Playboy Interview with David Duchovny |
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by Albert - dla X-Klubu |
PLAYBOY INTERVIEW: David Duchovny
a candid conversation with the brooding "x-files" star about life on the set
with Gillian Anderson, life at home with téa leoni and life on the road with porno tapes.
It's a classic "X-Files" moment Special Agent Fox Mulder, played by David
Duchovny, stares forlornly off a bluff, contemplating yet another investigation gone
wrong. Only minutes earlier, he had been driving wildly, then came to a screeching halt on
this bluff overlooking the Pacific Ocean. In the backseat: a man Mulder desperately want
to save. Close behind was Mulders partner, Special Agent Dana Scully bringing a syringe
full of the mystery concoction that could have saved the man's life. But when you
specialize in the paranormal you can pretty much expect that your victim will expire in a
most paranormal way. And that's precisely what happens. Unable to inject the medication in
time, Mulder watches helplessly as the victim's head explodes all over the backseat. No
wonder Mulder is depressed.
Later, back in his trailer, Duchovny gives some insight into his character's mood.
"Any time somebody's head explodes in your car, it's upsetting," he explains
drily.
Horror and humor. Without those elements subtly intertwined, "The X-Files" would
be just another TV show instead of that odd hybrid-a hit TV show with a devoted cult
following. And no one manages to straddle the mixed demands of the show better than
Duchovny, whose morose underacting is deftly leavened by a deadpan sense of humor. It's
the perfect combination for a show often described as a cross between "Twin
Peaks" and "The Twilight Zone"-a TV series for paranoids and zealots who
are sure the government covers up what it knows about the UF0s and aliens among us.
Mulder's own obsession stemmed from having seen, or so he believed, his younger sister ab
ducted by aliens when she was eight.
In a bit of fortunate casting, Duchovny was paired with Gillian Anderson, who landed the
role of Dana Scully, the rational disbeliever. Anderson, voted "most bizarre
girl" in high school, was the perfect match for the wry Duchovny. Their chemistry
worked, and the palpable sexual tension could be milked for the entire series without any
actual romance. Mulder, after all, is a guy who sleeps on a couch, watches pornographic
videotapes and never has sex (except with a vampire).The series has done more than help
boost the Fox network in the ratings. A movie spin-off, "The X-Files: Fight the
Future," was released this past summer. It was a bold attempt, because more
movies-from-TV-shows have failed ("The Avengers," "The Saint") than
have succeeded ("The Fugitive," "Mission: Impossible"). But the gamble
paid off as the $60 million "X-Files" movie grossed $83 million domestically and
is expected to more than double that internationally.Few TV shows or movies develop such a
fanatical following. At conventions and on the Internet, diehard believers debate every
conspiratorial nuance (there are hundreds of Web sites devoted to dissecting the meaning
of the ghost trains, black helicopters, bees, corn, Agent Scully's crucifix and other
obscure details). But the show has also grown beyond cult status: Twenty million people
tune in on Sunday nights (and 10 million for the syndicated repeats) to see what's been
cooked up by the Cigarette Smoking Man or the head of the Syndicate or the faceless men or
the alien-human hybrids created by a black-oil virus.At the heart of all this attention is
Duchovny. He was born on August 7, 1960 and grew up in New York City. When he was 11, his
parents split up and he and his sister and brother stayed with their Scottish-born mother,
Margaret, then a teacher. His father, Amram, a playwright ("The Trial of Lee Harvey
Oswald") and publicist who edited the humorous book "The Wisdom of Spiro T.
Agnew," moved to Boston after the divorce and now lives in Paris. Duchovny won a
scholarship to Collegiate, an exclusive rep school in Manhattan, where one of his fellow
students was John Kennedy Jr. Duchovny excelled in sports (baseball and basketball) and
academics (he was valedictorian) and was accepted to four Ivy League schools (Harvard,
Yale, Princeton, Brown). He chose Princeton for undergraduate and Yale for graduate school
(on a teaching fellowship), where he studied modern literature, concentrating on Samuel
Bechett. To the chagrin of his mother, he never completed his doctorate because a friend
introduced him to acting as a way to suppplement his income (he also worked as a bartender
during the summer). Duchovny had discovered his procession.
He started doing commercials in 1985 and auditioned for parts in the movies "Bull
Durham" and "Valmont." It was director Henry Jaglom who recognized his
potential and cast him as a seducer in his 1989 film "New Year's Day. " Duchovny
followed that with small parts in "VenicelVenice," "Julia Has Two
Lovers," "The Rapture," "Beethoven," "Ruby" and
"Chaplin." In 1993 he appeared with Brad Pitt and Juliette Lewis in
"Kalifornia." That same year "The X-Files" creator Chris Carter
thought Duchovny might be right for playing Fox Mulder.
Duchovny also gained notoriety for his sexually adventurous roles. He dressed in drag for
"Twini Peaks," flirted openly with Garry Shandling during a running story line
on "The Larry Sanders Show" and appeared as a regular character on Showtime's
erotic breakthrough series, "Red Shoe Diaries."
Like most TV actors, Duchovny has bigscreen ambitions. His "X-Files" contract is
up in two years, and he plans to leave TV behind (though he will continue to star as Fox
Mulder in the series of "X-Files" movies the studio hopes will live on long
after the TV show dies). Duchovny starred in the little see movie "Playing God"
in 1997, about a doctor who is coerced into working for the Mob.
Movie roles might be easier to come by now that the series has switched locations.
"The X-Files" was originally filmed in Vancouver, which gave the show its moody,
rain y look (and saved the studio from paying Hollywood salaries to the crew). But when
Duchovny fell in love with and married Téa Leoni (who starred in the TV show "The
Naked Truth" and the films "Flirting With Disaster" and "Deep
Impact"), the long shooting schedule and lengthy separations began to drag on him.
Furthermore, he managed to offend Canadians when he complained to a reporter that
"Vancouver is a nice place if you like 400 inches of rainfall a day." Soon
after, the marquee on a local strip club suggested that Duchovny go home, and he took the
advice, persuading the producers to move the show from Canada to Los Angeles.
To find out more about this unorthodox actor, PLAYBOY sent Contributing Editor Lawrence
Grobel (whose last interview was with Christopher Walken) to the Fox lot and on location.
Grobel'.s report follows:"The first few times we met, Duchovny was in his trailer on
the Fox lot, putting the finishing touches on the 'X-Files' movie. There were constant
interruptions-visitors who wanted to say hello or have a picture taken or signed, studio
heads who wanted, as Duchovny told me after they left, 'to blow smoke up my ass.' He was
as interested in asking me questions about people I had interviewed for PLAYBOY as he was
in answering my questions. 'Which actors did Brando say he admired?' he wanted to know.
'Would Pacino rather direct than act? Why won't he do ads in japan?' 'How does Anthony
Hopkins memorize his lines?' 'What did Soul Bellow think of the dramatization of
"Seize the Day?"' 'How does Joyce Carol Oates feel she can write well about
men?'"For our final sessions, we spoke in his TV trailer in San Pedro, a few months
after 'The X-Files: Fight the Future' had come out and he was back playing Mulder for the
series. He was pleased with a poem of his that a magazine had published and showed me
others he had written and hoped to turn into a book. I read his poems, offered my
suggestions (for whatever they were worth) and then we got down to business.
PLAYBOY: You once described The X-Files to Garry Shandling on The Larry Sanders Show as
"Laurel and Hardy with sexual tension." Do you still believe that?
DUCHOVNY: No, we were improvising. When you did the talk-show part on The Larry Sanders
Show you were actually doing a talk show. None of that was scripted. What I said makes no
sense to me. I don't know what that means. I think what Mulder and Scully have goes back
to Cary Grant movies, where verbal sparring had to code sexual sparring. I think that's
what people really like about it. It's this kind of chaste love affair. And we've done it
for five years. That's a lot of chastity. Usually at the end of a movie the guy and the
girl kiss, even if they've been sparring throughout. With us, it's an intense buildup.
People ask, "Are Mulder and Scully ever going to get it together?" I think no at
this point. I don't think they should.
PLAYBOY: How did the show keep from getting stuck in the science fiction ghetto and
attract more than a cult following?
DUCHOVNY: We do a cop show with paranormal phenomena. The show is amazing because it has
an all-inclusive tone. On one end it can take itself completely seriously on ridiculous
stuff like liberating aliens or a conspiracy that will bring down the entire world, and on
the other end it
can be lighthearted and funny.
PLAYBOY: Is that what accounts for the show's popularity?
DUCHOVNY: The enduring popularity of our show has to do with that we've established two
interesting characters in almost soap-opera fashion. We have embarked up a long-running
mythological story that people want to get to the bottom of, punctuated by interesting
stand-alone monster-of-the-week episodes. When we started we were really the only scary
show on TV. Now there are scary shows like Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Millennium. I
think Caroline in the City is very scary [laughs] People like to be scared; it's fun TV.
PLAYBOY: Some people claim we're al looking for a religious experience, and that shows
about alien abductions are basically that.
DUCHOVNY: If not a religious experience then a life-changing experience. Every week
something happens that would be world-altering if it were true. The genetic freaks or
monsters we deal with would revolutionize any evolutionary way of thinking. If the series
is not religious in the normal sense of the word, it's cataclysmic.
PLAYBOY: You've called it a "secular religious show."
DUCHOVNY: I was stretching. The show is evocative, it's part of the cultural lexicon now.
ER is twice as popular, but you don't hear people making an adjective out of ER. We've
achieved iconic status somehow. Everything is the something-files now.
PLAYBOY: How much have we embraced the worldview of The X-Files: "Trust no one,"
"The truth is out there"?
DUCHOVNY: I'm not sure that people are so into that. On a popular level it was one of the
first shows to state outright that the government is lying to you. Or, at least, that the
FBI is lying to its own agents. People always like to have somebody to blame.
PLAYBOY: How much of the show is based on real-life events?
DUCHOVNY: Read the recent news about splicing, cloning and genetic engineering. That has
become important for the idea in our show that experiments are being conducted with alien
DNA. Things that were science fiction ten years ago and were pretty much a joke as cloning
was in Sleeper-are now a reality. It helps that science is more imaginative than science
fiction. It helps that there are brilliant people out there, so that we knuckleheads can
actually make metaphors out of science and make trivial use of incredible breakthroughs.
PLAYBOY: What do you think about all these breakthroughs?
DUCHOVNY: Biologically, we're not far from cloning a human being, but what would be the
purpose? We'd have to decide who is worthy of cloning. We'd clone Stephen Hawking and
Michael Jordan, but what does that mean? It kind of ruins the preciousness of life.
PLAYBOY: Cloning could also be used for spare parts.
DUCHOVNY: Oh, so you farm your own. That's so mean to the poor clones. So you've got all
your clones in the backyard fighting because they don't want to give up their liver. I
don't know if life should be so precious that we try that hard to hold on to it. Maybe
there are people who love life a lot more than I do.
PLAYBOY: Are you often unsatisfied with what you do?
DUCHOVNY: Always. I have never been satisfied.
PLAYBOY: There isn't one show in which you feel you nailed it?
DUCHOVNY: No. There are definitely shows I feel are really good, even great.
PLAYBOY: Of the 110 shows you've done, what percentage would you say are really good?
DUCHOVNY: I'd say ten percent are the great ones. Really good, or good, 80 percent. Lousy,
ten percent.
PLAYBOY: Do the lousy ones make you cringe?
DUCHOVNY: There are the lousy ones that you know are going to be lousy. Then there are the
lousy ones that should have been better. Those hurt more, because you think, Maybe I
fucked up.
PLAYBOY: You told PLAYBOY a few years ago that Fox Mulder was on an inward journey and
asked, "Why is this man in so much pain? Why is he obsessed? Why would anyone want to
live their life this way? How do we heal him? How do we show him the truth?" Any
answers?
DUCHOVNY: I said that? That's good. I think his pain comes from the fact that he feels he
could have protected his sister but didn't. She was taken from him when he was 12 and she
was eight, and he's come to realize that she was abducted by aliens-at least he thinks
so-and that he might have been able to stop it in some way. Then, during the journey we've
had for the past five years, he found out that he was the one who was supposed to have
been taken and not his sister, so there's a lot of survivor guilt going on. He can't enjoy
himself. He can't rest until he's sure they've done everything to find the girl he let go.
PLAYBOY: As you said, why would anyone want to live that way?
DUCHOVNY: Right. He doesn't appear to have any interests outside that. We've never seen
him in a bed; he sleeps on his couch. He watches pornography. He doesn't have sexual
relations, except once, with a vampire. He cannot have joy until somebody else does. As
soon as he starts to have joy he feels guilty.
PLAYBOY: Will he ever find the truth?
DUCHOVNY: No. When he matures he'll realize that the truth is not something to be had.
Mulder is very young because he really thinks there's an answer. He thinks there's a bad
guy. He thinks if someone finds that guy, everything will be OK. That's a young point of
view. When he grows up he's going to turn into a different person. But I like that about
him. I like the intensity of his belief that he can fix things.
PLAYBOY: Your schedule conflicted with appearing in Oliver Stone's Any Given Sunday, a
movie about pro football. Was that disappointing?
DUCHOVNY: I would do anything to work with Oliver Stone. I really like him. I've always
wanted to play an athlete in a movie, and it was a rude awakening to realize the only part
for me in his film was that of an aging quarterback. But Oliver wanted me for the team
doctor. When we first met I told him I was a good athlete and he said he had seen George
Clooney, who is a really good athlete. I said, "I'm a better athlete than Clooney. e
talks about how he can beat me in basketball, but I guarantee you he can't." And
Stone said, "Well, you don't have the neck for it." I said, 'Joe Montana doesn't
have a big neck. If you tell me I can have this part, I'll work on my neck." We
laughed. Then he called later and asked again if I wanted the doctor part. I said,
"I'm working on my neck."
PLAYBOY: Are there any other movies in the works?
DUCHOVNY: Bonnie Hunt co-wrote and will direct Return to Me, a romantic comedy about heart
transplants. I want to do it.
PLAYBOY: Is TV better than movies?
DUCHOVNY: Yeah, though I think a great movie beats a great television show. It's like,
does a great karate guy beat a great boxer? A great movie is-a movie. But look at the
writing and the drama on XFiles and NYPD Blue, which to me are the two best dramas on
television. I feel they're better executed than the drama in most movies.
PLAYBOY: Then why do movies?
DUCHOVNY: Regardless of how good the story line is on a TV show, you're playing the same
character. I'm proud of The X-Files, and when all is said and done I'll be proud to have
created 150 hours or so of really good entertainment and the best TV we could do. But in
the end I'm playing 150 hours of the same guy.
PLAYBOY: Another actor who attempted to make the leap from a successful television show to
the big screen was David Caruso. His career has certainly faltered since he left NYPD
Blue. Is his a cautionary tale?
DUCHOVNY. No. As trite as it sounds, everybody is individual, everyone has their own
career to pursue. Alec Baldwin came from a soap opera, so did Demi Moore. Bruce Willis
came from Moonlighting. Tom Selleck came from Magnum, PI.-it didn't happen for him. Clint
Eastwood came from TV. There are millions of actors who were never on TV or film, who
never made it. There are film actors who were successful at first and then weren't, then
made a comeback. To think there's an equation is bogus. We all have our paths. What Caruso
did is so different from what I'm doing: He left a hit TV show after one year. He acted in
a couple of movies that didn't do well; now he's back on TV. I've been completely loyal.
This is my sixth year on the TV show. I've fulfilled my responsibilities.
PLAYBOY: How was the The X-Files movie received?
DUCHOVNY: Critically, It was hard for people to discuss the movie without discussing the
television show. Critics had an ax to grind. The movie did great and I was really happy
with it-it was a smart, funny adventure-science fiction thriller. It worked. But critics
seem to have a prejudice against television. A lot of them said they didn't understand it
because they don't watch the TV show. They missed the fact that our show deliberately
leaves people in doubt-that's part of our M.0. They thought if they were in doubt it was
because they didn't have enough information. That might be a risky situation in film
because it's a one-shot thing, whereas in TV you get to come back. So the critics may have
had a point. But underlying their criticism is the idea that it's only a TV show blown up
into a movie. But what's wrong with that if you're telling a good story? Look at
Armageddon, Godzilla, Independence Day. Those are much thinner stories than what we
attempted to tell, yet they didn't get that kind of criticism. So there were some
prejudices against the film that I hadn't anticipated. Also, our TV show is still on and
it's playing five times a week and it's free. The movie has been a success, so they'll do
another one. It's a $60 million film that has already made $83 million domestically.
Worldwide we'll probably make as much or more than Armageddon. I won't do another one
until the TV show is off the air. I think the audience will miss it when it goes off the
air.
PLAYBOY: Recently you said that you and Gillian have been thrown together, that you're
"two people who don't know each other, and we've been forced to spend more time
together than married people do." It's curious that you would use the present tense
when describing someone you have worked so closely with for five years.
DUCHOVNY: I was referring to the original coupling. But we still don't know each other
very well. We're not close personally. We're close professionally. But we're not tight. I
don't think we ever will be. I like her. I think she likes me. It's all fine.
PLAYBOY: What is it about your on-screen chemistry that makes it work?
DUCHOVNY: The meeting of two minds. Mutual respect. Scully came to this relationship
believing Mulder was a crackpot, but she was open to some of his ideas. And he took this
new partner and trusted her, what she had to say. It's an equal partnership, and that's
sexy to people.
PLAYBOY: Can Mulder or Scully ever be replaced?
DUCHOVNY: Yeah, everybody can be replaced. It's a double equation and it's contradictory,
and here's how it goes: The X-Files would not have been a success without me, but I am
replaceable at this point. It wouldn't have gotten to where it is if I hadn't been in it
in the beginning, but now that it is where it is, I'm dispensable. I mean, you get fans
who say, "Oh no, it wouldn't be the same without you." But in the end, you're
just an actor playing a role.
PLAYBOY: Before the X-Files movie, you starred in Playing God, which disappeared quickly.
You said that it was your way of saying, "I'm not Mulder; hear me roar." Was
anyone listening?
DUCHOVNY: Not with Playing God. That was a small movie, but because I'm a big TV star
people assumed it was my breakout movie. I never intended it to be that. When it didn't
make $40 million, people assumed that I thought it was a bomb or that I was disgraced. It
was exactly what I thought it would be. Maybe not as good as I wanted it to be, but I
never saw it as a hit movie.
PLAYBOY: One writer said that you have an air of confidence that could be interpreted as
smugness. Are you smug?
DUCHOVNY: Gillian did an interview in which she said I was arrogant, and when I read the
article I wondered, Why would someone think I'm arrogant? A friend of mine said, "If
you don't need something from somebody, if you're independent, they'll think you're
arrogant, Because that's threatening." OK, I'll take that. I'm a little like Holden
Caulfield-the things I hate more than anything else are hypocrisy and pretension. They
make my skin crawl. And I would put arrogance in the same category. To perceive myself as
arrogant would hurt.
PLAYBOY: Vanity Fair described you as "very handsome, though in a winsomely flawed
way, his nose a bit too large, his grin slightly geeky."
DUCHOVNY: I called Téa and asked, "What does winsome mean?" [Laughs] I know
what win means and I know what some means, it's like you win some, you lose some.
PLAYBOY: Do women still come on to you or has marriage changed that?
DUCHOVNY: I don't think marriage changes that. What changes is the way the sexes
relate-you smile at each other and then it escalates. I don't respond to that now. It's
not someone else's responsibility to honor my marriage. It's my responsibility. I never
got that attitude toward cheating: "How could she have an affair with a married
man?" Isn't that his responsibility?
PLAYBOY: So it doesn't matter what Monica Lewinsky did, it matters what President Clinton
did?
DUCHOVNY: Absolutely. And I don't care what either of them did.
PLAYBOY: Lewinsky's father knew where to put the blame.
DUCHOVNY: Well, he's her dad. If she were my daughter I'd probably blame Clinton, too.
When you have family involved, it's another story.
PLAYBOY: One of Lewinsky's lawyers called the president a misogynist. Do you have an
opinion?
DUCHOVNY: That comes from fucking women's lib. We're all smarting from that. It was a
necessary revolution. Women had to have a revolution, but let's now have a
counterrevolution and get back to where we should be. We can't have Andrea Dworkin saying
that unless a man asks for a kiss, it's rape. That's not human nature, it's not animal
nature. I see her on TV saying we should have guidelines for dating in colleges. The man
would have to ask if he can hold a hand, have a kiss, each step of the way: "May I
touch your breasts? May I put my hand down your pants? May I touch your clitoris?"
It's ridiculous.
PLAYBOY: What do men do in the workplace now, when they have to fear charges of harassment
if they say the wrong thing?
DUCHOVNY: Sexual harassment is about sex, not about harassment. It's become about power,
and that's not the same thing. It's all fucked up. We've got people trying to win the
lottery on other people. It's easy, because it's just he said-she said. If I try to get
you to have sex with me and I threaten that you'll lose your job if you don't, that's
sexual harassment. If I say, "Nice ass," I shouldn't be sued unless you say,
"You know, it bothers me when you say I have a nice ass. " And then I say,
" Nice ass" ten more times. Then you say, "Obviously I'm not getting
through to you. Do I have to sue you?" But now people are being sued for millions of
dollars because they said "Nice ass" once, jokingly, by the water cooler. It's
horseshit.
PLAYBOY: What if you pat a woman's ass by the water cooler?
DUCHOVNY: I don't think you should be sued. She can slap you, or she can say, "Next
time you touch me I'm going to get my brother" or "I'll sue you." I believe
in warnings. What happened to the warning?
PLAYBOY: Do you like pornography?
DUCHOVNY: I think pornography is fine. Without getting into a discussion about how it
demeans women and all that shit, I like to watch other people fuck. That's the fun
part-they're doing all the work. Something funny happened to me in Vancouver. At hotels in
Canada you get full porn, unlike in America, where they cut out all the penetration and
private parts, and you just get a shot of the guy from behind, which I don't need to see.
When I watched porn, I'd rent three tapes and do reconnaissance work first-I'd
fast-forward to see what caught my eye and then I'd catalog it. Then I'd make my choices
and go back and watch. But you can't do that in a hotel because the movie won't play again
for another eight hours. So if you're masturbating and not just watching, you have to make
a decision fast. I had to change my pornwatching habits and commit early. In Vancouver I
learned that beyond the initial commitment to the scene where I wanted to get off, I had
no control over the moment I got off. Once you go over that edge to an orgasm, you can't
pull back. So you give over and then you're at the mercy of the cuts-and all of a sudden
you're looking at a guy's sweaty ass and you're coming, and then you're thinking, Oh my
God, I'm questioning my sexuality, because that wasn't half bad. That's my porn story from
Canada.
PLAYBOY: Did you have favorite porn stars?
DUCHOVNY: My big porn years were the late Eighties. It's like watching sports-it has eras.
Was Marilyn Chambers better than Ona Zee? Who knows? The names that will forever be in my
pornographic heart are Alicia Monet, Alicia Rio, Amber Lynn, Ginger Lynn. You know how the
moviegoing public likes to see Tom Cruise-they like to have a known quantity out there. I
was the same way with porn. I was like, "Who's that nobody? I'm not sure she's
good." Alicia Monet was my favorite. If anything good can happen from this interview,
it's that Alicia Monet would contact me and we could have lunch. God, if she only knew how
many lonely periods she got me through. I don't think porn stars know how weirdly
important they are in people's lives.
PLAYBOY: Do you agree with Robin Williams that fame leads to money and drugs, which are
there to tempt and distract you?
DUCHOVNY: I never had the drug problem. Fame does lead to money, which I don't have a
close relationship with. I'm the kind of guy who never sees the money-it all goes
somewhere else. I don't understand it, I don't like to deal with it. I have a fear of not
having it, because I grew up without it. My mother was always vocal that we were very
close to not having anything. There was always a fear that one day we'd be out on the
street, though, looking back, that was not a reality. But I definitely was scared of
ending up in the gutter-that's the way we put it.
PLAYBOY: Is that one of the reasons you decided to be an actor rather than a
professor-because it's more lucrative?
DUCHOVNY: No, it wasn't about being rich. I never imagined being rich. It wasn't something
that I strove for. A professor makes plenty of money, and it's a solid income once you get
tenure. You're pulling in $60,000 to $100,000 for the rest of your life-that would have
been fine.
PLAYBOY: Which teachers left their mark on you?
DUCHOVNY: I studied poetry with Maxine Kumin. That was fun. One of the problems with being
in college is you're all the same age and writing about the same things. Maxine used to
sneak in friends from her generation, so we'd have a 70-year-old woman writing poems with
us. It just opened up the class. I wrote a break-up-with-my-girlfriend poem, a
get-back-together-with-my-girlfriend poem, and I had to read them. A lot of coffee,
cigarettes. Then this woman friend of Maxine's began her poem: "I have stitched my
labia shut." It was so far beyond, both thematically and chronologically, anything
any of us were approaching. We were just investigating labia for the first time and she
was leaving it behind. Maxine was very good that way.
PLAYBOY: What's the difference between graduate and undergraduate students?
DUCHOVNY. Graduate students are petrified. As an undergraduate you say what's on your
mind, you rap with the teacher. But in graduate school you pronounce yourself a
professional-this is what you do for a living. You're petrified to be wrong. All of a
sudden these lively discussions about literature that used to take place are silenced. In
our graduate Romantic Poetry class with Harold Bloom, there was a precocious
undergraduate, Naomi Wolf, who has since become known as a feminist writer. She was the
only one who would talk. Because she didn't care, she didn't have anything to lose. Bloom
was always bemoaning something in his fitting, sad voice, asking about what something
would be like, and we'd all be silent, afraid to be exposed. But Naomi Wolf would raise
her hand and respond, "It would be a world without adjectives." And he'd say,
"Exactly, my dear." And I was like, I'm in the wrong place. Not only did I not
get the answer, I didn't even understand the question. A world without adjectives. I just
don't get it. Though that would be a good name for a book, wouldn't it?
PLAYBOY: Did you learn discipline playing basketball at Princeton?
DUCHOVNY: No. I learned discipline more from academics than sports. And sacrifice and
single-mindedness. My entire life has been an attempt to get back to the kind of feelings
you have on a field. The sense of brotherhood, the esprit de corps, the focus-there being
no past or future, just the ball. As trite as it sounds, I was happiest playing ball. But
I can't do that for a living. And I'm not sure professional athletes have that kind of joy
anymore; it's a job for them. With acting you can approach the lack of selfconsciousness
you have on a basketball court. Acting, sex, sports, religion-those are your ecstatic
moments, when you're an animal.
PLAYBOY: And what order do you put those four in?
DUCHOVNY: It's been so long since I've had that feeling in sports, I can't remember it.
Sex is great until you die, but it's never as great as it was when you were a kid, when it
was a mystery. I'm not a religious person. If I get close to religion it's in these
moments when people faint and shudder and have orgasms with religious fervor-I don't think
they're kidding. And I'm envious. I guess at this point I'm trying to attain those states
through acting. But it's hard when you act as often as I do on a television show, because
the nature of a TV series is that you don't get there often. I'm looking forward to the
show's ending so I can work less and try to make my professional career more in tune with
that.
PLAYBOY: Staying with sports for a moment, which sports figure would you like to have
been?
DUCHOVNY: Mantle or Mays or Walter Frazier or Pistol Pete Maravich.
PLAYBOY: Who was a better baseball player, Mantle or Mays?
DUCHOVNY: Willie Mays was the best ever. When I was in college I once made a catch like
the one Mays made over his head. Sometimes when I'm lying in bed at night I think about
it. It still makes me warm.
PLAYBOY: What other sports memories do that for you?
DUCHOVNY: There was a moment when I was in high school playing basketball. My junior year
we were 21-5 and had all our players coming back, so we thought we might go undefeated the
next year. But we lost our second game, and our confidence. We had barely won our third
game and were losing our fourth. It was tied and they had a couple of foul shots with
eight seconds left. The guy hits the first and misses the second. Our center gets the
rebound, outlets it to me, I dribble it up and at the top of the key, with three seconds
left, I jump. There was something speaking to me and I rifled a pass right under the
basket rather than shoot and hit a guy for a lay-up. We won at the buzzer. It's the
feeling I had that made me pass that I think about. And that makes me smile. It's that
extrasensory feeling that we live for.
PLAYBOY: Do you still have friends from those days?
DUCHOVNY: I have mostly childhood friends. When you're younger you've got a lot of
friends, but you don't have time for that many friends when you get older. It's good to
have the one or two guys who've known you a long time who you can check in with.
PLAYBOY: So you don't have half a dozen guys you're comfortable playing poker with?
DUCHOVNY: No, not really. My college friends have all dispersed. My best friend from
college lives in Beijing. He?s a lawyer. We used to play squash together. After we
graduated we traveled together for five months in Southeast Asia. But he didn't speak
Chinese then so he was no help at all.
PLAYBOY: Where in Southeast Asia did you travel?
DUCHOVNY: Thailand, Burma, Maylaysia, all around there, backpacking.
PLAYBOY: Did you smoke opium while you were in Thailand?
DUCHOVNY: Yes. That was very interesting. It was north of Changmai. A group of us were
trekking, ten people and two guides. It was a 12-day trek. They said, "Do you want to
smoke opium with this guy? He's an opium addict." We said sure. We lay down next to
him. He used some kind of pipe, where he put the resin on the tip of a stick and then
inserted the stick into the pipe. He didn't speak English and was trying to show us how to
do it, to draw in deeply. I did one, not a good one, then I did another that was better.
Me and my buddy were the only ones in our group who did it. All of a sudden this big storm
started and all the animals congregated underneath the hut. We were nodding off and waking
up, and the animals were making all these noises and I was convinced that I could
understand what they were saying. I'd hear the pigs snorting and the horses talking to one
another throughout the village. When you'd go to take a shit you'd walk away from the
village and take a dump in the bushes, and the pigs would follow you because they were
going to cat your shit. It was hard for us Americans, being so modest, to take a shit
while the pigs were watching for a good one [laughs]. "Don't pull on that just yet, I
haven't released." When we were high we imagined the pigs calling for us to feed
them, that we would open up the floorboards and just lay one right there. We were having
this whole conversation with the animals. And then some event happened, and somebody came
in to talk to the head man of the village, who was one of our guides. There was some kind
of crisis, and five people began arguing in the room and they wanted him to settle it. My
friend and I were so stoned that we decided we knew what they were talking about, and we
made it into a soap opera. Every time somebody spoke I'd go, "What happened was, she
slept with his brother. And his brother is his cousin." We were like children,
laughing hysterically at how funny we thought we were being, while this serious business
was going on. Every once in a while they would look over at us giggling like fools in the
corner and shrug, "They're stoned." That was my night on opium. It was what
you'd call very dreamy. With your eyes open.
PLAYBOY: Different from marijuana?
DUCHOVNY: Very different.
PLAYBOY: Mushrooms?
DUCHOVNY: Yeah, more dreamy. My experiences with mushrooms were always kind of hyper. Very
intense. This was more slow and syrupy.
PLAYBOY: Ever try peyote?
DUCHOVNY: I may have. Pretty sure I did.
PLAYBOY: If you had one wish, what would it be?
DUCHOVNY: It would have to do with writing. To be able to tell a story like Homer. To
almost sing a story. Actually, I'd rather sing. If I could sing I probably wouldn't care
about writing.
PLAYBOY: What person would you like to be able to sing like?
DUCHOVNY: Many, many people. Ray Charles, Stevie Wonder, even Bonnie Raitt. It would be
funny, Bonnie Raitt's voice coming out of me, but I would change my physical appearance to
make it work.
PLAYBOY: Did you ever write anything for magazines?
DUCHOVNY: I wrote two articles, one for the English Tatler, about my high school, and the
other I can't remember.
PLAYBOY: What did you write about your high school?
DUCHOVNY: It was years later. And it wasn't good. It was basically about the fact that a
lot of rich, famous people's children went to my high school, like John F. Kennedy Jr. and
jacques D'Amboise's son Chris, F.A.O. Schwarz IV, William Kennedy Smith before he was
famous, and then a couple of kids who were prodigies on their own merit. We had a guy who
was the editor of the New York 'Iinws crossword puzzle in high school! We had some
geniuses there. It was a special school, called Collegiate. I had a great time there.
PLAYBOY: Did you know John Kennedy Jr. at school?
DUCHOVNY: Briefly. My first day at Collegiate I was kind of starstruck. I just wanted to
see who John John Kennedy was. I asked this kid at lunch, "Which one is John
John?" And he said, "His name is John." That was my first slap in the face.
John left after my first year. We had a class trip down to Washington in 1975 and because
I was new they put me with him. We roomed together. We went to the White House and one of
the tour guides said, "I'm told that John Kennedy Jr. is among you. And we're all
saying, "Who?" so that John wouldn't be embarrassed.PLAYBOY: You mean that they
didn't recognize him?
DUCHOVNY: Not then. We all had long hair parted on the side.
PLAYBOY: Did Kennedy talk about the White House?
DUCHOVNY: No. Not at all.
PLAYBOY: Do you know him now?
DUCHOVNY: Yeah.
PLAYBOY: Was it during your high school years that you first had sex?
DUCHOVNY: I lost my virginity when I was 14. And I haven't been able to find it.
PLAYBOY: Did the girl go to high school with you?
DUCHOVNY: She was 84.
PLAYBOY: Are you going to tell us?
DUCHOVNY: She was a year younger, but she wasn't a virgin. She was more experienced than I
was.
PLAYBOY: Did she seduce you?
DUCHOVNY: No, it was mutual.
PLAYBOY: Did she know it was the first time for you?
DUCHOVNY: No, but I told her many years later
PLAYBOY: Any other interesting teenage experiences with women?
DUCHOVNY: When I was 16 I had a Mrs. Robinson. It was really good, gave me a lot of
confidence.
PLAYBOY: Was she the mother of any of your friends?
DUCHOVNY: No, though I definitely had my eyes open for that [laughs]. That's all I ever
thought about. I always wanted an older woman. Actually, at that age it was any woman.
PLAYBOY: How did you finally meet your older woman?
DUCHOVNY: Two girlfriends of mine were babysitting for her. She had kids and was married.
PLAYBOY: Did she seduce you?
DUCHOVNY: Oh yeah. I didn't have the balls. We all went out dancing and she sat on my lap
and said, "Take me home and make love to me." She definitely had to make every
move.
PLAYBOY: Could you believe it when it was happening?
DUCHOVNY: Oh, I felt I was the luckiest guy in the world.
PLAYBOY: How often did you see her?
DUCHOVNY: Whenever I could!
PLAYBOY: Had you seen The Graduate?
DUCHOVNY: No.
PLAYBOY: Have you talked with this woman since?
DUCHOVNY: Yeah, the summer after. It was hard because I was feeling heroic and I took a
friend to see her. I was showing off. And she didn't mince words: It was over. And I
shouldn't bring anybody around or talk to anybody about it. It was like an introduction to
the adult world. I wasn't thinking of any consequences, but she made it clear.
PLAYBOY: Was she sophisticated?
DUCHOVNY: To me, yeah. She was a woman. I'd never been with a woman. I'd been with girls.
PLAYBOY: What happened after that, when you went back to girls?
DUCHOVNY: Actually it's kind of romantic because I fell in love for the first time with a
girl my own age while I was seeing the older woman. It was a really specific moment in my
life. I was lying in bed with this woman, and she was just beautiful and totally exotic to
me. She was younger than I am now. That summer I was a janitor in a place and had a little
room. I met a girl who was having trouble with her parents, so I invited her to stay at my
place-I had two single beds. I liked her. I called from this woman's house just to see how
she was doing. And I remember thinking, I want to be with her. It was weird, because here
was my fantasy, and I was having feelings for this girl. It was the first time I fell in
love.
PLAYBOY: What happened with her?
DUCHOVNY: We went out for about a year. I still hear from her every now and then. She's
been married a couple of times.
PLAYBOY: How did you react when your parents divorced?
DUCHOVNY: I don't think I understood what divorce was or what it all meant. If you tell a
child that his father is going to live somewhere else, it's like hearing the sun is so
many miles from the earth. You understand what it means but you don't know what it is
until it actually happens. It goes on for a month, then six months, then a year-and then
it's, Oh, now I understand what that meant.
PLAYBOY: How often did you see your dad after he moved out?
DUCHOVNY: First it was weekends, then less as time went on. It hurt, but I wasn't aware of
that. I probably felt rejected. It involved things I wouldn't have had the vocabulary or
the mentality to deal with.
PLAYBOY: Did you have other problems as a child? Did you ever steal, for instance?
DUCHOVNY: Yup. I was a good thief. I stole food, candy, all this stuff. I had a foolproof
method for stealing sodas: I'd carry a tennis ball can with one ball into the store and
then I'd take out the ball and the soda would go right in, perfect, with the ball on top.
I never got caught but I got extorted. My friend's big sister said, "You steal for
me." I tried it for a couple of days, stealing for me and for her. I realized I was
going to get caught, so I quit.
PLAYBOY: Did you ever steal again? Were you totally honest when you worked as a bartender?
DUCHOVNY: I stole money then. Fifty bucks here and there. Wouldn't put it in the register.
There were more legal ways of stealing: You come in and have seven drinks and I give you
four for free and you give me a $50 tip. That's stealing-1 didn't make you pay for the
drinks so I would get a big tip.
PLAYBOY: If you could steal anything today, what would it be?
DUCHOVNY: A great artwork from a museum. I don't know which one. Maybe the Mona Lisa,
that's a wonderful painting. I could look at her.
PLAYBOY: Are there any actors you particularly admire?
DUCHOVNY: I admired Bogart. He didn't give it all away. He was underplaying. If you look
at a film of Bogart's, he may have the same expression for the entire movie except for
that little twitch, and yet he trusted his own power enough that his moves would be
evident. I like actors who don't condescend, who let the audience make up their own minds.
Brando has always been my favorite. I love Pacino and Duvall. Meryl Streep is so gifted
it's hard to even place her. She's a real actor. Brando, Pacino, Duvall, they're great
actors, but they're forceful personalities. You really get a sense of the man. Streep-I've
never seen an actor, male or female, who comes close to what she does. I'm not saying I'd
rather watch her than any of those guys-sometimes I wouldn't. But her gift as an actor is
greater than anybody's I've ever seen. She's like a freak, like Michael Jordan.
PLAYBOY: You married an actor. You took the press by surprise when you and Téa secretly
wed. Was that satisfying?
DUCHOVNY: Yes, except that we stayed in New York for our honeymoon, which was a mistake.
We were followed around, and it was infuriating. It's hard to describe the
powerlessness-an AA word. You can't win. And it's difficult to be in a position where you
can't win. For some reason somebody decided, OK, here's the price you have to pay. Then
when you complain about it people go, "Didn't you understand? That's the price you
have to pay." Because the technology of spying, picture-taking, surveillance has far
outstripped the laws against it, we have to redefine spying. There used to be no telephoto
lenses. If you're 100 feet from me with a telephoto lens you're actually an inch away.
Ostensibly you're in my space, illegally. We really have to reconsider what it is that a
public person gives up. Why does a public person give up all his or her rights to privacy?
I'm not sure I understand that.
PLAYBOY: How does marriage work between two Ivy League-educated actors?
DUCHOVNY: Téa went to Sarah Lawrence, then she got into Harvard but didn't go. She went
on a dare to the Charlie's Angels cattle call. They were casting and wanted three
unknowns, and she got a part. It never got made, I think because of the Writers' Guild
strike.
PLAYBOY: You've said that Téa is "beyond gifted." Is that like saying there are
no words to describe her talents?
DUCHOVNY: I know I sound biased, but I truly believe that Téa is a unique performer. She
could have been in Show Girls, Speed 2, in one bomb after another, but she would have
survived because she has something that's undeniable. Her performance is always
wonderfully enthusiastic, funny, smart, sexy. It's like she can hit and field. She's like
Willie Mays, great with the bat and on the field. She's a beautiful woman who's a really
talented comedian, and that's rare. She just hasn't yet found the writer and director who
can service her, because she's able to do it all. And if she doesn't get too depressed
about the business and quits, she will.
PLAYBOY: Were you surprised when her film Deep Impact outgrossed The X-Files: Fight the
Future?
DUCHOVNY: I thought there was no way Deep Impact would make more money than our film, and
then it did, I wasn't competitive because I thought I'd win easily. Then I was
disappointed [chuckles]. No, I was happy. She's not competitive at all that way. She was
also surprised at how well Deep Impact did.
PLAYBOY: Are you and Téa developing a sitcom similar to I Love Lucy?
DUCHOVNY. No, that's out of whole cloth. At this point in my career television doesn't
appeal to me at all because of the repetition. I could change my tune, but the idea of
doing the same thing over and over doesn't appeal to me. Because The X-Files is going to
be syndicated and playing with The Twilight Zone and I Love Lucy and all these time
capsule-type TV shows, I think there's enough David Duchovny out there. Also, I know my
own limitations-you don't want to step onstage with Téa, because she will cat you up.
PLAYBOY: Speaking of being upstaged, isn't that how you and Téa met-during a preinterview
for a guest shot on The Tonight Show, which she got and you didn't?
DUCHOVNY: Yeah, that's true. The audition for The Tonight Show takes place over lunch.
It's like a meeting, and if you're not famous but a working actor, somebody at the show
might know who you are. Then they meet you to see if you have any interesting stories and
whether they want you to take up the last five minutes of the show, from 12:20 to 12:25
A.m., after the the monkey has shit on jay's head and the band hasn't closed the show.
That's the spot I was going for. For some reason my manager convinced me that it was a
career move of some kind. Téa's manager probably convinced her of the same thing. She was
doing a sitcom, Flying Blind, at the time, and I had just finished Kalifornia and Twin
Peaks. Unbeknownst to me they were meeting with Téa at the same time. It's brutal enough
that you have to audition with your life-it's not like being an actor where you do
material. It's like, Am I interesting, enough for you, Mr. Leno? And he's not even there.
Téa was much more effusive and interesting and funny. She took over the meeting and I
sulked. She got on and I didn't, and every time I'd hear her name after
that I'd spit, because I thought she had ruined my chance at the big time.
PLAYBOY: And there was no attraction to her at the time?
DUCHOVNY: She was married then. I remember talking to her before the producer showed up.
We had both arrived at the restaurant on time, but she doesn't remember that part. I
thought she was lively, funny. And she turned it up a notch when we sat down. She hates
that story because she thinks it makes her look like some showbiz All About Eve. When I
finally went on The Tonight Show I told this story and then I made up notes that the
producer had taken, like, "Téa Leoni is gorgeous and funny and talented, we should
have her on the show immediately"; "David Duchovny is a morose loser." And
the audience thought it was real. On talk shows I guess I have a deadpan delivery, and
people assume what I'm saying is true.
PLAYBOY: Are you more in love now than when you married?
DUCHOVNY: Yeah. It feels different.
PLAYBOY: You said before marrying that staying monogamous requires constant vigilance. Now
that you're married does that still hold true?
DUCHOVNY. It's not like you don't notice that a woman is attractive, it's that you know
what's at stake. The great benefit of monogamy is that you get to trust the person you're
with and she gets to trust you. And so much comes out of that. So whether or not men and
women were meant to be monogamous-and we can debate all the theories until we die-I know I
gain something great from it. Whether or not it's natural.
PLAYBOY: Does Téa expect you to be different from who you are?
DUCHOVNY: No, the wonderful thing about Téa is that I've never felt entirely comfortable
as a stereotypical man. I was a successful male figure in that I was respected by boys
because I was athletic, I was big enough, I wasn't beat-up on. But I never felt totally
comfortable with that. I was never macho. I never wanted to hunt or box or kill. Téa, on
the other hand, was a tomboy, athletic, tough, strong. She also was successful as a girl
because she was attractive and could do girl things, but she had a strong masculine side.
We understand each other's anxieties about gender identity and stuff like that. I'm not
talking in terms of sex at all, I'm talking about the roles that are given to us and how
we fit in. You would look at me and think I was the most macho of guys, the captain of all
the sports teams I ever played on, yet I never felt that way. And you would look at her
and think she's a beautiful girly girl, and yet no.
PLABOY: Did it take working as a transvestite for an episode of Twin Peaks to bring out
your other side?
DUCHOVNY: [Laughs] That was fun. It made it easier for me not to think anything of it. I
just felt like, Here's something inside me, why not? We all have access to those things if
we just open up. One of the nice things about acting is that it allows you to open up to
the other people within you.
PLAYBOY: What did you discover about wearing high heels?
DUCHOVNY: That I was uncomfortable. I felt sorry for women after that. Women's fashion is
a subtle form of bondage. It's men's way of binding them. We put them in these tight,
high-heeled shoes, we make them wear these tight clothes and we say they look sexy. But
they're actually tied up.
PLAYBOY. Why is great sex rare with beautiful women?
DUCHOVNY. There are many answers to that very dangerous question. The first is that you
may not be at your best with an extraordinarily beautiful woman. Who was the famous
director who married Brigitte Bardot? Roger Vadim? He said he couldn't get it up the first
time because she was too beautiful, he was too intimidated. On the other hand, if a woman
has been beautiful her entire life, she's never had to work that hard. She hasn't had to
be funny, or smart, or a great lay, because people hang around her anyway.
PLAYBOY: Saul Bellow said it was "because great beauties tend to be very
narcissistic. They don't give themselves freely because they're much too valuable."
DUCHOVNY: Yeah. See, the good thing about Téa is she didn't blossom until she was older
[laughs].
PLAYBOY: How many kids would you like to have?
DUCHOVNY: One at a time. We're working on it now. We're not trying not to. Téa wants to
save the umbilical cord in the freezer. If the kid ever gets sick, the cord has the goods
in it. That's as far as I'll go: You can put the umbilical cord next to the ice cream. But
I don't know about having a frozen clone baby in there for spare parts.
PLAYBOY: What do you fear most?
DUCHOVNY: Not physical stuff. It's more emotional, like public humiliation, abject social
failure, shame. Now that I'm married and thinking of having a family, my greatest fear is
being unable to defend my loved ones.
PLAYBOY: Would you consider getting a gun?
DUCHOVNY: Yeah, I know how to use one. When I start a family I'll have one. It's not that
I believe something will happen; it's that you can have bad luck. What if a nut decides to
come to your house? That happens.
PLAYBOY: what do you have for protection now?
DUCHOVNY: A baseball bat. Thirty inches is the best. Thirty-four is a little long because
you can't swing it in the doorway.
PLAYBOY: Wooden or aluminum?
DUCHOVNY: Wooden. It's a Louisville Slugger 125.
PLAYBOY: There's an advertisement!
DUCHOVNY: Hey, that would be nice. I wouldn't mind getting some bats.
PLAYBOY: Don't you already have a deal with Nike?
DUCHOVNY: No, I don't have any deal; They send me free stuff. Everybody sends you free
stuff when you're famous, in the hopes that you'll wear their stuff in public. Send me
whatever you want, I'll wear it. I mentioned Bacardi in an article and they sent me a big
crate of booze. I'm an idiot-I should talk about Tiffany's, about diamonds. Let me give a
plug to the Federal Reserve. My favorite bill is the one hundred.
PLAYBOY: How old do you see yourself?
DUCHOVNY: Thirty. I'm always surprised when I catch sight of myself in the mirror and I
look older than I feel. My dad tells me the same thing. He's 70 and he keeps wondering who
that guy in the mirror is. In New York you see these great old women, they've got to be
90, and they've got the rouge on, the lipstick, they've done their hair. When I was
younger I used to think, How ridiculous, you still don't want to fuck them. Isn't that
what makeup is about? Then I began to realize it's the life force. They're just staying
alive, and they do it by keeping up appearances.
PLAYBOY: You and Téa bought a house north of Malibu. Do you like Southern California
better than New York?
DUCHOVNY: I've never really been inspired culturally by any city. I grew up in New York,
the greatest city in the world, blah blah blah. I never went to any of the museums, I
never was inspired by the street life. I don't see that happening anywhere, where people
are hanging out in cafés influencing one another. And to me that's the only reason to
live in a thriving metropolis. Other than that, Hollywood is full of Philistines and
pieces of shit, sure, but so is every other city. California's got great weather and is
very livable.
PLAYBOY: More so, obviously, than Vancouver was for you. Are you glad to be away from
there?
DUCHOVNY: It's great for me to be down here because I'm living at home. I can't downplay
the kind of comfort there is in going home at night, rather than going to an apartment or
a place I never considered home. That's all that I ever really wanted to do.
PLAYBOY: Is it true that a Vancouver strip club told you to go home because you knocked
the city-comparing it to a tropical rain forest without the tropics?
DUCHOVNY: There was a reporter at the Vancouver Province who thought that he could sell
papers by misrepresenting me and putting me on the cover of the paper. Then the strip club
thought that it could get in the paper, and it did, by barring me from the club, which I'd
been to maybe once in five years. Bad-mouthing me became a way for people to sell whatever
they were selling.
PLAYBOY: But you did knock the city.
DUCHOVNY: Yeah, and if I had to do it again I wouldn't. Everybody knows it rains a lot up
there, and everybody who saw that interview could see I was joking. I thought it was clear
that I was making a joke, but I underestimated the xenophobia and the fact that I was a
foreigner and a
guest in that city. I won't do that again.
PLAYBOY: How much time have you spent in therapy, trying to figure out who you are?
DUCHOVNY. I have a therapist I trust. I've known him six years. When we were shooting in
Vancouver I called him, we did the phone thing. Each session lasted an hour. And I also
paid for the call, which I didn't think was fair-he should have paid. I'm good on the
phone. My view of therapy is that it helps you tell the story of your life to yourself as
you're living it, in a way that makes you happier than you might be without it. I don't
really believe it's a way of getting to the truth, and I don't believe it can heal you. It
teaches you to seize the narrative of your life in a way that makes it better for you.
That's what I've gotten out of it. I now have a different view on the events of my life
and my participation in them.
PLAYBOY: So you're enjoying a better made-up life than whatever the reality might be?
DUCHOVNY: [Laughs] No, no. I tell him the terrible things that I do and he tells me
they're not so terrible. "Here, let's look at it this way." There's a therapist
named James Hillman who I like very much, and that's his thinking-that the self is a
fictional creation anyway. Therapy enables you to seize control of that fictionalization
and not be made by other people. If the greatest artwork in life is the creation of who
you are, then it?s good to apprentice to a good therapist.
PLAYBOY: Some people we know do Freudian therapy five days a week.
DUCHOVNY: My dad did that for a while. I can't imagine it. I don't have that much to say.
My internal monolog is heavy, but I can't keep talking to somebody like that.
PLAYBOY: With that said, how do you feel about doing interviews?
DUCHOVNY: I get interviewed out. There are only so many interviews I want to do. I get
tired of hearing the sound of my voice. I repeat myself, which makes me feel like an
imposter. It can send you into a funk.
One of the tricks of interviewing that always kills me is a question like, "Tell me
about your acting style." And I'll say, "Well, the kind of acting that I do is
blah blah blah." Then that will appear in the article without the question, like I
just started talking about my acting style. Why do actors always appear so self-centered?
Well, they've got people asking them questions about themselves. It's not their choice to
talk about themselves. I would rather talk about other people. It's more interesting to
hear about you than to talk about me. I like it when Norman Mailer interviews somebody
because it's always about Mailer. You know you're safe with him, because you don't have to
talk much about yourself. You'll talk about Mailer's impression of you and how you remind
him of him.
Newsweek felt so bad about putting us on the cover that they had to insult us in the
article. There was this give-and-take in that article where they asked me, like you did,
if The X-Files is a religious show. I said, "It's as religious as Howdy Doody."
The writer says, "No, but really-" And I go, "Well, it has to do with
people having metaphysical yearnings that are no longer answered in traditional
ways." Then I see the article and it says, "Duchovny alternates between flip and
pretentious." Well, where else could I fall? What were the possibilities for me? You
asked me the question, I tried to tell you what I think, you didn't accept that so I tried
to answer it in the terms you gave me. And then you present me as an obnoxious high
schooler-pretentious former Yale graduate student, putting me in the most clichiéd group.
After that article I just went, "Fuck it. I'm not going to win this one." So I
decided to be quiet. This will be the last interview I'll do for a while. I have no reason
to publicize the TV show. I felt loyal to the movie and I wanted to get my face out there.
I played that game. But when you see that kind of shit come back at you, it's painful.
PLAYBOY: Whose ideas in this century have intoxicated you?
DUCHOVNY: Freud. Nietzsche. Wallace Stevens. Darwin is probably the most revolutionary
thinker and most influential of all time.
PLAYBOY: Would these people be the ones you'd like to have at the proverbial dinner with
historical figures?
DUCHOVNY: Nah, you don't know them, they're not famous. You've got to think party. If you
have Darwin, Christ and Nietzsche, they're all going to talk at once. You need somebody
who listens.
PLAYBOY: Who would you have, then?
DUCHOVNY. Gee. Christ. Buddha. Elvis for a little fame. We'd retire to the drawing room
and Elvis would sing a bit. Shakespeare would be interesting because he was an actor; I
could talk to him about acting and writing. And the fifth? Who's cooking? Get Wolfgang
Puck.
PLAYBOY: So, no women at your table?
DUCHOVNY. That's true. Joan of Arc. Or Anne Hutchinson. Or Anne Boleyn, because she was
hot and would have some good gossipy stuff about that time. Typhoid Mary I'd want to talk
to, as long as she wouldn't spill.
I think that's the end :)