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In His Big TV Comeback, David Duchovny Is Bitter and Funny and Generally Without Pants

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In His Big TV Comeback, David Duchovny Is Bitter and Funny and Generally Without Pants

My phone rings, and I pick it up. The man on the other end says, "Hi. This is David Duchovny." And it really is, which is odd, because usually when you interview a celebrity, a publicist calls first to connect. When I point this out, he quips: "I can dial my own phone. I learned it just the other day." Show-off.

Of course, it's not his tech savvy so much as his deadpan sense of humor that's on display here. You know the one. In the late '90s, he was more prominent than Y2K scares, thanks to The X-Files, the campy alienfest that entranced us for nine years due in great part to its star's sarcastic persona and brooding good looks. He even inspired a minor hit song titled — yep — "David Duchovny."

And then ... nothing. Well, nothing of that magnitude — a few not-so-memorable films and a voice-over gig as a puppy in some Pedigree commercials.

But now, at 47, he returns to the tube with a genius new Showtime series, Californication. He stars as a literary novelist named Hank Moody whose magnum opus, God Hates Us All, is adapted into the popcorn-nosher Crazy Little Thing Called Love, launching him into midlife-crisis battles with the shiny, happy people of California. It's the freshest, funniest thing to hit cable in a while. And we're not too disappointed that the lead spends roughly 19 of the show's 30 minutes shirtless and/or pantless.

"I had a discussion with Tom Kapinos, the writer, and I said, 'I think I'm gonna get in a little better shape for this.' And he said, 'No, you're a writer. You've gotta be kind of fat and dissipated.' And I thought, Yeah, you say that, but when you see it, you won't like it."

Duchovny played a similarly disenchanted writer in last spring's indie film The TV Set. Do his choices reveal that this Princeton grad — who spends a lot of his time writing screenplays — is fed up with his own work? He laughs. "No. No, I'm not frustrated in my writing at all." He pauses. "I mean, of course I am — every writer is frustrated — but not to the level that I would seek out parts to vent that."

So that's what he's been up to: writing, avoiding X-Files obsessors, and raising two kids with his wife and fellow comedian, Téa Leoni. "At home, I actually will say to her, 'Now, that made me laugh,'" he says drolly. "I point it out because I'm not an easy laugh."

So what misconceptions do people still have of him? "That I'm aloof. But, you know, I'm not, because I don't care," he says. "Isn't that funny? That was supposed to be funny."
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Kate

Kate Schweitzer is the senior web editor of Marie Claire. She loves traveling (even back to her hometown of St. Louis, Missouri), eating candy, cheating at Scrabble, and watching TV — so much so that she is a writer for Chaos Theory and Handsome Town, two web comedy series from Emmy-winning PhoebeTV.

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Koryn Kennedy is Marie Claire's associate web editor. She believes in limited use of both personal pronouns and self-tanner, is a coffee snob and a Brooklyn boutique aficionado. Having grown up in Europe, she's never "from around here." Her writing has appeared in the Chicago Tribune, Orlando Sun Sentinel, Esquire.com, Premiere.com, and other movie and culture blogs.

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Abigail Pesta is a journalist who has lived and worked around the world, from London to Hong Kong. (A highlight from her travels: bar-hopping in Shanghai with a minor-league Mafioso in his hearse-like limo.) She writes short-short stories for her website, Fine Words Butter No Parsnips.

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Jessica Henderson is a senior editor. She obsesses daily over movies, television, celebrities, and music. A southern girl at heart and Brooklyn by address, her skill set also extends into vintage shopping, planning themed parties, brunching, applying eyeliner, dancing, concocting bourbon mint iced tea, movie-quoting, and Elvis spotting.

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