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David Duchovny

A MOMENT WITH ...

June 10, 2009|Michael Ordona

One unnoticed, wry touch on the set of Hank's dining room is the presence of the book "The Myth of Male Power" -- the movers and shakers on the show tend to be the women, presenting the various magnetic poles that make Hank dance.

"If you look at the way he gets involved with women, he's very passive. It's like this despair comes over him; he can't go against whatever is flowing at the time," Duchovny says. "If he was a guy who was always on the make, it would be harder to cut him the slack. He's just kind of -- if he can't be with the one he loves, he's loving the one he's with."


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Some of the actor's favorite moments on the series so far illustrate its range: from the naked and ridiculous to the emotionally naked and sublime. He still laughs when he sees an early-season scene of a drug-fueled romp between Hank and a friend of Karen's, which abruptly erupts into what he calls "the double-puke scene."

"But there's also a scene from the first season where I walk with Becca on the Venice canals and I sing Dylan's 'If You See Her, Say Hello' to her. It just really surprised me, the sentimentality that I liked very much about it. When you juxtapose it with the crudeness and the explicit nature of some of the other stuff, it just seems real and right."

So why does the show not have a bigger audience? It's possible the misguided title and tag lines (one implying the show is about a midlife crisis), and media descriptions inaccurately pegging Hank as a sex addict have blurred with tabloid headlines about Duchovny's personal struggles.

"I don't concern myself with people's perceptions of the show," he says, becoming visibly uncomfortable. "It's all very personal. The things that I do on the show have never had anything to do with my personal life. There has never been any kind of parallel that we've done."

There is still hope, as the show enters Season 3 with guest stars such as Kathleen Turner and Peter Gallagher, that it will come into focus for those who can't see the forest for the sleaze. "For the most part, I feel that we're a drama that doesn't know it's a comedy," said the star. "To me that feels right, that feels like life to me. Because we all think we're in a drama, but actually we're in a comedy."

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