I hate that they show my bum in the first scene!' David Duchovny on poems, podcasts and his TV comeback
Briefly

I hate that they show my bum in the first scene!' David Duchovny on poems, podcasts  and his TV comeback
"Halfway through our hour-long conversation, David Duchovny slumps in his seat a little then gently chastises me. I got tired while you were talking, he groans. In fairness, I had been talking a lot, but only because I was trying to list everything he's managed to do in the past year. There's his podcast, Fail Better, in which he's wrung incredibly candid interviews from notoriously reticent stars like Alec Baldwin and Robert Downey Jr, more on which later."
"There's his book of poetry, About Time, which came out last month. There's his History Channel show Secrets Declassified With David Duchovny. As we speak, he's just finished an eight-date tour, where he performed songs from the three folk-rock albums he's released over the last decade. We are ostensibly here to discuss Malice, his new Prime Video series. Had we spoken a couple of weeks later, God knows how many new projects he would have flung himself into. In other words, no wonder he's tired."
David Duchovny undertook numerous creative projects in the past year, including a candid-interview podcast, a new poetry collection, a History Channel show, and a recent eight-date music tour. He released three folk-rock albums over the last decade and performed selections on tour. He stars in Malice, a six-part psychological thriller partly set in Greece about a boorish wealthy venture capitalist and his family terrorised by a deranged nanny played by Jack Whitehall. Malice was written by James Wood and balances a sharp, ripe tone with unexpectedly dark premise elements. Duchovny expresses fatigue from sustaining so many simultaneous projects.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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