Dubai Telegraph - Donald Sutherland: Hollywood's dark chameleon

EUR -
AED 3.849531
AFN 71.26801
ALL 97.489577
AMD 407.133958
ANG 1.888735
AOA 957.394851
ARS 1052.235814
AUD 1.609184
AWG 1.889117
AZN 1.791112
BAM 1.948361
BBD 2.11583
BDT 125.23708
BGN 1.955359
BHD 0.395016
BIF 3036.735477
BMD 1.048054
BND 1.408323
BOB 7.241353
BRL 6.093912
BSD 1.047904
BTN 88.545444
BWP 14.307376
BYN 3.429805
BYR 20541.851716
BZD 2.112535
CAD 1.464126
CDF 3007.913807
CHF 0.929383
CLF 0.036979
CLP 1020.374446
CNY 7.58351
CNH 7.604227
COP 4600.169523
CRC 532.71786
CUC 1.048054
CUP 27.773422
CVE 110.700709
CZK 25.372333
DJF 186.259983
DKK 7.459244
DOP 63.303486
DZD 140.007168
EGP 52.063095
ERN 15.720805
ETB 129.33436
FJD 2.406641
FKP 0.827247
GBP 0.832107
GEL 2.855927
GGP 0.827247
GHS 16.611633
GIP 0.827247
GMD 74.411853
GNF 9044.703289
GTQ 8.090113
GYD 219.262881
HKD 8.156703
HNL 26.384765
HRK 7.476038
HTG 137.59468
HUF 411.518243
IDR 16686.95315
ILS 3.893142
IMP 0.827247
INR 88.546488
IQD 1373.47432
IRR 44128.299527
ISK 146.119923
JEP 0.827247
JMD 166.434573
JOD 0.743174
JPY 161.922177
KES 135.721253
KGS 90.647778
KHR 4244.617195
KMF 492.218524
KPW 943.247896
KRW 1467.647167
KWD 0.322423
KYD 0.873366
KZT 519.705991
LAK 23015.258108
LBP 93853.205449
LKR 304.92583
LRD 188.911965
LSL 18.979978
LTL 3.09463
LVL 0.633958
LYD 5.119716
MAD 10.495157
MDL 19.084139
MGA 4895.458406
MKD 61.536096
MMK 3404.037402
MNT 3561.286277
MOP 8.401263
MRU 41.833101
MUR 48.629757
MVR 16.192506
MWK 1819.421082
MXN 21.389077
MYR 4.679539
MZN 66.973014
NAD 18.980034
NGN 1775.591527
NIO 38.557996
NOK 11.596507
NPR 141.673109
NZD 1.78734
OMR 0.403491
PAB 1.047999
PEN 3.977392
PGK 4.219989
PHP 61.814724
PKR 291.266876
PLN 4.34356
PYG 8225.282947
QAR 3.815701
RON 4.977107
RSD 117.009991
RUB 106.166872
RWF 1436.881566
SAR 3.934587
SBD 8.757045
SCR 14.317421
SDG 630.390661
SEK 11.590944
SGD 1.411131
SHP 0.827247
SLE 23.670312
SLL 21977.166166
SOS 598.957702
SRD 37.106378
STD 21692.594729
SVC 9.16999
SYP 2633.266111
SZL 18.99125
THB 36.403062
TJS 11.161487
TMT 3.678668
TND 3.304543
TOP 2.454645
TRY 36.144389
TTD 7.11384
TWD 34.114983
TZS 2779.814551
UAH 43.266675
UGX 3872.069131
USD 1.048054
UYU 44.658222
UZS 13498.931116
VES 48.495894
VND 26644.144146
VUV 124.427036
WST 2.925737
XAF 653.462161
XAG 0.034053
XAU 0.000392
XCD 2.832418
XDR 0.799448
XOF 651.889416
XPF 119.331742
YER 261.9079
ZAR 18.971032
ZMK 9433.736719
ZMW 28.899665
ZWL 337.472851
  • RBGPF

    -0.5000

    59.69

    -0.84%

  • CMSC

    0.1200

    24.64

    +0.49%

  • RYCEF

    0.1800

    6.79

    +2.65%

  • RIO

    0.1800

    62.57

    +0.29%

  • RELX

    0.6500

    45.76

    +1.42%

  • NGG

    -0.1700

    63.1

    -0.27%

  • GSK

    0.3500

    33.7

    +1.04%

  • AZN

    1.0600

    64.26

    +1.65%

  • VOD

    -0.1000

    8.84

    -1.13%

  • SCS

    -0.0300

    13.04

    -0.23%

  • BCC

    2.9500

    140.36

    +2.1%

  • BTI

    -0.1000

    36.98

    -0.27%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.23

    0%

  • BP

    0.4400

    29.52

    +1.49%

  • BCE

    -0.3200

    26.68

    -1.2%

  • CMSD

    0.1850

    24.445

    +0.76%

Donald Sutherland: Hollywood's dark chameleon
Donald Sutherland: Hollywood's dark chameleon / Photo: JUSTIN TALLIS - AFP/File

Donald Sutherland: Hollywood's dark chameleon

With his towering height and a brooding expression that veered from menacing to hilarious and heartbroken, Donald Sutherland was Hollywood's chameleon, equally at home in war, love, horror -- or playing for laughs.

Text size:

In a dense filmography spanning six decades, Sutherland stood out for his unusual -- even odd -- looks and an incredible range of roles, working alongside several of the greatest directors of his time.

The Canadian-born actor -- who has died at age 88, his son Kiefer said Thursday -- had many standout roles, from an army surgeon in wartime comedy "M*A*S*H" (1970) to a tyrannical leader in "The Hunger Games" more than 30 years later.

Other memorable characters include a private detective entangled with a call girl in suspense thriller "Klute" (1971), the mythical seductor in "Casanova" (1976) and a pot-smoking professor in "National Lampoon's Animal House" (1978).

"Canada's greatest export," Britain's Daily Telegraph once called him.

"One of the most versatile film and television actors of the century," Variety said.

Sutherland's inner circle consisted of equally familiar screen faces, from his former partner Jane Fonda to his son Kiefer, himself an actor best known for the drama series "24."

- Ugly? No. 'Unattractive' -

Born on July 17, 1935 in New Brunswick, northeastern Canada, Donald Edward McNichol Sutherland was a sickly child, suffering from hepatitis, polio and rheumatic fever.

"One leg's a little shorter, but I survived," he told Esquire magazine in 2011.

As an adult, he shot up to 6 foot 3 inches (1.93 meters), but was long aware that not everyone would consider him handsome.

"Unattractive is a gentler way of putting it," he responded when asked by CBS whether he considered himself ugly.

After working as a part-time DJ for local radio as a teenager, he graduated from the University of Toronto in drama and engineering.

Opting to pursue the theater against the wishes of his parents, he moved to London when he was 22 and later to Scotland.

He appeared in his first feature in 1964, the Italian gothic horror "The Castle of the Living Dead." Small television roles followed, including on cult British series such as "The Avengers" and "The Saint."

His breakthrough came in 1967, after he moved to Hollywood, with Robert Aldrich's "The Dirty Dozen" in which he starred alongside Lee Marvin and Charles Bronson as part of a World War II unit of violent misfits fighting the Nazis.

Four years later came the hugely successful "M*A*S*H," a wildly irreverent comedy about a group of army doctors in the Korean War, directed by Robert Altman.

- Jane Fonda partnership -

Sutherland started dating Jane Fonda in the 1970s and they appeared together in Alan J. Pakula's "Klute," for which Fonda won an Oscar and Golden Globe.

In 1972, the couple starred in an anti-Vietnam war documentary, "F.T.A."

Sutherland then made around a film a year for a while, including a series of modern gems such as Nicolas Roeg's harrowing child abduction drama "Don't Look Now" (1973) and Oliver Stone's biopic "JFK" (1991).

He worked with a host of top-drawer directors, including Bernardo Bertolucci, Federico Fellini and Clint Eastwood.

- 'Hunger Games' dictator -

In his later decades, Sutherland was best known as the tyrannical Coriolanus Snow, ruling over the post-apocalyptic state Panem in "The Hunger Games" franchise beginning in 2012.

He once said he hoped the films would give youngsters hope for "a decent future."

Sutherland, an Emmy and Golden Globe winner, received an honorary Oscar in 2017, although he was never nominated for a competitive Academy Award.

He was given a star on Hollywood's storied Walk of Fame in 2011, saying at the ceremony that the honor meant more to him than a fancy gravestone.

"Getting old," he said in Esquire in 2011, "is like having a new profession, except it's not a profession of your own choosing."

And death will be "a lonely little journey," he said.

Sutherland left five children from three wives, all of whom have worked in the film or television industry in some way.

H.Yousef--DT