Kiefer William
Frederick Dempsey George Rufus Sutherland (born 21 December 1966) is a Canadian actor, voice actor, producer,
director, and singer-songwriter. He is known for his starring role as Jack Bauer in the Fox drama series 24
(2001–2010, 2014), for which he won an Emmy
Award, a Golden Globe Award, two Screen Actors Guild Awards, and two Satellite Awards. He is the son of
Canadian actors Donald Sutherland
and Shirley Douglas, grandson of Canadian politician Tommy Douglas and the father of actress Sarah Sutherland.
He has also starred as Martin
Bohm in the Fox drama Touch, and provided the facial motion capture and English voices for Big Boss and Venom Snake
in the video games Metal Gear Solid V:
Ground Zeroes and Metal Gear Solid V:
The Phantom Pain. He starred as President Tom Kirkman in the Netflix political drama series Designated Survivor.
Sutherland got his first leading film role in the Canadian drama The Bay Boy (1984), which earned him a Genie Award nomination. Since that time he has had a successful movie
career, starring in films such as Stand
by Me (1986), The Lost Boys
(1987), Young Guns (1988), Flatliners (1990), A Few Good Men (1992), The
Three Musketeers (1993), A Time to
Kill (1996), Dark City (1998), Phone Booth (2002), Melancholia (2011), Pompeii
(2014) and Flatliners (2017).
Sutherland has been inducted to the Hollywood Walk of Fame and to Canada's Walk of Fame and has received a Lifetime Achievement Award at the Zurich Film Festival.
Early life
Sutherland was born December 21, 1966, in St Mary's
Hospital, Paddington, London, to Donald
Sutherland and Shirley Douglas,
both successful Canadian actors who
had been living and working in the United
Kingdom for some time. He has a twin
sister, Rachel, who works as a
post-production film supervisor. His
maternal grandfather was Scottish-born Canadian politician and former Premier of Saskatchewan Tommy
Douglas, who is widely credited for bringing universal health care to Canada.
Sutherland is named after American-born writer and director Warren Kiefer, who directed Donald
Sutherland in his first feature film, Castle
of the Living Dead. Sutherland's
family moved to Corona, California,
in 1968. His parents divorced in 1970. In 1975, Sutherland moved with his mother to Toronto, Ontario. He attended
elementary school at Crescent Town
Elementary School, St. Clair Junior
High (now Gordon A. Brown Middle
School) East York and John G. Althouse Middle School in Toronto. He attended several high
schools, including St. Andrew's College,
Martingrove Collegiate Institute, Harbord Collegiate Institute, Silverthorn Collegiate Institute, Malvern Collegiate Institute, and Annex Village Campus. He also spent a
semester at Regina Mundi Catholic
College in London, Ontario and
attended weekend acting lessons at Sir
Frederick Banting Secondary School. Sutherland told Jimmy Kimmel Live! (2009) that he and Robert Downey, Jr. were roommates for
three years when he first moved to Hollywood
to pursue his career in acting. He and
Downey, Jr. also starred together in the film 1969.
Career
1980s: Rise to fame in
Hollywood
Sutherland made his screen debut in Max Dugan Returns (as did Matthew
Broderick), in which his father Donald
Sutherland also starred. Sutherland was one of the contenders for the role
of Glen Lantz in the original A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984), which
ultimately became Johnny Depp's
feature film debut.
After receiving critical acclaim for his role as Donald Campbell in The Bay Boy, Sutherland moved to Hollywood. Stand by Me
was the first film Sutherland made in the United
States. In the film, directed by Rob Reiner, he played a neighborhood
bully in a coming-of-age story about a search for a dead body. Before that, he
played a silent, supporting character, as one of Sean Penn's friends who goes up against Christopher Walken in James
Foley's crime-thriller At Close Range.
His film Promised Land,
with Meg Ryan, was the first film to
be commissioned by the Sundance Film
Festival, and was released in 1988. His role as vampire David in The Lost Boys is one of his iconic roles in his career reviews by
many critics and audiences.
In the Western
film Young Guns (1988), he starred
alongside Emilio Estevez and Lou Diamond Phillips. He was considered
for the role of Robin in Batman (1989), alongside Michael Keaton, in the early production
before the character was deleted from the shooting script. He went on to star again with his close friend
Lou Diamond Phillips, in the
crime-action film Renegades. That
same year, he and his father appeared at the 61st Academy Awards as presenters of the Academy Honorary Award to the
National Film Board of Canada.
1990s: Success in
films
In the sequel Young
Guns II (1990), Sutherland continued to play 'Doc' alongside some of the original cast and with newcomer Christian Slater. As of 2017, it is the
only sequel to a feature film he has starred in. Sutherland starred as the lead
in Flatliners, with an ensemble cast
featuring Julia Roberts and Kevin Bacon, a film about a student
who wants to "experience"
death's afterlife and record what happens during it, with the help of a group
of young students who are "a
little" crazy like him; the film received positive reviews from
critics. He plays a young cop in Flashback
(1990) alongside Dennis Hopper. Sutherland
had also starred in The Nutcracker Prince
as Hans/The Nutcracker.
Sutherland did not make a film in 1991. During an interview
in March 2012, he said he had declined director Gus Van Sant's offer to star in the lead role in the movie My Own Private Idaho, a decision that he
regretted. He was quoted as saying "I
passed on My Private Idaho because I wanted to go skiing and didn't even look
at it. I told myself that I needed to stick to my plan ... and it was a really
dumb plan."
In 1992, he played a doctor alongside Ray Liotta in the drama-Article
99 He played a supporting character in Twin
Peaks: Fire Walk with Me, the continuation of the short-lived television
series of the same name which ran from 1990 to 1991, as agent Sam Stanley; and also in A Few Good Men (1992), where he played a
junior officer subordinate to Jack
Nicholson's Col. Nathan R. Jessup.
The film was nominated for the Academy
Award for Best Picture.
In The Vanishing
(1993), he starred alongside Jeff
Bridges as a desperate man seeking the whereabouts of his girlfriend, three
years after she mysteriously vanished. In The
Three Musketeers (1993), Sutherland played the central character of Athos.
In 1996, Sutherland appeared in three films. He starred with
Reese Witherspoon in Freeway, which gained a cult following.
He starred with Sally Field in the
thriller Eye for an Eye, and he
appeared in A Time to Kill alongside
his father Donald Sutherland.
In 1998, he starred in Dark
City, the science fiction film directed by Alex Proyas in which he portrayed the historical character Daniel P. Schreber. Sutherland also
starred in the film Ground Control
where he played as an air traffic controller named Jack Harries who had a perfect record until one air crash haunts
him to leave the business years later he is hurtled back into the world he
thought he left behind.
2000s: 24
In 2000, he co-starred with Woody Allen in the black comedy Picking
up the Pieces, but the film was received poorly by both commercial
audiences and by critics. Since then, Sutherland has starred in small projects
and festival-released films. He starred in the film Beat, which premiered at the
Sundance Film Festival in 2000. He also appeared in 2001 film Cowboy Up, which won the Crystal Heart Award at the 2001 Heartland Film Festival. He also
starred in the film To End All Wars,
which won two awards at the Heartland
Film Festival and one award at the Hawaii
International Film Festival.
Since 2001, Sutherland has been associated most widely with
the role of Jack Bauer on the critically
acclaimed television series 24. After being nominated four times for the "Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama
Series" Primetime Emmy Award, Sutherland won the award in 2006 for his
role in 24's fifth season. In the
opening skit of the 2006 Primetime Emmy
Awards, Sutherland made an appearance as his 24 character, Jack Bauer.
He was also nominated for Best Actor in a
Drama Television Series at the 2007
Golden Globe Awards for 24.
According to his 2006 contract, his salary of $40 million for three seasons of
the show made him the highest-earning actor on television.
Sutherland constantly emphasizes that the show is merely "entertainment." The dean of the United States Military Academy, Brigadier General Patrick Finnegan, visited the set of 24 in February 2007 to urge the show's
makers to reduce the number of torture scenes and Sutherland accepted an
invitation from the U.S. military to
tell West Point cadets that it is
wrong to torture prisoners. In an
interview with OK! Magazine, Howard Gordon said it would be an "unbearable loss" if they
killed off Sutherland's character.
Due to his extensive schedule with 24, he spent less time in film. In 2004, he starred in Taking Lives, alongside Angelina Jolie and Ethan Hawke, in which he had a "flashy
cameo". In The Sentinel
(2006), he starred alongside Michael
Douglas, as his protégé. He played the lead roles in Alexandre Aja's supernatural horror, Mirrors (2008). In 2009, he
joined the DreamWorks's animated film
Monsters vs. Aliens, reuniting him
with actress Reese Witherspoon with
whom he starred in Freeway. Monsters vs. Aliens is Sutherland's
highest-grossing film to date.
The actor is also a frequent collaborator with director Joel Schumacher, and has appeared in The Lost Boys, Flatliners, Phone Booth, the big-screen adaptation of A Time to Kill
(the film also starred his father, Donald, although their characters did not
interact), and Twelve as the
narrator.
In 2005, Sutherland was inducted into Canada's Walk of Fame in Toronto, where both of
his parents have also been inducted. He ranked No. 68 on the 2006 Forbes
Celebrity 100 list of the world's most powerful celebrities; his earnings were
a reported $23 million. In 2009, he was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Sutherland was the first Inside the Actors Studio guest to be the child of a former guest;
his father, Donald, appeared on the show in 1998. Sutherland was featured on the cover of the
April 2006 edition of Rolling Stone,
in an article entitled "Alone in the
Dark with Kiefer Sutherland." The article began with Sutherland
revealing his interest to be killed off in 24.
However, he stated, "Don't get me
wrong. I love what I do." It also revealed that he devoted 10 months a
year working on 24.
He has starred in Japanese
commercials for CalorieMate,
performing a parody of his Jack Bauer
character. Sutherland also provides
voice-overs for the current ad campaign for the Ford Motor Company of Canada.
In mid-2006, he voiced the Apple, Inc. advertisement announcing the
inclusion of Intel chips in their Macintosh computer line. He
also voices the introduction to NHL
games on the Versus network in the U.S.
2010s: Television,
film festivals and music career
On 14 February 2010, Fox
TV announced they were temporarily suspending production of Season 8 of 24 due to a ruptured cyst near one of
Sutherland's kidneys. According to the report, he waited a few days before
going in to have "elective
surgery" performed. It was
anticipated that he would return after a week, but a few days further were
needed and Fox reported that his return
to set would be 1 March.
In the 2011 drama-thriller Melancholia directed by Lars
Von Trier, he played the male lead character and got the chance to share
the screen with long-lost co-stars such as Charlotte
Rampling and John Hurt, the film
in which Kiefer was nominated for the major Danish
film prize Bodil. Kiefer also shared
the screen with Hurt another time, this time on the small screen, in the web
series The Confession.
In The Reluctant
Fundamentalist (2013), the best-selling novel adaptation directed by Mira Nair, he played a supporting
character for newcomer Riz Ahmed, as
a boss named Jim Cross, and in the
2014 historical-disaster movie, Pompeii,
directed by Paul W. S. Anderson, he
played a corrupt Roman senator who
plotted to stop the love between the city ruler's daughter and a Roman slave whose family was killed by
the senator; the movie concluded with the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD.
Sutherland also provided narration for several promotional
spots for the United States Men's
National Soccer Team during the 2014
FIFA World Cup for ESPN. He has
appeared in Brazilian TV commercials for Citroën
C4 sedan and a voice-over for a commercial for Bank of America. He voices Sgt. Roebuck in Treyarch's video game Call of
Duty: World at War and voices of Snake
(aka Big Boss) in the video game Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes and
its sequel Metal Gear Solid V: The
Phantom Pain, taking over the role originally performed by David Hayter.
In 2011, Sutherland made his Broadway debut, opposite Brian
Cox, Jim Gaffigan, Chris Noth, and Jason Patric, in the Broadway
revival of That Championship Season,
which opened in March 2011. The show has since closed.
In 2012, Sutherland starred in the Fox television series Touch.
He played the father of an autistic boy who does not like to be touched, while
the son also communicates future humanity interrelated events to his father
through numbers and mathematics.
On 14 May 2013, it was confirmed that the show 24 would return for a limited
series. Before that, he was also offered
the lead role in the NBC drama The Blacklist. In May and July 2014, Fox
aired the twelve-episode 24: Live Another
Day, which received acclaimed reviews from critics. Although he did not
appear in 2017's 24: Legacy, he was
the show's executive producer.
After working in the movie industry for more than 30 years,
he had the chance to star with his father, Donald
Sutherland, in the western-drama film, Forsaken,
which also stars Demi Moore and Brian Cox. The film screened at the Toronto International Film Festival and
received mixed reviews from critics.
In 2015, it was announced that Sutherland was cast in the
lead role of the former ABC political
drama series Designated Survivor as Tom Kirkman, the President of the United
States. The show was renewed by Netflix for a third season which was
released on June 7, 2019.
Personal life
Family and
relationships
Sutherland has one daughter (Sarah) from his first marriage to Camelia Kath, the widow of Chicago
guitarist/singer Terry Kath, to
whom he was married from 1987 to 1990, and through his marriage to Camelia, he
became stepfather to Michelle Kath,
who has two sons. Sarah Sutherland is an actress and appears on the TV series, Veep.
Julia Roberts met
Sutherland in 1990, when they co-starred in Flatliners.
In August 1990, Roberts and Sutherland announced their engagement, with an
elaborate studio-planned wedding scheduled for 14 June 1991. Roberts broke the
engagement three days before the wedding allegedly because Sutherland had been
meeting with a go-go dancer named Amanda
Rice. Sutherland denied having an affair with Rice and said that they only
met because he liked to play pool. On the day of what was supposed to be their
wedding, Roberts went to Ireland
with Sutherland's friend Jason Patric.
In the late 1990s, Sutherland purchased a 900-acre (3.6 km2)
ranch in Montana and toured on the
rodeo circuit.
On 29 June 1996, Sutherland married Kelly Winn. The couple separated in 1999, and he filed for divorce
in 2004. The divorce was finalized on 16 May 2008. He dated Bo
Derek in 2000.
Sutherland began dating model/actress Cindy Vela of Olmito, Texas
sometime in 2014, keeping their relationship private up until 2017 when they
began to be seen together in public. Vela and Sutherland became engaged in 2017.
Legal troubles
Sutherland was charged in Los Angeles on 25 September 2007, on drunk driving charges, after
failing a field sobriety test. His test exceeded the state's legal blood
alcohol limit, and he was later released on a $25,000 bail. It was Sutherland's
fourth DUI charge since 1989. Sutherland
pleaded no contest to the DUI charge and was sentenced to 48 days in jail.
Sutherland surrendered to the NYPD on 7 May 2009 for head-butting fashion designer Jack McCollough, founder, and
co-designer of Proenza Schouler, at The Mercer Hotel in SoHo following a fundraiser for the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Several weeks later, Sutherland and McCollough
issued a joint statement in which Sutherland apologized; police later dropped
the charges.
Business ventures
Sutherland is the co-owner (along with Jude Cole) of the independent record label Ironworks.
Sutherland reportedly fell victim to a financial scam
involving cattle in 2010. According to
the Associated Press, the
perpetrator, Michael Wayne Carr,
allegedly took US$869,000 from Sutherland, ostensibly on the account of steers
to be purchased. Prosecutors alleged that Carr never purchased the steers. Carr
pleaded guilty and was ordered to pay US$956,000 in restitution to Sutherland
and his investment partner.
Political views
Sutherland identifies as a political liberal.
During an interview with Charlie Rose, Sutherland said of his political views:
I believe inherently
that we have a responsibility to take care of each other, so when you talk
about socialized health care: absolutely, that’s a no-brainer. Free universities:
absolutely, that’s a no-brainer. So, in the definition, I guess those are
leaning toward socialist politics. To me, it’s common sense.
Charity work
Sutherland is a member of a Canadian charity Artists
Against Racism.
Awards and
recognition
·
2003: Sweden TNT award for Best Foreign TV
Personality – Male
·
2005: Canada's Walk of Fame
·
2008: Hollywood Walk of Fame
·
2013: Hasty Pudding Theatricals for Man of the
Year
·
2015: Zurich Film Festival for Lifetime
Achievement Award
Filmography
Discography
Down in a Hole Release
date: 19 August 2016 Label: Ironworks / Warner Bros. Nashville 35 "Not Enough Whiskey"
"Can't Stay Away" Reckless & Me Release date:
26 April 2019 Label: Ironworks / BMG Rights Management GmBH
"Open Road"
"This Is How It's Done"
"Something You Love"
Music videos
2016 "Not
Enough Whiskey" Kiefer Sutherland /
Frank Borin
"Can't Stay Away" Cal
Aurand
2017 "I'll
Do Anything"
"Shirley Jean"
2019 "This
Is How It's Done"
"Something You Love"
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