BY BOB TOURTELLOTTE
LOS ANGELES — For former "The X-Files" star David Du-chovny, the
television show’s slogan "The Truth Is Out There" had extra
meaning during his final year on the Fox network playing an FBI
agent tracking space aliens on Earth.
"The truth" meant finding an opportunity to
portray a character grounded in real life, while "out there"
meant the realm of cable television, where Duchovny’s new
program, "Cali-fornication," airs on Showtime.
This Sunday "Californication" will compete
for a Golden Globe award for best television comedy or musical
after just one season on the air, and Duchovny is up for best
actor in a comedy or musical.
"I was really happy for the show and everyone
involved," Duchovny, 47, told Reuters. "The thing about any
award show is it’s about exposure bringing new people to our
program."
"Californication" tells of the everyday life
of novelist Hank Moody (Duchovny), who lives in Los Angeles and
is divorced from his wife. Yet, Moody remains in love with her
and they share duties raising a teenage daughter.
In its first season, Moody was in a writer’s
funk because his best-selling book had been turned into a silly
Hollywood movie that became a hit. He finally produces a new
novel only to have it stolen by a young girl who seduced him.
Not surprisingly, "Californication" covers
sexual material, shows nudity and uses obscenities, all of which
can be done on cable networks but not broadcasters like Fox that
are held to stricter content standards on public airwaves.
Duchovny said that toward the end of the
ninth and final season of "X-Files" in 2002, he had grown tired
of hearing critics laud cable shows such as "The Sopranos"
because of their use of street language and real-life
situations.
"I used to kind of bemoan the fact they were
cheating. They had the richness of the English language and we
did not. Now that I get to, it’s fun," Duchovny said.
Duchovny shot to stardom in the early 1990s
as Fox Mulder, the plain-spoken FBI agent who probed strange
cases of aliens visiting Earth. It was a huge hit, earning many
awards and nominations for the show and Duchovny.
When it ended, Duchovny kept working but not
on network television, as might have been expected from an
A-list star.
He took a small role in HBO’s "Sex and the
City," worked in some low-budget and art movies such as Steven
Soderbergh’s "Full Frontal" and wrote and directed "House of D,"
a coming-of-age story about a boy living in New York City.
"The fact that I was in a very mainstream
(television) hit was never by design in any way," he said.
Before "X-Files," he won acclaim for offbeat
roles such as a transvestite on the television series "Twin
Peaks." He also was the narrator for erotic series, "Red Shoes
Diaries," and in two decades as an actor, he has shown his
talent in a variety of dramas and comedies.
He said Moody appealed to him because the
character has a dual nature as a deeply flawed man who also is
charming, likable and armed with a sharp wit.
"I’ve been saying for years, ‘I’m funny,’" Duchovny said. –
Reuters