"Nina hasn't had a break, a catnap or time for a shower or a change of clothes. She's been in the same drab black outfit all along, and her makeup has gone very faint. It doesn't matter; Nina is a knockout still, and so beautiful and so intelligent-looking..." - David Thomson on the first season of '24'
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SELMA: Hey! What's your problem? I was just trying to make a conversation! - "Psichic Driving"
Press
"Secret Agents of the hit show '24'" Hello!
UK (February 2004)
by Sue Russell
Sarah Clarke and Xander Berkeley tell us about their
clandestine romance and marriage as they invite us into their
Hollywood hills home.
Who better than actors Sarah Clarke and Xander Berkeley, both
known for specialising in subterfuge on TV's edgy espionage
series 24, to execute a top-secret personal mission?
Sarah, 32, and Xander, 46, were both thrilled to be part of the
award-winning ahow, which takes place in real-time and stars
Kiefer Sutherland as anti-terrorism agent Jack Bauer, but they
were unprepared for one unscripeted plot twist. After locking
eyes in February 2001 while working on thr first episode, it was
love at first sight.
But rather than share their happiness with the rest of the cast,
they cloaked their romance in spy-like secrecy.
"We were playing CIA agents, people who keep their entire
lives secret," Xander explains, "so we just felt like
we were getting into character."
Sarah, a rocker scientist's daughter from St Louis, was a near
novice on TV save for a brief appearance on Sex And The City
before being cast as agent Nina Myers, Jack's former lover. The
actress, who had been living in New York after studying at the
Circle in Square acting school, was flown out to LA at the last
minute by the show's producers to test her for the role. They
liked her so much that she started to work the same day as the
treacherous double-crossing agent who kills Jack's pregnant wife
at the end of series one.
Xander played Jack's boss George Mason who, already dying after
exposure to plutonium, saved LA by crashing a plane with a
nuclear bomb on board into the Mojave desert away from the city.
A veteran actor of 80 films, he made his screen debut as Joan
Crawford's grown-up son in 1981's Mommie Dearest and has
appeared in blockbusters Terminator 2: Judgment Day and Apollo
13.
With their 24 colleagues still obliovious to the love
match unfolding under their noses, Sarah and Xander's romance got
serious. But after both told their pal and co-star Carlos Bernard
(fellow agent Tony Almeida) that they'd spent their summer breaks
visiting the east coast and holidaying in Portugal, they realised
"the gig was up". So, that very afternoon, they broke
the news with a champagne toast. They wed in September 2002 at an
18th-century church near Sarah's godmother's horse farm in
Millbrook, New York.
This private couple is still fond of secrets and details of
Xander's 2002 Valentine's Day proposal remain off-limits. Yet
they graciously invited Hello! to their 1924,
Mediterranean-style, Holliwood Hills home.
Eclectically furnished, the house mirrors their artistic
personalities. Xander is an accomplished painter, sculptor and,
like Sarah, a photographer. Canvases line his studio, although
all paintings of Sarah have been tucked out of sight "to
protect her privacy".
Since the actor's demise in 24, he's made several films
including the forthcoming World War II drama In Enemy Hands.
He and Sarah both worked on the soon-to-be-ralsed indipendent
film comedy Below The Belt and Sarah also appeared with
Oscar-nominated Holly Hunter in the acclaimed coming-of-age movie
Thirteen.
Back on the third series of 24, which starts this
Thursday on Sky One after winning a Golden Globe for best TV
drama series, Jack is once again locked in battle with evil Nina,
this time over a devastatingly deadly virus about to be unleashed
on America. Meanwhile, Sarah and Xander contemplate their
professional futures with justified optimism.
"Clearly," says Xander, "24 has been a
great ride for both of us."
- So, what was it like the first time you two met?
Sarah: "It was in the make-up trailer on the set of 24.
and suddently the power went off! It's a very interesting way to
get to know somebody, in the dark. All you can focus on is their
voice."
Xander: "As opposed to their eyes, which is what we
initially focused on, reflected in the make-up trailer's mirror.
Once that intense distraction's taken away, you hear each other's
voices and what you have to say."
- How did your romance get off the ground?
S: "That first weekend I was here alone, waiting to explore
LA, so I asked Xander if there was a great place to go on a
hike."
X: "She was intrigued with one area she recalled from a
previous visit and began describing precisely where my house is.
I said, 'There's a place I can point out to you, or I can join
you if you like?' Sarah said she'd prefer that I show her the
trail.
"Also, it was the weekend of the Oscars and I wasn't going
to let her watch them alone in a hotel room like an outcast from
society, so I took her to a party. My friends are really cool,
they're sculptors, painters and writers, and they were all
hanging out at the beach. She jumped in and hit it off with
everyone. And all my friends immediately took to her."
- Did you really fall in love instantly?
X: "I'd have to say yes. It was like there was no
possibility of escape for either of us - and no desire to
either."
- Had either of you been married or had any children?
"No. We had a clean state. And meeting Sarah made it clear
to me why I had taken hard road to holding out for the right one.
At times you doubt that and wonder if you're just being too
picky. But it all made sense why I had not fot married
before."
- Did the age gap concern either of you?
S: "Moments come up like, 'Oh, wow, I was two when you did
that!' But I feel completely equal with Xander, in my mind and in
myself.
X: "I was ready to meet my match and with Sarah there was a
sense of meeting someone at eye level, so that took precedence
and eliminated any sense of the disparity of ages."
S: "With Xander, it seems like this is exactly who I'm
supposed to be with and where I'm supposed to go."
- Why didn't you want to share this with your 24 cast mates?
S: "I was a little embarassed that I'd come out to do this
professional job and then hooked up with someone on the set. I
didn't want anybody making any judgments. It was so much more
important than a fling and I just didn't want people talking
about it."
- Was it hard to hide your feelings for one another?
X: "Yes, because it was so obvious! And after the summer
break when we showed up back on the set, we had more than a
little fling to keep secret, we already had this huge
history."
- What happened when you finally revealed all?
S: "The first assistant director rounded up about 100
people. I was really nervous. I was standing next to Xander and I
just said without thinking, 'Okay, it's me, it's me! I just
wanted to announce that I'm marrying George!' Everyone was like,
'Who's George?' because they only know Xander's character as
Mason. I said, 'I mean Xander, this guy right here!' They were
very happy for us."
- Tell us about your wedding.
S: "Oh, it was beautiful. We had about 100 people, which was
just right and about as many as the church would hold."
X: "It was as many as the little bed and breakfasts and
hotels nearby could hold, too. We took over a whole village! We
had a horse and carriage and an Irish band. It was the most
romantic wedding you could dream of. All our friends fell for
each other."
- Do you want children?
S: "Definitely!"
X: "And that's all we're at liberty to divulge at the
moment!"
- What was it like merging households?
X: "I'd been in the house for a while but Sarah's arrival
was like a wand being waved. A lot of the hard work had been done
but it was a house and I think I was waiting for my mate for the
house to become a home. When she moved in it was a metamorphosis
from my house to our house. Now it feels like it's been ours all
along."
S: "But we're both into making our own spaces. I have my
study and Xander has his studio where he paints and
sculpts."
- Are you very different personalities?
S: "We have a similar philosophy of life. Personalitywise we
have our differences that allow us to go together as a unit very
well. I tend to hole up in the house. Xander definitely goes off
on his own but he's a little more social than I am. I'm very good
one on one but in a bigger group I get a little shy. Xander's
been very helpful with that."
- How did you prepare for your 24 roles?
X: "It's the hardest research I've ever had to do because
real agents aren't at liberty to divulge much! We went to a spy
shop, read a bunch of books, talked to some people - and made the
rest up."
- Do people ever confuse you with your 24 characters?
S: "People really do mix it up - and when you play a
terrorist it's kind of frightening."
X: "Somebody came uo to me yestarday at a restaurant I had
stopped at while driving through the desert near LA. It freaked
them out to see me there because that's where Mason died in a
plane crash. I had to say, 'No, we shot that on a soundstage and
I'm alive.'"
- Kiefer was once considered a hellraiser. What's he like?
S: "I saw nothing but professionalism from him. I was a bit
intimidated at frst, he'd been working in films for so long. I
just hoped to rise the occasion."
X: "What's great about both his reputation and his behaviour
of being on the edge is that it creates great veracity for the
character, and intensity and truthfulness in the acting. He's not
an apologist. He's a guy who likes to have fun and live hard.
He's nice to people everywhere he goes. And if he acts crazy
sometimes, well, then that's what makes him fun to be
around."
- You both have much to thank 24 for.
X: "Yes. First, having met Sarah; second, being involved in
something so popular. I get recognized more now but it's cool.
Success is a razor's edge and you can fall off either side. You
can become too famous and fat and comfortable and self-involved
for your own good. Or you can be so obscure that nobody knows you
or cares to! 24 has been great for both of us."