From London Times, August 17, 1998
Posted by barbar on alt.fan.david-duchovny
Tales of the unexpected fame
by Martyn Palmer
Success has been an alien experience for David Duchovny of The X-Files.
Martyn Palmer met him
Once in a while, David Duchovny - Fox Mulder in the hugely successful TV
series The X-Files - feels the need to break out of the celebrity straitjacket.
An appearance on American shock jock Howard Stern's live radio show, for
instance, is normally enough to make the 37-year-old actor feel liberated
from the saccharine treatment meted out to A-list personalities.
While others who share his level of fame would run a mile at the very sight
of Stern, who has built a career out of humiliating the rich and famous,
there is something in Duchovny that positively courts his favours. Indeed,
he was mortified once when, having tried to arrange an appearance, he was
turned down by Stern, who dismissed him as a "fake Richard Gere".
The refusal served only to make Duchovny all the more determined, and he
has now appeared twice, giving as good as he received on both occasions.
Duchovny likens the Stern experience to a form of Russian roulette - the
thrill comes in knowing that it could all go disastrously wrong.
"It's exciting because people are always trying to control the world that
I'm in," he says. "It's insulated. I'm always well-dressed when I see people,
I've always shaved, I'm always controlled to look and be at my best, and
when you do something like Howard Stern anything, anything at all, can happen.
I like that."
That Duchovny should need this occasional burst of control-free adrenalin
- he has also appeared, sending himself up, on the wonderful spoof talk show,
Larry Sanders - comes as no surprise when you meet the man himself.
He has often complained that after years (often working 14 hours a day, six
days a week and ten months a year) of playing the same character, he needs
new creative stimulation and challenges. A one-on-one with the likes of Stern
is an interesting diversion.
These days, of course, Duchovny can pick and choose the chat shows he wants
to appear on. The X-Files has grown from a cult hit into an international
success in the five years since its creation, turning Duchovny and his co-star
Gillian Anderson (who plays his partner Dana Scully) into huge stars.
Over several series, The X-Files has skilfully woven together an increasingly
intricate web of conspiracy theories - mostly connected with governments
covering up evidence of alien abductions - and expertly fed the nightmares
of its diehard fans, known as X-philes.
The $60 million movie version of the show, released in this country on Friday,
is another landmark. The trick for the X-Files team was to produce a film
that was not only a companion to the series, with references to previous
stories and characters that have featured on TV, but also to make a film
which would stand alone and draw in moviegoers who have not seen the show.
In short, it had to be cinema rather than TV. Duchovny admits that it was
a fine line to tread but believes that they have pulled it off.
"It's supposed to be out there competing with Armageddon and Godzilla and
that kind of theatregoer wants bang for the buck," he says. "All that stuff
- making the alien look wonderful, shooting on a glacier, explosions - is
the spectacle and a huge concern for the people having to do it, but fortunately
I have nothing to do with that side of it. For me the biggest concern as
an actor was how to play a part that I've been playing for five years - and
introduce him at the same time. It was an interesting challenge and kind
of energising, because it sent me back to the beginning, rediscovering all
those things about the character that I liked in the first place. All the
dangers of making this movie are only apparent now that we have succeeded.
I'd always thought we'd make a movie and it would be great. We know how to
make the TV series and we tell great stories and we have good characters,
so why not?
"But it's only now, doing interviews, that I fully appreciate all the pitfalls.
Not only could the movie have bombed and therefore tarnished the champion
status of a great TV show, it could have been totally incomprehensible to
people who don't know the show."
Born and raised in New York, Duchovny grew up in an academic environment.
"I had no interest in acting as a child," he recalls. "I always had more
fun playing basketball, baseball, tennis, anything. I was good at ball sports,
I wasn't particularly fast or strong but I had good hand-to-eye co-ordination."
He attended Princeton University and then received his Masters degree in
English Literature from Yale, where he first began to act. "There were a
lot of actors there and I thought those people were having fun the way that
I'd had fun playing sport. It looked like a team sport to me; they were getting
together to make something work.
"I didn't think of it as a career at that stage. Actually I wanted to write
for the stage and movies and I wanted to learn more about acting in order
to write better. I thought I would understand good dialogue if I got to speak
it. It's weird the way you kind of back into things . . ."
During a summer break from Yale, Duchovny returned to New York and was offered
a beer commercial being directed by a friend. He needed the money and accepted;
an agent saw the commercial, and offered to represent him on condition he
took formal acting lessons.
"All the reasons I had for getting into acting were so mercenary - I wanted
to have fun and make some money. But once I started classes I realised it
was something I could enjoy on a spiritual and emotional level. In those
classes you get to scream and laugh and cry and I guess because I'd come
from a strict academic environment it was really liberating.
"You can do the most powerful things and not have to pay for it - you can
sleep with your neighbour's wife or kill someone and you don't have to get
beaten up for it or go to jail."
After college Duchovny moved to Los Angeles and began to build a career without
exactly setting Hollywood on fire. He appeared in such diverse films as the
children's movie Beethoven, as a greedy yuppie, and in Kalifornia, as a man
who unwittingly hooks up with a serial killer (Brad Pitt). He is probably
best remembered for his role as the transvestite detective Dennis/Denise
in David Lynch's offbeat Twin Peaks.
When he was offered The X-Files in 1993 he hoped that the show would either
be a huge success or flop and be axed very quickly so that he could move
on. He suspected the latter would be the case. "I don't think anyone thought
it was going to be huge. It wasn't on one of the big networks - ABC, NBC
or CBS - it was shown on the great pretender, Fox. And we were doing a show
about aliens, which seemed silly. Chris Carter, who created the show, had
never done anything, Gillian Anderson hadn't done anything and no one was
waiting for what I was going to do next. So none of us were anticipated in
any way."
Instead, filmed entirely in and around Vancouver, where production costs
are cheaper than Los Angeles, the show proved it could win ratings against
all the odds. It broke viewing records in America and won a clutch of Emmys.
Last year, Duchovny and Anderson campaigned for the show to be relocated
to Los Angeles and the sixth series is currently in production there. For
the actor, it means that he can be at home with his wife, the actress Tea
Leoni, and that, he says, has made a huge difference to the quality of his
life.
"I wanted to move to LA before I was married, but after it there was no question,
it had to happen," he says. "I want to play other parts, but there is something
comforting in knowing how to play this character, getting up in the morning
and kissing the wife goodbye, going to work and doing your job. For the moment,
it's fine, it really is."
Palmer, Martyn. August 17, 1998. "Tales of the unexpected
fame." London Times.