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David Duchovny

Who is ??

Birth name : David William Ducovny
Date of birth : 7 August 1960
Place of birth:  New York, New York, USA
Nickname:  Dave

Height: 6' 0˝" (1.84 m)
Spouse: Tea Leoni (6 May 1997 - present) 2 children.

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Famous Quote

"If you're smart, you'll always be humble. You can learn all you want, but there'll always be somebody who's never read a book who'll know twice what you know. I'm frightened by the possibilities of my own lack of talent."

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Contact Address

David Duchovny
Melanie Greene Management
425 North Robertson Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90048
USA


Biography David Duchovny Biography

 

David William Duchovny (born August 7, 1960) is a two-time Golden Globe Award-winning American television and film actor, best known for his roles as FBI Special Agent Fox Mulder on The X-Files and as Hank Moody on Californication. Actor David Duchovny rose to fame in the early 1990s as paranormal-obsessed FBI agent Fox Mulder on the hit television series “The X-Files” (1993-2002). 

Duchovny’s understated but convincing delivery – no small feat in the face of the show’s far out UFO/government conspiracy subject matter – helped make him an idol among TV viewers and pop culture aficionados. Such was the public’s identification of the actor as Agent Mulder, Duchovny struggled to find a project with a similarly wide audience after departing his still popular show in 2001. Regardless, he kept busy with a wide variety of films and television shows, including “House of D” (2005), which he wrote and directed, and the Showtime series “Californication” (Showtime, 2007- ).

Duchovny was born in New York City, New York, the son of Margaret "Meg" (née Miller), a school administrator and teacher, and Amram Ducovny, a writer and publicist who worked for the American Jewish Committee. Duchovny's father was Jewish and his mother a Lutheran immigrant from Scotland. His father dropped the "h" in his surname because of frequent mispronunciations of the name. Duchovny's siblings are Daniel and Laurie Duchovny. 

He attended The Collegiate School For Boys in Manhattan and ultimately graduated from Princeton University. He also holds a Master's degree in English Literature from Yale University and began work on a Ph.D. that remains unfinished. At Princeton, Duchovny was a member of the Charter Club, one of the University's eating clubs, where upperclassmen take their meals. The title of his senior thesis was The Schizophrenic Critique of Pure Reason in Beckett's Early Novels (1982).

Born David William Duchovny in New York City, NY, on Aug. 7, 1960, he was raised with his brother and sister by his father, Amram, a writer, and mother Meg, a school administrator. After his parents’ divorce, Duchovny remained in New York with his mother and siblings, and later won a scholarship to the exclusive Collegiate School in Manhattan, where he excelled at both studies and sports. He graduated in 1978 as class valedictorian, choosing Princeton University for his undergraduate studies. An English Literature major, he graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and after a five-month backpacking trip through Southeast Asia, went on to Yale on a teaching fellowship.

At Yale, he worked as a graduate assistant (and a bartender during the summers), teaching literature classes while working on his doctorate thesis. But he also developed an interest in acting during this period, and began traveling to New York to audition for off-Broadway roles. A turn in a beer commercial in 1987 led to a blink-and-you-miss it part in “Working Girl” (1988), which was followed by a larger role in independent director Henry Jaglom’s “New Year’s Day” (1989).

Duchovny appeared in an advertisement for Löwenbräu beer in 1987. He had a recurring role as a transvestite DEA agent on the series Twin Peaks and played the narrator/host in the long-running Showtime erotica/softcore TV series Red Shoe Diaries. In 1993, Duchovny began starring in the sci-fi series The X-Files as FBI Special Agent Fox Mulder, a conspiracy theorist who believed his sister was abducted by aliens. The show emerged as a cult hit and quickly became one of The FOX Network's first major hits. During the show's run, in between the fifth and sixth seasons, Duchovny co-starred alongside Gillian Anderson in a 1998 motion picture that continued the X-Files storyline, titled The X-Files: Fight the Future. He remained with the series until quitting in 2001, partly due to a contract dispute that occurred after season seven finished filming. Duchovny appeared in half of the season eight episodes, but did not appear in season nine until the series finale in 2002. He also provided the voice for a parody of his Fox Mulder character in an episode of The Simpsons, entitled The Springfield Files.

Duchovny’s biggest notice up until that time came with a three-episode arc on David Lynch’s “Twin Peaks” (ABC, 1990-91) as FBI Agent Dennis Bryson, who harbored a cross-dressing fetish. This led to more supporting roles in films and television, including the intriguing “The Rapture” (1991) as Mimi Rogers’ libidinous sex partner. The following year, Duchovny served as the lovelorn narrator and host (of sorts) of Zalman King’s glossy erotica “Red Shoe Diaries” (1992) and its subsequent series (Showtime, 1992-99). More supporting roles in features followed – including in the star-laden ensemble, “Chaplin” (1993) – but he did make an impression with his starring role opposite Brad Pitt and Juliette Lewis in “Kalifornia” (1993), about a pair of documentary filmmakers who become entangled with a pair of redneck killers. The movie struggled under its own artificial hipness, but Duchovny’s performance impressed writer and producer Chris Carter enough to invite him to audition for the lead role in a new supernatural-themed television series he was developing at Fox. And the rest was TV history.

Duchovny caused controversy when it became public that he was the primary reason that filming of The X-Files series was moved from Vancouver, British Columbia to Los Angeles in 1998. Many residents of Vancouver were upset with Duchovny over scripted jokes on Conan O'Brien's late night show about the city's heavy rainfall; he joked that "Vancouver is a very nice place, if you like 400 inches of rainfall a day." He also stated, "Of course, I'm tired of the rain. But if I wasn't married to a woman that lives in L.A. I'd stay in Vancouver. It's a lovely city." During the run of The X-Files, he also made several guest appearances in the cult TV satire The Larry Sanders Show, playing himself, but adding a strong homosexual attraction to Sanders. In the final episode of the series, he performed a memorable parody of Sharon Stone's infamous 'flashing' scene from Basic Instinct.

Duchovny has guest hosted Saturday Night Live twice (May 13, 1995 and May 9, 1998). Both shows were season finales. In 2000, he starred in the feature film Return to Me, a romantic comedy/drama. Return to Me was directed by Bonnie Hunt and co-starred Minnie Driver and Carroll O'Connor. In 2001, Duchovny played a hand model in the Ben Stiller comedy, Zoolander.

The show, which eventually became “The X-Files,” focused on two FBI agents – one, a seemingly paranoid conspiracy theorist with a personal interest in getting to the bottom of paranormal claims, and the other (Gillian Anderson) a born skeptic whose beliefs were constantly challenged by the cases she undertook as Dana Scully with Duchovny’s Fox Mulder. After a slow start in 1993, “The X-Files” took off as a runaway global smash for all involved, with Duchovny suddenly finding himself the lust object of countless female fans, wooed by his looks and sardonic charm At the peak of the show, Duchovny found himself the subject of not one – but two – pop song tributes, including Bree Sharp’s eponymous cult hit, which included the memorable line “Why won’t you love me/David Duchovny?” He also netted a mantle’s worth of awards for his performance, including a Golden Globe and TV Guide award in 1993.

Duchovny’s first foray away from “The X-Files” was a hilarious turn as himself on “The Larry Sanders Show” (HBO, 1992-98), with one slight wrinkle – he carried a considerable onscreen torch for Garry Shandling’s character, late night talk show host, Larry Sanders. The appearance was followed by popular demand by three others, including the series’ finale in 1998, in which, much to Sanders’ horror, Duchovny parodied the interrogation room “leg uncrossing” scene from “Basic Instinct.” Real-life best friends, Duchovny and Shandling appeared to have had a ball trying to screw with their viewers reality, taking the whole “gay thing” to a new level for their uncomfortably hilarious scenes together. In the midst of playing the angst-ridden Agent Mulder, the “Larry Sanders” appearances, though sporadic, gave an excellent showcase for the actor’s dry wit, and earned him an Emmy nomination and an American Comedy Award in 1999.

Unfortunately, his big screen efforts were less successful – even during his popular Mulder run. It was almost as if – “Larry Sanders” notwithstanding – fans could and would not accept Duchovny any way other than in pain, chasing ghosts in the dark and continually shouting at the heavens for people to believe in his supernatural quest. His first feature after “X-Files” stardom fared somewhat less successfully. “Playing God” (1997) was a stagnant thriller that was notable as an early, pre-stardom film for Angelina Jolie, but the film disappeared without a trace. On a brighter note, after years as a notable bachelor, squiring around the likes of actress Perry Reeves and singer Lisa Loeb, Duchovny shocked fans by tying the knot decidingly fast after dating fellow actress Tea Leoni – then best known as the critical darling with all the failed TV sitcoms. Many prophesized that it would not last, but the happy couple went on to have two children, a daughter, Madeline, in 1999 and a son, Kyd, in 2002, and enjoy wedded bliss well past a decade.

The inevitable “X-Files” feature film appeared in theaters in 1998 – making for an interesting situation, what with the TV show between seasons and the film addressing the running storyline – but it was a pale carbon of the show’s better moments. Although it did well at the box office, the film signaled that the program had lost its way in an attempt to untangle its labyrinthine conspiracy theory plotline.

Upon returning to the network version that same year, Duchovny garnered controversy from Canadian fans when it was discovered that his influence had prompted the show to move its shooting location from Vancouver to Los Angeles – all so he could be closer to his new wife, it was said. The incident would mark a cooling period between the series and Duchovny, which re-ignited two years later, when he sued Fox and the show’s producers – including good friend Chris Carter – for money owed from the syndication of the program. The producers and network eventually settled out of court, but the move signaled the end of Duchovny’s participation in the show. He left the series in 2001, but returned twice in 2002 – once to direct the episode “William” (he had directed two episodes prior to this), and once to appear in the season finale – in which, it was presumed, Scully and Mulder finally got together. Despite his rancor with Fox brass and his weariness in being pigeonholed as Mulder, Duchovny would later admit that it was his fondness for the show itself and his loyalty to his own character’s story arc, his co-stars like Anderson and Mitch Pileggi, and to the show’s fans, which kept him with one foot always in the “X-Files” universe, despite any hard feelings at the time.

In the meantime, Duchovny devoted more time to his growing family and to exploring a career in the movies. His first effort in that direction came with the 2000 romantic comedy “Return To Me,” in which he played a widower who falls for the recipient (Minnie Driver) of his late wife’s heart. This was followed by the Ivan Reitman comedy “Evolution” (2001), which parodied his Mulder persona in its story about aliens arriving on Earth, and Steven Soderbergh’s low-budget “Full Frontal” (2002), as a producer with a particularly unpleasant sexual kink. Unfortunately, none of the pictures made a mark at the box office, though Duchovny received favorable reviews for his work in each.

In 2003, Duchovny returned to television for an episode of “Sex and the City” (HBO, 1998-2004) as a boyfriend of Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker) who had suffered a nervous breakdown. He ventured again into the movie waters with “Connie and Carla” (2004), the disastrous follow-up to “My Big Fat Greek Wedding” for writer-producer Nia Vardalos. The following year, Duchovny made his feature debut as writer-director with the independent film “House of D” (2005), in which he also starred as an American illustrator living in Paris who comes to terms with his troubled past. The film, which also featured Robin Williams, singer Erykah Badu, and Duchovny’s wife Tea Leoni, received some positive reviews from critics, and enjoyed a middling run at the box office.

In 2006, Duchovny appeared with Julianne Moore and Billy Crudup in the drama “Trust the Man” (2006), which focused on a pair of couples as they navigated the ups and downs of relationships. This preceded a particularly busy period for the actor, which found him starring in a new television series, “Californication,” about a writer who struggles to maintain his career and life with his daughter and girlfriend – for which he won a Golden Globe in early 2008 for Best Actor in a Musical or Comedy TV Series – and starring in several films, including the comedy “The TV Set” (2007), about a writer who sees his dramatic script turned into a frivolous Hollywood comedy. He also lent his distinctive voice to a television ad campaign for Pedigree foods.

Most importantly to long-time X-Philes (as the diehard fans were known) came news from Duchovny, of all people, that after numerous false starts and legal developments between Fox and Chris Carter, a script for a sequel to the “X-Files” movie was in the works for a reported 2008 release date. And that yes, Duchovny and Anderson were on board, as was Carter behind the scenes to continue his creation’s complicated but still compelling storyline of whether the “truth was (still) out there.” 

Duchovny provided the voice of Ethan Cole in the 2005 video game, Area 51, as well as that of the title character "XIII" in the 2003 video game XIII. In 2003, Duchovny starred in the 84th episode of the popular HBO show Sex And The City. He played the role of Jeremy, Carrie Bradshaw's high-school ex-boyfriend, who has committed himself to a Connecticut mental health facility. In 2005, Duchovny, who had already made his directorial debut with an episode of The X-Files, wrote, directed and featured in House of D. The film starred Anton Yelchin, Robin Williams and Duchovny's wife Tea Leoni in a coming-of-age tale. It received mostly poor reviews and little box office success. Duchovny also guest-directed an episode of Bones (Episode 211, "Judas on a Pole") during its second season. Duchovny recently played Hank Moody, a troubled novelist in Showtime's series Californication. The portrayal landed him a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Television Comedy or Musical in 2007.

Duchovny married actress Téa Leoni on May 6, 1997. On April 24, 1999, Leoni gave birth to a daughter, Madelaine West Duchovny. Their second child, a son, Kyd Miller Duchovny, was born June 15, 2002. Though their children's names are Madelaine and Kyd, Duchovny and his wife call them by their middle names. The Duchovnys make their home in Malibu, California.

Duchovny is a former vegetarian and wears contact lenses. He suffered an eye injury due to a basketball accident years ago, which caused the enlargement of one pupil. Duchovny keeps in shape with a variety of different activities, including swimming, yoga and kickboxing.

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