Actor Donald Sutherland dies aged 88 - A true great

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Actor Donald Sutherland, star of films including The Hunger Games and Animal House, dies aged 88 after a long illness
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The Canadian actor Donald Sutherland, star of films including The Hunger Games and Don't Look Now, has died at 88 after a long illness.

His son, the actor Kiefer Sutherland, said: "With a heavy heart, I tell you that my father, Donald Sutherland, has passed away. I personally think one of the most important actors in the history of film.

"Never daunted by a role, good, bad or ugly. He loved what he did and did what he loved, and one can never ask for more than that. A life well lived."

Sutherland had almost 200 credits to his name in a career spanning more than half a century.

The news was met with an outpouring of support and tributes.

Actor Rob Lowe, who starred alongside Sutherland in the miniseries Salem's Lot, called his former co-star "one of our greatest actors".

"It was my honor to work with him many years ago, and I will never forget his charisma and ability," he wrote on X/Twitter.

Cary Elwes, a co-star in the 2001 television film Uprising, said he was "devastated" by Sutherland's death.

"Our hearts are breaking for you," he told Kiefer in an Instagram message. "So grateful to have known [and] worked with him. Sending our love.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau recalled feeling "deeply, deeply star-struck" when he first met Sutherland.

"My thoughts go out to Kiefer and the entire Sutherland family, as well as all Canadians who are no doubt saddened to learn, as I am right now," he said.

"He was a man with a strong presence, a brilliance in his craft and truly, truly a great Canadian artist," he added.

Ron Howard, who directed Sutherland in the 1991 film Backdraft, said that he was "one of the most intelligent, interesting [and] engrossing film actors of all time".

Born in New Brunswick, Canada, Sutherland started as a radio news reporter before travelling to London in 1957 to study at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art.

He then took on small roles in British film and television.

His earliest high-profile roles were in war films including 1967's The Dirty Dozen, and Kelly's Heroes and M*A*S*H from 1970.

Jane Fonda was Sutherland's co-star in Alan J Pakula's 1971 thriller, Klute, about a detective whose hunt for a missing person is assisted by a high-priced call girl.

They dated for two years.

The 1970s also saw him play an IRA member in The Eagle Has Landed, a pot-smoking college professor in National Lampoon's Animal House and the lead in the 1978 remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers.

In the 1980s, Sutherland played the father of a suicidal teenager in the Oscar-winning Ordinary People.

He turned to television in the 2000s, appearing in such series as Dirty Sexy Money and Commander-in-Chief.

Despite his numerous roles, he was never nominated for an Oscar. He did receive an honorary Academy Award in 2017.

Sutherland was known for his political activism throughout his career, and protested against the Vietnam war alongside Fonda.

He also channelled his beliefs into some of his roles, including The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 2, where he played the tyrannical President Snow.

Sutherland told the BBC in 2015 that he hoped the film's socio-political message would help young fans become more aware of the world around them.

"We asked the kindest man in the world to portray the most corrupt, ruthless dictator we’ve ever seen," the official Hunger Games X account posted following the announcement of his death.

"Such was the power and skill of Donald Sutherland’s acting that he created one more indelible character among many others that defined his legendary career. We are privileged to have known and worked with him, and our thoughts are with his family."

He also told the BBC that the biggest changes he'd noticed in the industry was that actors were making "a lot of money".

"I don't think anybody of my generation became an actor to make money. It never occurred to me. I made £8 a week here [on stage in London]. When I starred in a play at the Royal Court, I made £17 a week, that was in 1964," he said.

At the time, he said he had no plans to retire from acting.

"It's a passionate endeavour. Retirement for actors is spelt 'DEATH'." he said.

His memoir, Made Up, But Still True, is due to be published in November.
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ouch, he was a great actor

But he lived a life most would envy. Died at a ripe old age surrounded by family and dear friends. Not the worst way to go.

I particularly like him in Johnny Got his Gun; man that was a haunting movie and Donnie play the Jesus role very well.

RIP
 
There is some aging unknown starlet out there, who fucked this guy and Willie Mays back in the 70's, and now has to mourn them back to back, alone in a far away Florida trailer park...
 
I have come to the conclusion that your political beliefs are so strongly informed by where you live that you can't fully hold it against someone for, say, being a lifelong Californian and believing minimum wage laws are a good thing. It's like having your only water source be contaminated with lead. It's going to have an effect.

Look at Bill Burr. People think he's turned into a pussy because of his wife, and that's true. But he's also living in California, so I was not surprised (despite my disgust) when he unironically talked about "white privilege" on his comedy podcast a few years ago. Ol' Freckles is partiality stunted by his environment (and his half'-black kid, I'm sure), simple as.

All that to say Donald Sutherland was a great actor, and I already assumed he was partially retarded because of the milieu he lived in. RIP to a great talent.
 
Donald Sutherland is one of those actors who I recognize but struggle to think of a movie that he has a prominent role in.
"Animal House". He was one of the professors at Faber College, fucked one of the frat guys' girlfriend, who was played by Karen Allen.

He was also one of the doctors in the original MASH movie.

He seemed to have lived a pretty good life, never heard anything bad about him.
 
He is cast perfectly in Citizen X (1995) a dramatization of what it took to track down Chikatilo in the USSR. The incredible scene regarding a simple arranged telephone call is right up there with his best performances.
 
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