Duchovny: Sex Addict Onscreen and Off
The "Californication" star who plays a womanizer enters rehab for sex addiction.
Aug. 29, 2008— -- Is it life imitating art, or an actor taking his "method" a little too far? Whatever the case, David Duchovny, who plays a sex-crazed writer on Showtime's "Californication," seems to be having trouble breaking character; the actor is currently being treated for sex addiction at a rehab facility.
"I have voluntarily entered a facility for the treatment of sex addiction," he said in a statement released Thursday through his lawyer, Stanton "Larry" Stein. "I ask for respect and privacy for my wife and children as we deal with this situation as a family."
Duchovny, 48, has been married since 1997 to actress Tea Leoni, with whom he has a 9-year-old daughter and a 6-year-old son.
Showtime, which will begin airing the show's second season in September, released a statement after Duchovny's announcement, saying, "All of us at Showtime wish David and his family the best during this very private time."
In January, Duchovny won a Golden Globe for best comic actor for his lead role as Hank Moody, an oversexed single dad and novelist struggling with writer's block, on "Californication."
The show's Web site describes Moody as a man who "enjoys life and owns all his various vices -- drink, drugs and women -- with a refreshing sense of honesty and unapologetic candor. He's holding it together while falling apart, and he doesn't mind it one bit."
Starting with the series' first episode, which opens with Moody fantasizing about a nun performing oral sex, the show is rife with romps, one-night stands, threesomes and, in one episode, a post-coital vomit session. Hence, the word "fornication" in the title.
Could Duchovny have taken his character home with him? Psychoanalyst Bethany Marshall said it's more likely the actor brought his addiction to the set.
"I think it stems from a personality disorder that was pre-existing," Marshall, who has not treated the actor, told ABCNews.com. "Sex addiction is a serious problem. Adult circumstances don't turn you into a sex addict. It's factors from childhood."
Where a sex addict works, however, can solidify the addiction. "Just like an alcoholic might get a job in bar and a gambler might get job in Vegas, sex addicts seeks out environments where they can practice their addiction under the radar, so that it doesn't come to others' attention," Marshall said.