'X-Files' actor is a (super)natural
by Eirik Knutzen
If they had tried to, the producers of "The X-Files" couldn't have done a
better job of typecasting than when they hired David Duchovny to portray
FBI Special Agent Fox "Spooky" Mulder--a man possessed when it comes to tracking
ancient genetic mutants and 200,000-year-old parasites from another galaxy.
The highly educated Ivy Leaguer, who holds degrees in English literature
from Princeton and Yale (where he is also a dissertation away from a PhD),
has an open mind when it comes to paranormal phenomena. He's intellectually
receptive to certain "weird stuff," due to a few personal experiences for
which he is still seeking explanations.
"I certainly have experienced the paranormal--I was in love once," says Duchovny,
34, a man of dry humor.
"Actually, I saw something in the sky during the spring of 1982," he says.
"A student at Princeton at the time, I was running along the beach in Ocean
City, N.J., on a bright and sunny morning when I looked up and saw what I
thought was a ship or plane, about 100 yards directly above me. It made no
noise; I didn't hear a thing.
"Thinking it was an odd-looking plane, I took a couple of steps before looking
up again. It was gone. Looking back, it seemed triangular in shape, somewhat
similar to today's stealth bomber."
Duchovny, "in a way," also believes in ghosts.
"My (Scottish) grandmother said that when she was a little girl, she saw
her grandfather--who had drowned a couple of years before--come into the
house and go up to the crib where her younger brother was sleeping. The 'ghost'
kind of looked in, nodded and walked out. I believed it happened to my
grandmother, and I have definitely felt the presence of loved ones, though
I have never seen anyone."
Duchovny approaches his character and life in general with a handfull of
salt.
"Special Agent Mulder gave up a thriving career in the FBI's violent-crime
section and disgraced himself in the eyes of peers when he went after the
paranormal cases no one admits to," he says. "And, because nobody trusts
or believes in him, he has become hard and sarcastic. I guess that happens
to people who get buried in office basements while higher-ups try to take
their budgets away. Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) is a medical doctor charged
with observing this nut case and debunk some of his outrageous theories."
During a recent visit to the FBI's headquarters in Washington, Duchovny and
his co-star had a close look at the organization's high-tech approach to
crime, but received no hint that anything resembling "The X-Files" actually
exists.
"I have no proof of it, but I assume that (the FBI) possesses classified
documents dealing with such things as alien life forms," he says with a shrug.
"I don't know if we've been contacted or the aliens have landed, but it would
seem rather odd to me if this planet is the only one in the universe with
life on it."
Long before chasing UFO and telepathic pyromaniacs on locations in and around
Vancouver, British Columbia, Duchovny was a jock-scholar in various parts
of New York City. His mother, Margaret, is a Scottish-born grade-school teacher,
his father, Amram (Ron) Ducovny, of Russian-Jewish extraction, went from
public relations to being "a writer of sorts" and saw his play, "The Trial
of Lee Harvey Oswald," performed on Broadway in 1967.
When his parents divorced, David was raised along with two siblings, Daniel
and Laurie, by his mother.
"My father took the 'h' out of our last name because he was tired of having
it mispronounced," Duchovny says matter-of-factly. "But when my parents divorced,
my mother put the 'h' back in, as a show of solidarity with how a family
member spelled the name. I spell it with the 'h'; my brother doesn't use
the 'h.' My sister goes back and forth, depending on her mood.
"Regardless, I think it's a beautiful name that I'm told means 'Spiritual'
in Russian. I don't care how people spell the name as long as they get the
meaning."
Smart and athletic, Duchovny earned an academic scholarship to an elite Manhattan
prep school and parlayed his physical skills at Princeton into one year as
a basketball guard and two seasons in center field on the baseball team.
While Duchovny was at Yale as a teaching assistant outlining his Ph.D.
dissertation in 1985, a friend suggested trying a few acting classes.
"It made sense, because I was 26 years old and didn't feel like spending
the rest of my life teaching," he says. "I liked teaching, but it seemed
like being coddled in an unreal world."
Duchovny found a teacher affiliated with the New York Actors Studio and
discovered he was able "to have an emotional life really for the first time.
It was great. I could scream, yell and cry on stage without consequences.
I could have a full life; nobody would arrest or leave me for (behaving)
like that."
Two years later, while still teaching at Yale, he made $9,000 for appearing
in a TV commercial for Lowenbrau beer. It was twice as much money as he made
as a teaching assistant.
When cast in the feature "New Year's Day" in 1987 (but released in 1989),
Duchovny left Yale in a flash, only to spend the next 1-1/2 years in Hollywood
virtually unemployed and "leeching off pe