No
Duncan Macleod is a fictional character. The character's origins state he was born and raised in Glenfinnan, Scotland. That would make him Scottish, not American.
Most of the series takes place in Canada, and France hundreds of years after his birth. It's not made clear if he has citizenship in other countries or simply fakes a new identity every few decades.
The actor who plays the role is Adrian Paul; born in London, England. So he is also, not an American.
Duncan MacLeod was created in 1992.
Duncan Macleod has written: 'The island beautiful' -- subject(s): Missions, Presbyterian Church in Canada
Gilbert Duncan Macleod Bullard has written: 'Sundries' 'Sunlit days and sycamores'
Duncan A. MacLeod has written: 'Statistical analyses of pollution data' -- subject(s): Pollution, Water, Air, Measurement
No they are not, They are from the same clan, And Conner was the immotal who trained Duncan
One that floats.
Conner (born 1518) is Duncan's (born 1592) elder by 74 years.
He was Duncan MacLeod
Yes, Christopher Lambert chose to step back from the Highlander franchise, which culminated in the film "Highlander: Endgame." In this movie, his character, Connor MacLeod, is ultimately defeated by Duncan MacLeod, played by Adrian Paul. Lambert's reduced involvement allowed the focus to shift more towards Duncan's character and story, marking a significant transition in the franchise.
Duncan MacLeod is a fictional character from the "Highlander" film and TV franchise. Duncan (played by Adrian Paul) is the brother of original Highlander character Connor MacLeod (played by Christopher Lambert).
A fictional city called Seacouver (since that set was filmed on location in Vancouver).
R. D. Macleod has written: 'The Scottish publishing houses' 'The Anglo-American library association'