The Times Magazine - UK (2022-01-15)

(Antfer) #1
The Times Magazine 49


  • named after Sarah Jessica Parker – but the
    marriage lasted less than two years, allegedly
    falling apart due to Sutherland’s fondness
    for drinking and other women. He married
    former model Kelly Winn in 1996 but that
    relationship ended after four years. Those
    marriages bookended an ill-fated engagement
    to Julia Roberts, who called off their wedding
    three days before the big day – he had allegedly
    been enjoying a dalliance with a stripper
    called Raven, something he has always denied

  • and flew to Europe with Kiefer’s best friend
    at the time, Jason Patric. Sutherland has in
    the past admitted that he was heartbroken
    but believes Roberts did the right thing.
    “We were young,” he told another
    interviewer, “and I think she very smartly
    realised, ‘Oh gosh, this is for life. I’m not ready
    to do this.’ And fair enough. Good for you.
    Thank you – in hindsight.” Sutherland was not
    quite so equanimous at the time – the public
    humiliation sent him into a spiral of boozing
    and womanising and, with his film career
    faltering, Sutherland quit Hollywood.
    It was a phone call from a British director
    friend who was working on the pilot for a new
    real-time TV series that lured Sutherland back
    to acting. The show was to be called 24 and the
    director wanted Sutherland to play the lead.
    “I thought it was a huge long shot,” he
    says. “Television in America is designed to feel
    familiar and it is not something that changes
    easily. It took me a full season to accept that
    the show was becoming a hit.” 24 first aired
    in November 2001 and eventually ran for
    nine series. It won 20 Emmys, 2 Golden
    Globes and was watched by a global audience
    of more than 100 million viewers. The role
    of Jack Bauer brought Sutherland his second
    career peak: his salary of $40 million for three
    seasons made him the highest-earning actor
    on television.
    “It was incredibly exciting to be a part of
    something people were enjoying,” he says. “I’d
    done films, some that I’d been proud of, but
    no one would see them. And suddenly I was
    part of a show that millions and millions of
    people were watching every week and they
    were really enjoying, and that ended up being
    a fantastic ten-year period for me.”
    24 ended in 2014 and suddenly Sutherland
    was unmoored again. “I’m not the kind of
    person to curl up by the fire with a good
    book,” he says. “I have tried that and by page
    six I can smell it: there are people outside
    having a much better time than I am right
    now. And before I know it, my jacket’s over
    my shoulders and I’m out the door. When you
    start finding yourself walking into a bar during
    the day, it’s time to say, ‘Let’s figure this out
    and go do something else.’ ”
    He found other things: he started dating
    actress and model Cindy Vela, to whom he
    dedicates a song on the new record. He also


starred opposite his father in the 2015 western
Forsaken. “There was a moment [during
filming] where I caught myself watching
him work and I forgot that I was even in the
scene,” he told one interviewer, “because I was
so moved by what he was doing.” I ask if he
felt he learnt anything about acting from his
father. “I’m so inspired by what he’s managed
to do,” he says. “If you look at films like Don’t
Look Now or Ordinary People and Bertolucci’s
1900 , the fact that one actor did them is
just extraordinary – he’s an extraordinarily
talented guy. He’s seen things in the world.
Hearing my father tell stories about what
it was like to do The Dirty Dozen or Kelly’s
Heroes – that’s a really nice evening. What
I’ve learnt just from watching his work is
profound. I’ve had very few conversations with
him about work, but the ones that I have had
I can recite word for word.”
Sutherland had thought that his 40 years
of acting experience might have helped when
embarking on his music career. “I was really
wrong,” he admits. “I remember the very first
show – my right hand was shaking so badly.

I was so nervous. [Since then] we have played
easily 700-odd shows in the past five years
and it took me a long time to realise that the
audience wasn’t coming there to kill you. They
wanted you to do well.”
The list of actors who have tried their hand
at music is long – Bruce Willis, Keanu Reeves,
David Hasselhoff, William Shatner – but
hardly distinguished. “I’ll be very honest with
you, I am aware of that list,” Sutherland tells
me. “When you talk about actors doing music
it’s an instant eyeroll – I’m one of the people
rolling their eyes.” So why do it? The short
and honest answer is probably because he can.
The longer answer is that Sutherland has
been loving and playing music his whole life.
He used to have a collection of more than
100 guitars, which he has whittled down to


  1. He had started writing songs during the
    second season of 24 , but the plan was to sell
    them to a record company for another artist
    to record. It was around 12 years ago that he
    played them to a musician pal who suggested
    Sutherland record them himself.
    “I said I wasn’t interested,” Sutherland
    recalls. “He got me a couple of drinks and
    I was more agreeable and so we recorded a
    couple of songs. He said we should make a
    record and I said, ‘Over my dead body.’ ” Once
    the record was made, Sutherland changed his
    mind. “I was really proud of them,” he says,
    “and I wanted to put them out.”
    Our time is nearly up, but Sutherland says
    he is happy to keep talking. So I pitch him the
    question I had most wanted to ask: is it true
    that he is a fan of Blackadder?
    “I thought it was amazing” he says,
    recalling how he felt watching the last episode
    of the First World War-set Blackadder Goes
    Forth. “It ended with them all coming out
    of a trench and machinegun fire and they’re
    all dead,” he says. “Man, that was just like a
    sock on the jaw. That blew my mind. It was so
    profound, I was thinking about it for days.”
    Would you be up for starring in a British
    sitcom? “I would be thrilled to be given an
    opportunity to try something like that,” he says,
    adding that, “Acting is the great love of my
    life and I hope they let me do that to the day
    I die.” While the world waits for Jack Bauer
    meets Baldrick, Sutherland will be on our
    cinema screens in the upcoming action thriller
    The Contractor and as Franklin D Roosevelt in
    the new Showtime TV series The First Lady.
    “It’s good for me to stay busy,” he says. “Me
    with nothing to do is not a good thing.” I have
    time for one more question: how does 55 feel?
    “It is what it is,” he says. “There’s no getting
    around it, you’re going downhill. You’re skiing
    now – get in as many turns as you can and
    make it last as long as you can make it last.” n


Kiefer Sutherland’s latest album, Bloor Street,
is released on January 21

‘At my first gig, my


right hand was shaking


so badly. It took time


to realise the audience


wasn’t there to kill me’


On stage at the Shepherd’s Bush Empire in London, 2019

GETTY IMAGES

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