/01/one-of-hardest-tasks-in-any-script-is.html|access-date=January 30, 2011|newspaper=kenlevine.blogspot.com|date=January 30, 2011}}</ref> Scully's character was also inspired by ]'s portrayal of ] in the film '']''.<ref>Lowry, p. 15</ref>


The casting for Scully caused a conflict between Carter and the Fox network. Carter had chosen 24-year-old Gillian Anderson, whom Carter felt was perfect for the role.<ref name="Lowry 15-17" /> Of her audition, Carter said, "she came in and read the part with a seriousness and intensity that I knew the Scully character had to have and I knew she was the right person for the part."<ref name="Pilot Speaks">{{cite video |people=] (narrator) |title=Chris Carter Speaks about Season One Episodes: Pilot|medium=DVD |publisher=]}}</ref> However, Fox executives had wanted a more glamorous "]" for the part (in a 2008 interview Anderson stated that ] had actually been the network's first choice),<ref>{{cite journal|url=https://www.rte.ie/entertainment/2008/0724/414071-thexfiles/|title=Pamela Anderson first choice for X-Files role|date=24 July 2008|access-date=10 April 2019|via=www.rte.ie}}</ref> hoping that this would lead to the series involving a romantic element. This led Carter to insist that he did not want the roles of Mulder and Scully to become romantically involved.<ref name="Lowry 15-17">Lowry, pp. 15–17</ref> Carter decided Scully would be the skeptic to play against established ]; typically on television the quality was attributed to a male.<ref name="Pilot Speaks" /> Because Duchovny was much taller than Anderson, during scenes where Mulder and Scully stand or walk next to each other Anderson stood on "the Gilly-Board," an ] named after her.<ref name="andersonama">{{cite web | url=https://www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/1egkr9/i_am_gillian_anderson_ama/ca01vck?context=3 | title=I am Gillian Anderson – AMA! | website=] | date=May 16, 2013| access-date=May 16, 2013| author=Anderson, Gillian}}</ref>
In "Milagro" (6x18), Scully unwittingly became the object of desire for Phillip Padgett, a reclusive writer. He revealed his obsession with Scully to her in the course of an investigation, providing strangely detailed insight into her life, to the extent that he moved into Mulder's building to be near her. As an X-File case, all of his written work comes to life. In his newest book he wrote that the two made love on his bed, but in reality they were interrupted by Mulder. His love for Scully remained unrequited and he even hints that Scully is already in love with someone else.


Scully appears in every episode of the 11-season series with the exceptions of "3," "Zero Sum," "Unusual Suspects," and "Travelers." She has appeared outside ''The X-Files'' on numerous occasions, the most notable being in the '']'' (also created by Chris Carter) episode "Lamentation," in which the main character, Frank Black, visits the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia, and Mulder and Scully are briefly seen descending a stairway. In fact, they are Duchovny and Anderson's ]s.
Towards the end of the series, her relationship with Mulder clearly crossed over into the romantic sphere. When Mulder was injured in a boat crash, he awakened in a hospital and told Scully that he loved her ("Triangle", 6x03). In the episode ("The Ghosts that Stole Christmas") a ghost that seems to know the inner workings of Scully's mind suggest that her source of intimacy from Mulder comes from her desire to always prove him wrong. By the end of Season 6, Mulder and Scully were increasingly shown doing more light-hearted activities together, such as practicing baseball ("The Unnatural", 6x20), using FBI funds for a "night out" during a movie premiere ("Hollywood, A.D.", 7x18), and enjoying a movie at Mulder's apartment("]", 7x21). In The X-Files film Mulder initiates what would seemed to have been a consensual kiss to Scully, but was interrupted by a bee sting, from a bee carrying the alien virus. In another episode ("Trust No 1", 9x08), a man reveals to Scully that he works for the New Syndicate, and his job requires him and a few other colleagues to spy on her around the clock. Due to this he knows intimate details of Scully's personal life, right down to her "natural hair color". It is suggested by this man that Scully ultimately initiated her and Mulder's sexual relationship, as he remarked that he was very surprised when she invited Mulder "into her bed".


An animated version of Scully, which featured the voice acting of Anderson, appeared on ] of '']'', in the episode "]," as well as Canadian animated series '']'', on the episode "]." The animated television series '']'' featured characters Fax Modem and Data Nully, obvious spoofs of Mulder and Scully, in the episode "]." Anderson provided her voice work for the episode, but co-star Duchovny declined.
After Mulder's abduction, coinciding with Scully's announcement of her pregnancy ("Requiem", 7x22) there was little doubt that ] was conceived with Mulder. During her pregnancy, Mulder pulled out all the stops to protect her and uncover the plot against her baby ("Essence", 8x20). When ] resurfaced as a disfigured man claiming to be Mulder, Scully was quick to dismiss his disfigurement, stating, "If that were Mulder, I wouldn't care." ("William", 9x16) When Mulder actually returned, they shared a passionate kiss and grieved together over the loss of their son. She and Mulder became fugitives together.


==Reception==
The last scene of the series finale featured Mulder and Scully in bed, facing an uncertain future together.
]ing as Agent Scully]]
{|class="toccolours" style="float: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 2em; color:black; width:37em; width: 35%;" cellspacing="5"
|style="text-align: left;"|"I love it when women come up to me and tell me I'm a positive influence on their lives and the lives of their young daughters. That's a great feeling."
|-
|style="text-align: left;"| — ] talking about the reaction to Dana Scully from female fans.<ref name="Askmen">{{cite news| title=Gillian Anderson Bio| work=]| url=http://www.askmen.com/celebs/women/actress/21_gillian_anderson.html| access-date=2010-05-03| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100127083249/http://www.askmen.com/celebs/women/actress/21_gillian_anderson.html| archive-date=2010-01-27| url-status=dead}}</ref>
|}
Anderson won many awards for her portrayal of Special Agent Scully during the ten seasons of ], including an ] for ''Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series'' in 1997,<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9rFxnULdRYw |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/9rFxnULdRYw |archive-date=2021-12-21 |url-status=live|title=GA Wins Emmy in '97 – YouTube.Com|website=] }}{{cbignore}}</ref> a ] for ''Best Actress in a Television Drama Series'' in 1997,<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c69gWu6ufx8 |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/c69gWu6ufx8 |archive-date=2021-12-21 |url-status=live|title=GA and DD win GGS in 1997 – YouTube.Com|website=] }}{{cbignore}}</ref> two ] for ''Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series'' in 1996 and 1997<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MOGfCsE38TY |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/MOGfCsE38TY |archive-date=2021-12-21 |url-status=live|title=GA wins SAG award in '96 – YouTube.Com|website=] }}{{cbignore}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=63ZjtqGKC50 |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/63ZjtqGKC50 |archive-date=2021-12-21 |url-status=live|title=SAGs – 1997 Gillian Anderson – YouTube.Com|website=] }}{{cbignore}}</ref> and a ] in 1997. In total, Anderson received for the role, four Emmy nominations,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.emmys.com/bios/gillian-anderson|title=Gillian Anderson – Television Academy – Emmy Awards|work=]|access-date=March 19, 2016}}</ref> four Golden Globe nominations,<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.hfpa.org/browse/?param=/member/28970 |title= Gillian Anderson – Golden Globe Official Website|work=]|access-date=March 19, 2016}}</ref> nine SAG nominations<ref name="IMDb">{{cite web|title=Gillian Anderson – Awards|url=https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000096/awards?ref_=nm_awd|work=IMDb|access-date=March 19, 2016}}</ref> and eight Saturn nominations.<ref name="IMDb" />


Film critic Scott Mendelson, writing in '']'', cited Scully as an example of strong female characters on television, calling her "one of the most iconic characters in the science-fiction genre."<ref>{{cite web|first=Scott|last=Mendelson|url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/scott-mendelson/why-wonder-woman-belongs_b_817905.html|title=Why Wonder Woman Belongs on Television, Where Female Superheroes Thrive|work=]|date=February 3, 2011|access-date=March 11, 2012}}</ref> '']''{{'s}} Laura Pledger also named her as a strong TV woman, placing her at No. 1.<ref>{{cite web|first=Laura|last=Pledger|url=http://www.radiotimes.com/news/2012-03-08/ten-strong-tv-women|title=Ten Strong TV women|work=]|date=March 8, 2012|access-date=May 5, 2012}}</ref> Rebecca Traister of ] opined that Scully had a better character arc than Mulder. She wrote, "The very fact that her character was such a hard sell made her repeated brushes with the supernatural all the more powerful. Mulder's desire to believe was so expansive, his credulity so flexible, that it's not as though he was ever going to have either shaken from him. But Scully's surety was solid, stable, rigid; every time she saw something she thought she'd never see, we saw it crack, sparks fly from it. She was forced to question herself, grow, change."<ref name="Salon">{{cite news|first=Rebecca|last=Traister|url=http://www.salon.com/2008/07/24/scully_2/|title=Scully have I loved|work=]|date=July 24, 2008|access-date=March 11, 2012}}</ref> She praised her for being more "rational, resilient, mature" than her partner and for their mature relationship.<ref name="Salon" /> In a review of "]," Emily VanDerWerff of '']'' wrote that it was a cliché to put Scully in danger, as "Scully is heart, and any time she's in danger, it feels like the show itself is about to be stabbed through the heart."<ref>{{cite web|first=Emily|last=VanDerWerff|url=http://www.avclub.com/tvclub/the-x-filesmillennium-irresistibledie-hand-die-ver-41824/|title="Irresistible"/"Die Hand Die Verletzt"/"Fresh Bones"|work=]|date=June 6, 2010|access-date=July 21, 2019}}</ref>
In the film, ], which takes place six years later, Mulder and Scully are still in a relationship and are now living together.<ref name=believe></ref>
Scully was concerned that Mulder's continuing pursuit of the unknown was taking its toll on their relationship and they could not be together if he couldn't "escape the darkness." However, in the "secret ending" after the majority of the credits, Scully is seen in a small rowboat with Mulder - both clad in swimwear and a bathrobe - in a tropical sea, having taken him up on his offer to run away together.


The character of Scully has become something of a sci-fi heroine due to her intelligence and resilience, frequently appearing on lists of important female ] characters, such as ''Total Sci-Fi Online''{{'}}s list of ''The 25 Women Who Shook Sci-Fi'', where she came in fourth.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://90slove.livejournal.com/15749.html |work=totalscifionline.com |at=] |title=The 25 Women Who Shook Sci-Fi |date=June 3, 2009 |access-date=March 19, 2016 }}{{dead link|date=April 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> ] named her the thirteenth greatest woman on television,<ref>{{cite web|first=Kim|last=Potts|url=http://www.aoltv.com/2011/03/02/tvs-greatest-women-25-1/|title=TV's Greatest Women: 25-1|publisher=]|date=March 2, 2011|access-date=March 13, 2012|archive-date=July 2, 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150702004219/http://www.aoltv.com/2011/03/02/tvs-greatest-women-25-1/|url-status=dead}}</ref> while the site also listed her among the most memorable female science fiction television characters.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ohnotheydidnt.livejournal.com/57386257.html?thread=9857223441|work=]|at=]|title=Sci-Fi TV's Most Memorable Female Characters |date=March 18, 2011|access-date=March 19, 2016}}</ref> She is also often cited as being an unlikely ], frequently being included in lists of sexy TV characters.<ref>{{cite magazine|title=Hottest Nerd Crushes|url=http://www.maxim.com/entertainment/hottest-nerd-crushes|magazine=]|access-date=December 10, 2010|date=March 19, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine|title=The 14 Hottest '90s TV Stars, Ranked|url=http://www.maxim.com/entertainment/14-hottest-90s-tv-stars-ranked|magazine=]|access-date=May 18, 2015|date=March 19, 2016}}</ref> She was listed in ]'s Top 50 Favorite Female TV Characters.<ref>{{cite web|title=AfterEllen.com's Top 50 Favorite Female TV Characters|url=http://www.afterellen.com/tv/99120-afterellencoms-top-50-favorite-female-tv-characters/11|publisher=]|access-date=June 24, 2012|date=February 27, 2012}}</ref> The pairing Mulder/Scully was ranked number 15 on ]'s poll of ''America's Top Sleuths''.<ref>{{cite web|title=America's Top Sleuths|url=http://magnum-mania.com/Lists/Americas_Top_Sleuths.html|access-date=February 3, 2013|year=2006}}</ref>
On the island, Scully in her bikini and Mulder in his bathrobe will battle an entire race of reptilian demons during which Scully will be held down, raped and impregnated as Mulder watches helplessy, being held captive by two of them. Scully, in a matter of minutes, gives birth and dies as the demon baby rips her stomach and chest open.


] of '']'' emphasized the importance of Scully's character in popular culture by listing all the strong female characters she inspired or may have influenced in some aspects, including: ] of '']'', ] of '']'', ] of '']'', Olivia Moore of '']'', Dr. Maura Isles of '']'', ] of '']'', ] of '']'', ] of '']'', Abbie Mills of '']'', ] of '']'', ] (another character portrayed by Anderson) of '']'' and ] of '']''. Jade Bastién wrote: "Do all the characters Scully has influenced live up to her? Definitely not. Gillian Anderson's performance and her chemistry with David Duchovny aren't exactly elements that can be replicated. But these characters prove that Scully isn't only the heart of '']'', but also the character who had the most profound influence on popular culture."<ref>{{cite web|first=Angelica|last=Jade Bastién|url=http://www.vulture.com/2016/02/dana-scully-all-the-characters-she-has-inspired.html|title=All the Characters Agent Dana Scully Has Inspired|work=]|date=February 9, 2016|access-date=February 23, 2016}}</ref>
"Noooooooooo!" Mulder cries out as he see the two demon grabs his arms and legs and rip his body in half.


]'s Liz Shannon Miller ranked Scully as the No. 1 most important character of ''The X-Files'', writing: "Scully's legacy is so important in so many ways, from giving us the gift of Gillian Anderson's acting, to inspiring an entire generation of young women to pursue careers in ]. Intelligent, loyal, flawed and brave, Scully was the show's beating heart and saving grace even in its lowest years. As ] himself has said: 'It's Scully's show'."<ref>{{cite web|first=Liz|last=Shannon Miller|url=http://www.indiewire.com/article/the-49-most-important-characters-of-the-x-files-ranked-20160222|title=The 49 Most Important Characters of 'The X-Files', Ranked|work=]|date=February 22, 2016|access-date=February 22, 2016}}</ref>
THE END


=="The Scully Effect"==
The character is believed by some to have initiated a phenomenon referred to as "The Scully Effect," as the character's role as a ] and ] inspired many young women to pursue careers in ], ], ], and ], and as a result brought a perceptible increase in the number of women in those fields.<ref>{{cite journal|url= http://www.yesmagazine.org/happiness/less-big-bang-theory-more-dana-scully |title= Less "Big Bang Theory," More Dana Scully: What It's Going to Take to Lead More Girls Into Science |date=December 24, 2013|author= Christopher Zumski Finke|journal=] |access-date= October 19, 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= http://all-that-is-interesting.com/scully-effect|title= The Scully Effect: How "X-Files" Helped Mainstream Women In STEM Careers |date=January 31, 2015|author= Abby Norman|author-link=Abby Norman (writer)|work=All That Is Interesting|access-date= October 19, 2015}}</ref> At the 2013 ], Anderson noted that she has long been aware of "The Scully Effect" and stated: "We got a lot of letters all the time, and I was told quite frequently by girls who were going into the medical world or the science world or the FBI world or other worlds that I reigned, that they were pursuing those pursuits because of the character of Scully. And I said, 'Yay!'"<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.vulture.com/2013/10/david-duchovny-gillian-anderson-nycc-paley-center-quotes.html|title= Nearly Everything The X-Files' David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson Said This Weekend |date=October 14, 2013|author= Jennifer Vineyard|work=]|access-date= October 19, 2015}}</ref> ], a biology professor and a science adviser for the series recalls: "I asked my Intro Bio class back then how many of them were influenced by the character of Scully on ''The X-Files'' to go into science and half of the hands in the room went up. That's huge! That was saying that the show was really having an effect."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://motherboard.vice.com/read/the-new-x-files-science-advisor-explains-how-the-reboot-will-stay-realistic|title=The New 'X-Files' Science Advisor Explains How the Reboot Will Stay 'Realistic'|date=August 10, 2015|author=Carly Lane |work=Motherboard |access-date=November 30, 2015}}</ref> "The Scully Effect" remains a subject of academic inquiry.<ref>{{cite book|date= September 3, 2013|publisher= ] |doi= 10.1021/bk-2013-1139.ch020 |title = Hollywood Chemistry|volume= 1139 |pages= 241–249 |series = ACS Symposium Series|last1 = Nisbet|first1 = Matthew C.|last2= Dudo |first2= Anthony |isbn= 978-0-8412-2824-5 }} {{subscription required}}</ref>


==References==
{{Reflist}}


===Bibliography===
{{Refbegin|2}}
* {{cite book | last = Duncan | first = Jody | title = The Making of ''The X-Files'' Movie | publisher = HarperPrism | year = 1998 | isbn = 9780061073168 | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/makingofxfilesfi00dunc }}
* {{Cite book |title=X-Files Confidential |first=Ted |last=Edwards |publisher=Little, Brown and Company |year=1996 |isbn=9780316218085 |url=https://archive.org/details/xfilesconfidenti00edwa_0 }}
* {{Cite book |title=The Complete X-Files |first1=Matt |last1=Hurwitz |first2=Chris |last2=Knowles |publisher=Insight Editions |year=2008 |isbn=978-1-933784-80-9 }}
* {{Cite book | last = Kessenich | first = Tom | title = Examinations: An Unauthorized Look at Seasons 6–9 of "The X-Files" | location = New York, US | publisher = ] | year = 2002 | isbn = 9781553698128 | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/examinationsunau0000kess }}
* {{cite book|year=1996|last=Lovece|first=Frank|title=The X-Files Declassified|publisher=Citadel Press|isbn=9780806517452|url=https://archive.org/details/xfilesdeclassifi00love}}
* {{cite book | last1 = Lowry | first1 = Brian | last2 = Stegall | first2 = Sarah | title = The Truth Is Out There: The Official Guide to the X-Files | url = https://archive.org/details/truthisoutthere00lowr | url-access = registration | publisher = ] | year = 1995 | isbn =978-0-06-105330-6 }}
* {{cite book | year=2000 | author=Shapiro, Marc | title=All Things: The Official Guide to the X-Files Volume 6 | publisher=Harper Prism | isbn=978-0-06-107611-4 | url=https://archive.org/details/allthings00shap }}
* {{cite book | year=2009 | first1=Robert |last1=Shearman |first2=Lars |last2=Pearson | title=Wanting to Believe: A Critical Guide to The X-Files, Millennium & The Lone Gunmen|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-9759446-9-1}}
{{Refend}}


==Appearances== ==External links==
* on ]
* on ]
{{X-Files}}


{{Subject bar|portal1=Television |portal2=United States|portal3=Speculative fiction|commons=yes|q=yes}}

{{Authority control}}


Scully appears in every episode of the nine-season series except:
* Season 2: "]"
* Season 4: "]"
* Season 5: "]" and "]"

''Other Appearances:''
*In the '']'' (also created by Chris Carter) episode "Lamentation," The main character, Frank Black, visits the FBI building and Mulder and Scully are briefly seen descending a stairway. In fact, they are Duchovny and Andersons' ]s.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.fourthhorseman.com/Abyss/Episodes/epi117.htm |title=Millennium Episode 117}}</ref>
*An animated version of Scully, which featured the voice acting of ], would appear on season 8 of '']'', in the episode '']'', as well as '']'', on the episode ''Eek Space 9''. The animated television series '']'' featured characters "Fax Modem" and "Data Nully", obvious spoofs of Mulder and Scully, in the episode "Trust No One". Anderson provided her voice work for the episode, but co-star Duchovny declined.

==Pop culture references==
*] has stated that he named Scully after his favorite sportscaster, ]. ] was named after Scully's longtime broadcasting partner, ].
*Scully was portrayed by ], who played as herself, in the movie within the episode ] (7x19). Leoni was married to David Duchovny until 2008.
*Scully, along with Mulder, is strongly referenced in the song "]" by the band ].
*In the online roleplaying game ], ] played an April Fools joke on the online community by fictionally creating the "Tinfoil Hat". The Blizzard Tinfoil Hat page stated that if players ate enough of a specific food or drink, agents Sculder and Mully would appear, a reference to Mulder and Scully.
*In a deleted scene in the first season of British comedy '']'', you can see the main character Tim using Scully as a muse - she is in his head, and she disappears as soon as Tim turns around.
*Maryland punk rock band The Pizza Monsters has a song dedicated to Agent Scully.
*In the ] episode ], Buffy says to Giles: "I can't believe you of all people are trying to ''Scully'' me".
*In the ] episode, ]: ], a member of the nerd Trio, asserts, "Scully wants me so bad."
* In an episode of the television series '']'', a police officer Kendrick says the following to Kate:
::Kendrick: “Come on Kate. Everyone knows you’ve gone all Scully. Anytime one of these weird cases crosses anyone’s desk, you’re always there. We used to be friends - what’s going on with you?”
::Kate: “Scully’s the skeptic”.
::Kendrick: “Huh?”
::Kate: “Mulder’s the believer, Scully’s the skeptic.”
::Kendrick scratches his head: “…Scully’s the chick, right?”
* In season one of '']'' both Scully and Mulder appear to be played by two extreme X-files fans at a Science Fiction convention. Mulder was also mentioned by Klaus when Roger tried to imitate the agent's background story in, "The Office Spaceman" of season three.
* In the pilot to '']'', Dean Winchester (Jensen Ackles) manages to sneak himself and his brother into the investigation on a bridge. As two FBI agents approach them, he nods to them and says, "Agent Mulder. Agent Scully."
* In an episode of ], while Michael Guerin and Maria Deluca sneak into Courtney's house, carrying flashlights to investigate her and Maria says the following to Michael:
::Maria: Michael! I feel like we're Scully and Mulder or something.
*In ] episode 1x11 Woody says that Jordan and Garret are like Mulder and Scully.
* On the pilot episode of ], while trying to convince Temperance "Bones" Brennan that they'll work together, FBI Agent Seeley Booth says "We're Scully and Mulder". These two main characters are often compared to Scully and Mulder in fanbases, since they share the platonic-but-somewhat-flirty relationship made famous on ''The X-Files''.
* On the ]'s spinoff series ], the characters of ] and ] are called often called Mulder and Scully.

==See also==
*]

==References==
<references/>

==External links==
* - X-Files Wiki
* - entry on Dana Scully
*
* at Pop Culture Heroines
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Latest revision as of 04:14, 11 December 2024

Fictional character in the television series The X-Files

Fictional character
Dr. Dana Scully
The X-Files character
First appearance
  • "Pilot"
  • The X-Files
  • September 10, 1993
Last appearance
Portrayed byGillian Anderson

Tegan Moss (young Scully)

Zoe Anderson (young Scully 1976 – uncredited)
In-universe information
Full nameDana Katherine Scully
SpeciesHuman, Female
Occupation
Affiliation
Family
SpouseFox Mulder
Significant otherFox Mulder
Children
ReligionRoman Catholic
HomeWashington, D.C., U.S.

Dana Katherine Scully, M.D., is a fictional character and one of the two protagonists in the Fox science-fiction, supernatural television series The X-Files, played by Gillian Anderson. Scully is a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Special Agent and a medical doctor (MD), partnered with fellow Special Agent Fox Mulder for seasons one to seven and seasons 10 and 11, and with John Doggett in the eighth and ninth seasons. In the television series, they work out of a cramped basement office at FBI headquarters in Washington, DC to investigate unsolved cases labeled "X-Files." In 2002, Scully left government employment, and in 2008, she began working as a surgeon in Our Lady of Sorrows, a private Catholic hospital – where she stayed for seven years, until rejoining the FBI. In contrast to Mulder's credulous "believer" character, Scully is the skeptic for the first seven seasons, choosing to base her beliefs on what science can prove. She later on becomes a "believer" after Mulder's abduction at the end of season seven.

Scully has appeared in all but five episodes of The X-Files, and in the 20th Century Fox films The X-Files, released in 1998, and The X-Files: I Want to Believe, released 10 years later. The episodes in which she does not appear are "3," "Zero Sum," "Unusual Suspects," "Travelers" and "The Gift" (excluding archive footage). The eleventh season marked Anderson's final time portraying the character.

Background

Dr. Dana Katherine Scully was born on February 23, 1964, in Annapolis, Maryland, to William (Don S. Davis) and Margaret Scully (Sheila Larken), into a close-knit Catholic family with Irish ancestry. She has an older brother, Bill Jr., an older sister, Melissa, and a younger brother, Charles, who is never seen on the show except in flashbacks. In the canonical 2016 comic book series, published by IDW Publishing, the two-part issue "Ishmael" revealed Scully had a paternal half-brother, named Tam Minh Nguyen. Scully's father was a navy captain, who died of a heart attack in early January 1994. Dana Scully grew up in Annapolis, Maryland and later in San Diego, California. As a young girl, Scully's favorite book was Moby-Dick and she came to nickname her father "Ahab" from the book, and in return, he called her "Starbuck." Due to this, she named her dog Queequeg.

Scully attended the University of Maryland, and in 1986, received a Bachelor of Science degree in physics. Her undergraduate thesis was titled Einstein's Twin Paradox: A New Interpretation. Just out of medical school at Stanford University, she was recruited by the FBI; she accepted the agency's offer of employment because she felt she could distinguish herself there. After two years in the bureau, Section Chief Scott Blevins assigned her to work with agent Fox Mulder.

Storylines

A promotional image for the first season of The X-Files featured Anderson as Scully.

Upon being partnered with Mulder, Scully maintained her medical skills by acting as a forensic pathologist, often performing or consulting on autopsies of victims on X-Files cases.

In season two, Scully was kidnapped by an ex-FBI agent turned mental patient named Duane Barry, and then taken from Barry by a military covert operation that was working with the alien conspirators, but was later returned. In season three, she found out that a super hi-tech microchip had been implanted in the back of her neck. After having it removed, she developed cancer in the fourth season and was hospitalized after the cancer became terminal. She was saved after Mulder broke into the Department of Defense to retrieve another chip to be implanted back into her neck. At the time, Scully was also undergoing experimental medical treatments and was having a dramatic renewal of her faith.

Scully was pronounced infertile during the fifth season. In the season five episode "Emily," Scully discovers that she unknowingly mothered a daughter during her abduction (in season two). Her daughter Emily was adopted by another family. Emily died shortly afterwards, and they were unable to further investigate after Emily's body went missing. In the seventh-season finale, "Requiem," Scully mysteriously became pregnant. The child, named William, after her own father, as well as Mulder's father, was born at the end of the eighth season. The show did not initially reveal the cause of Scully's pregnancy, but later episodes and movies would see Mulder and Scully call William "our son"; the pair had unsuccessfully tried for a child through in vitro fertilization. Around this time, Mulder was fired from the FBI by Deputy Director Alvin Kersh, and Scully left the field to teach forensics at Quantico. William was placed for adoption during the end of the ninth season after Scully felt she could no longer provide the safety that William needed. William was a "miracle child," of some importance to the alien conspirators. He demonstrated extraordinary powers, including telekinesis.

In The X-Files: I Want to Believe, she is shown working as a medical doctor at the Our Lady of Sorrows, a private Catholic hospital in Virginia. Early on in the film, Scully is contacted by the FBI, who are looking for Fox Mulder in the hope that he will assist them with the investigation of a missing FBI agent. In exchange for his help, the charges against him will be dropped. Unlike Mulder, Scully was apparently not considered a fugitive by the FBI. However, she did continue to maintain her romantic relationship with Mulder throughout the six years that he was on the run from the American government. In the movie, they are shown to be living together in a secluded house.

In the first episode of season 10, "My Struggle" (2016), Scully is still working as a doctor for Our Lady of Sorrows hospital, now performing surgeries on children with severe birth defects. She has extraterrestrial DNA, as the test that she performs on herself confirms. After the FBI reopens the X-Files, 14 years after their closure, she rejoins the bureau. In "Mulder and Scully Meet the Were-Monster," Scully jokes that she often enters dangerous situations alone due to the immortality she seemingly obtained during the events of the episode "Tithonus." At the end of "Mulder and Scully Meet the Were-Monster," Scully steals a dog from an animal control center, named Daggoo, which is named after yet another character from Moby-Dick. In "Home Again" Dana's mother, Margaret Scully, dies after suffering a heart attack. In the show's 10th-season finale, "My Struggle II," Scully is in a race against time to save humankind, creating a vaccine from her own extraterrestrial DNA.

Characterization

Throughout the series, Scully's Catholic faith served as a cornerstone, although a contradiction to her otherwise rigid skepticism of the paranormal. Due to her career in science and medicine, she drifted from her Catholic Christian upbringing, but remained somewhat entrenched in her religious beliefs.

Scully almost always wears a gold cross necklace. Two conflicting stories exist of how Scully received the necklace. After Scully's abduction in season two, Scully's mother told Fox Mulder she gave Scully the necklace as a 15th birthday present. In season five, Scully recalls receiving the necklace as a Christmas present. Scully's sister, Melissa, also receives a similar necklace on that occasion. When she was abducted by Duane Barry, a self-proclaimed alien abductee, it was the only item left behind in Barry's getaway car. Mulder wore it as a talisman of her until Scully miraculously reappeared in a Washington, DC, hospital. After she recovered from the trauma of her abduction, he returned the cross to her.

The abduction visibly tested the limits of her faith – Mulder believes that Scully was taken aboard an alien spaceship and was subjected to tests. Because of Scully's skepticism, though, she believes she was kidnapped by men, not aliens, and subjected to tests. She believes she could have been brought there by Barry, and she began to exhibit symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder on a case involving a murdering fetishist named Donnie Pfaster. This psychological re-victimization continued after Pfaster escaped from prison five years later and again attempted to kill her in her home, ending only after she fatally shot him. She struggled with what motivated her actions to kill Pfaster, and questioned whether it was God compelling her to kill him, or "something else."

Sometime after her recovery from cancer, Scully began to regularly attend mass again. At the request of Father McCue, Scully got involved in a case concerning a paraplegic girl who was found dead in a kneeling position with her palms outstretched and eye sockets charred. After Scully discovered the girl was a quadruplet and two more were murdered, Father McCue shared with her the story of the seraphim and the nephilim, which Scully interpreted as a possible explanation for the deformations and deaths of the girls. Scully continued to have visions of Emily, and when the last girl died, Scully believed she was returning the girl to God. Upon her return to Washington, DC, she went to confession to gain peace of mind and acceptance for Emily's death. In confession, she regretted her decision of letting the girl go. This suggests Scully had doubts about her faith.

In the sixth-season episode "Milagro," Agent Scully's vulnerability is exposed. In this episode, the murderer takes the victim's heart out. The suspect, a writer named Phillip Padgett, has a particular interest in Scully and is fascinated by her beauty and personality. When she goes to a church to observe a painting, the writer is there and talks to her about the Sacred Heart of Jesus. During the conversation he says she visits the church because she likes art, but not as place of worship. Scully doesn't say otherwise and later she says to Agent Mulder the writer told her her life story. All this suggests that Scully isn't a devout Roman Catholic, although she attempted to approach again the Catholic community and the Catholic faith to which she was devout in her youth, after handling the strange case presented in "Revelations" and also after dealing with life-threatening cancer during the fourth season.

Relationships

While in medical school, Scully carried on an affair with her married instructor, Dr. Daniel Waterston, who may have been the "college boyfriend" mentioned in "Trust No 1." In the show, whether or not the relationship became sexual is never indicated. According to Anderson in the episode's audio commentary, Scully came very close to having an affair with the married Waterston, but left before she could break up his marriage. The end of her relationship with Waterston came about following her decision to go into the FBI. After her entrance to the FBI's Academy at Quantico, Scully began a year-long relationship with her Academy instructor, Jack Willis, with whom she shared a birthday.

Towards the end of the series, her previously platonic friendship with partner Fox Mulder developed into a romantic relationship. When Mulder was injured in a boat crash, he awakened in a hospital and told Scully that he loved her. In the season six episode "How the Ghosts Stole Christmas," a ghost that seems to know the inner workings of Scully's mind suggests that her source of intimacy for Mulder comes from her desire to always prove him wrong. By the end of the sixth season, Mulder and Scully were increasingly shown enjoying more light-hearted activities together, such as practicing baseball, using FBI funds for a "night out" during a movie premiere, and watching a movie at Mulder's apartment. In the season seven episode "all things," Scully is shown getting dressed in Mulder's bathroom, while Mulder sleeps, apparently naked, in the bedroom. In "Trust No 1" a man reveals to Scully that he works for a new Syndicate like-organization, and his job requires him and a few other colleagues to spy on her around the clock. Due to this he knows intimate details of Scully's personal life, right down to her "natural hair color" (Titian, as later confirmed by Chris Carter). It is suggested by this man that Scully ultimately initiated a sexual relationship with Mulder, as he remarked that he was very surprised when she invited Mulder "into her bed." The last scene of the series finale featured Mulder and Scully holding each other on a bed, facing an uncertain future together in love.

In the film, The X-Files: I Want to Believe, which takes place six years later, Mulder and Scully are still in a relationship. Scully was concerned that Mulder's continuing pursuit of the unknown was taking its toll on their relationship, and they could not be together if he could not "escape the darkness." However, the film ends with the couple sharing a passionate kiss, and in the "secret ending" after the majority of the credits, a happily-smiling Scully is seen in a small rowboat with Mulder, both clad in swimwear, in a tropical sea, having taken him up on his offer to run away together. In the 10th season, Scully and Mulder are no longer a couple, as she chose to leave him. At the end of the season, Scully gets a vision, which is revealed to have come from her son, William, at the beginning of season 11. Over the course of season 11, Scully and Mulder search for William. Skinner learns from the Smoking Man that the Smoking Man, who is Mulder's father, also artificially impregnated Scully, thus is William's father, as well. In the third episode of the 11th season, "Plus One," Scully and Mulder are intimate again. In the season 11 finale, "My Struggle IV," she reveals to Mulder that she is pregnant with his child.

Conceptual history

Anderson at the 2008 WonderCon

Chris Carter named Scully after his favorite sportscaster, Vin Scully of the Los Angeles Dodgers. John Doggett was likewise named after Vin Scully's longtime broadcasting partner, Jerry Doggett. Scully's character was also inspired by Jodie Foster's portrayal of Clarice Starling in the film The Silence of the Lambs.

The casting for Scully caused a conflict between Carter and the Fox network. Carter had chosen 24-year-old Gillian Anderson, whom Carter felt was perfect for the role. Of her audition, Carter said, "she came in and read the part with a seriousness and intensity that I knew the Scully character had to have and I knew she was the right person for the part." However, Fox executives had wanted a more glamorous "bombshell" for the part (in a 2008 interview Anderson stated that Pamela Anderson had actually been the network's first choice), hoping that this would lead to the series involving a romantic element. This led Carter to insist that he did not want the roles of Mulder and Scully to become romantically involved. Carter decided Scully would be the skeptic to play against established stereotypes; typically on television the quality was attributed to a male. Because Duchovny was much taller than Anderson, during scenes where Mulder and Scully stand or walk next to each other Anderson stood on "the Gilly-Board," an apple box named after her.

Scully appears in every episode of the 11-season series with the exceptions of "3," "Zero Sum," "Unusual Suspects," and "Travelers." She has appeared outside The X-Files on numerous occasions, the most notable being in the Millennium (also created by Chris Carter) episode "Lamentation," in which the main character, Frank Black, visits the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia, and Mulder and Scully are briefly seen descending a stairway. In fact, they are Duchovny and Anderson's stand-ins.

An animated version of Scully, which featured the voice acting of Anderson, appeared on season eight of The Simpsons, in the episode "The Springfield Files," as well as Canadian animated series Eek! The Cat, on the episode "Eek Space 9." The animated television series ReBoot featured characters Fax Modem and Data Nully, obvious spoofs of Mulder and Scully, in the episode "Trust No One." Anderson provided her voice work for the episode, but co-star Duchovny declined.

Reception

A fan cosplaying as Agent Scully
"I love it when women come up to me and tell me I'm a positive influence on their lives and the lives of their young daughters. That's a great feeling."
Gillian Anderson talking about the reaction to Dana Scully from female fans.

Anderson won many awards for her portrayal of Special Agent Scully during the ten seasons of The X-Files, including an Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series in 1997, a Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Television Drama Series in 1997, two SAG Awards for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series in 1996 and 1997 and a Saturn Award for Best Actress on Television in 1997. In total, Anderson received for the role, four Emmy nominations, four Golden Globe nominations, nine SAG nominations and eight Saturn nominations.

Film critic Scott Mendelson, writing in The Huffington Post, cited Scully as an example of strong female characters on television, calling her "one of the most iconic characters in the science-fiction genre." Radio Times's Laura Pledger also named her as a strong TV woman, placing her at No. 1. Rebecca Traister of Salon.com opined that Scully had a better character arc than Mulder. She wrote, "The very fact that her character was such a hard sell made her repeated brushes with the supernatural all the more powerful. Mulder's desire to believe was so expansive, his credulity so flexible, that it's not as though he was ever going to have either shaken from him. But Scully's surety was solid, stable, rigid; every time she saw something she thought she'd never see, we saw it crack, sparks fly from it. She was forced to question herself, grow, change." She praised her for being more "rational, resilient, mature" than her partner and for their mature relationship. In a review of "Irresistible," Emily VanDerWerff of The A.V. Club wrote that it was a cliché to put Scully in danger, as "Scully is heart, and any time she's in danger, it feels like the show itself is about to be stabbed through the heart."

The character of Scully has become something of a sci-fi heroine due to her intelligence and resilience, frequently appearing on lists of important female science fiction characters, such as Total Sci-Fi Online's list of The 25 Women Who Shook Sci-Fi, where she came in fourth. TV Squad named her the thirteenth greatest woman on television, while the site also listed her among the most memorable female science fiction television characters. She is also often cited as being an unlikely sex symbol, frequently being included in lists of sexy TV characters. She was listed in AfterEllen.com's Top 50 Favorite Female TV Characters. The pairing Mulder/Scully was ranked number 15 on Sleuth Channel's poll of America's Top Sleuths.

Angelica Jade Bastién of Vulture emphasized the importance of Scully's character in popular culture by listing all the strong female characters she inspired or may have influenced in some aspects, including: Temperance "Bones" Brennan of Bones, Peggy Carter of Agent Carter, Veronica Mars of Veronica Mars, Olivia Moore of iZombie, Dr. Maura Isles of Rizzoli & Isles, Olivia Benson of Law and Order: SVU, Joan Watson of Elementary, Sydney Bristow of Alias, Abbie Mills of Sleepy Hollow, Zoë Washburne of Firefly, Stella Gibson (another character portrayed by Anderson) of The Fall and Olivia Dunham of Fringe. Jade Bastién wrote: "Do all the characters Scully has influenced live up to her? Definitely not. Gillian Anderson's performance and her chemistry with David Duchovny aren't exactly elements that can be replicated. But these characters prove that Scully isn't only the heart of The X-Files, but also the character who had the most profound influence on popular culture."

Indiewire's Liz Shannon Miller ranked Scully as the No. 1 most important character of The X-Files, writing: "Scully's legacy is so important in so many ways, from giving us the gift of Gillian Anderson's acting, to inspiring an entire generation of young women to pursue careers in STEM. Intelligent, loyal, flawed and brave, Scully was the show's beating heart and saving grace even in its lowest years. As Chris Carter himself has said: 'It's Scully's show'."

"The Scully Effect"

The character is believed by some to have initiated a phenomenon referred to as "The Scully Effect," as the character's role as a medical doctor and FBI Special Agent inspired many young women to pursue careers in science, medicine, engineering, and law enforcement, and as a result brought a perceptible increase in the number of women in those fields. At the 2013 San Diego Comic-Con, Anderson noted that she has long been aware of "The Scully Effect" and stated: "We got a lot of letters all the time, and I was told quite frequently by girls who were going into the medical world or the science world or the FBI world or other worlds that I reigned, that they were pursuing those pursuits because of the character of Scully. And I said, 'Yay!'" Anne Simon, a biology professor and a science adviser for the series recalls: "I asked my Intro Bio class back then how many of them were influenced by the character of Scully on The X-Files to go into science and half of the hands in the room went up. That's huge! That was saying that the show was really having an effect." "The Scully Effect" remains a subject of academic inquiry.

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