Buffy ran for seven seasons from 1997 to 2003. Its lead star Sarah Michelle Gellar took to Instagram to write that appearing in the show had been "the greatest privilege."
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“While we knew the potential, I don’t think any of us saw the lasting impact our show would have. As an actor, you wish for that one role where you can leave your mark and forever be remembered. With Buffy I got so much more," said Sarah. "She’s a feminist challenge to gender hierarchy. Buffy may have been the Chosen One, but I was the lucky one.”
https://www.instagram.com/p/BRdzz-KDcye/
The actress went on to thank the creators, crew and her co-stars. “And lastly, but most importantly thank you to all of you, the fans. We made this show for you, and your unwavering support has kept this show going long past our seven years. You are everything.”
#BuffySlays20 Here's to all who watched, and all who were part of its creation, but most of all, here's to you @joss - grrrr,aargh x
— Anthony Stewart Head 💙 (@AnthonySHead) March 10, 2017
Thank you for all the International #20YearsOfBuffy love!!! Does this means I can start eating cake now as long as it's Australian cake?
— alyson hannigan (@alydenisof) March 10, 2017
Meanwhile, Anthony Stewart Head – who portrayed Giles – has penned an article for The Guardian in which he calls the show “a feminist parable for everyone," including himself. “Twenty years after we started, I see that our series gave flesh (and horns) to the demons we all face in life: teenage Buffy’s storylines transcended age or gender," he wrote.
David Boreanaz, who played Angel, also told EW, "I was in the right spot at the right time, but I had been struggling for years just to get in the door. I couldn’t even do a commercial, like a gum commercial without freaking out. You have to go through the pain to get to the other end, and then once you get to the top, you’re not down — you gotta climb other mountains."
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