"I'm sure we won't be seeing the last of Sarah Clarke on the show or anywhere else in Hollywood and if she even brings half the talent she has brought to Nina, it will be an amazing thing to behold." - Adam Varn
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CARLY: Why did you fight for me? You risked so much and you hardly know me. - "House"
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"Spy game" TvGuide (6/8/2002)
by Jennifer Graham
The set of 24 was a chamber of secrets for Sarah Clarke, who
had to keep quiet about her character's hidden agenda - and her
own romance with a costar.
You thought you knew Nina Myers. She was, you thought, the
crime-fighting heroine of FOX's 24 - its magnolia of
steel. Resourceful and tough, she was the most tenacious defender
of special agent Jack Bauer (Kiefer Sutherland), head of the
CIA's Counter Terrorist Unit (CTU). But here's the astonishing
truth: She is actually really tiny. Jack could
practically fit her on the dashboard of his car.
"As an actor, you always want a secret," says Sarah
Clarke, laughing. This 30-year-old St. Louis native - who plays
the formidable Nina - is 5 feet 4 inches and maybe 100
pounds. And she sat for a long time on a much bigger bombshell:
Nina's got a dark side. In the closing moments of 24's
23rd episode, she conveyed a message, in Serbian, to the
murderous Victor Drazen, thereby exposing her own part in the
plot to assassinate presidential candidate David Palmer (Dennis
Haysbert). When her cover was blown in the final episode, Nina
fled CTU, reflexively murdering anyone in her path - including
Jack's wife, Teri (Leslie Hope). Viewers watched in horror. But
Clarke was already reconciled to her character's long-hidden
duplicity.
"This gave me a secret to reveal slowly, and it was a
wonderful, wonderful tool," she says. Hanging out in a
Manhattan bistro, Clarke sets a different tone than Nina - one of
blue jeans and cappuccinos and lots of laughter. The producers
"told me about two months ago," she says with a
mischievous grin. "Nobody knew. I don't know if Kiefer even
knew. I found out probably six scripts ahead of them."
Clarke knew nothing of her character's hidden agenda when she
signed on for the part. With even the actors out of the loop, the
set took on a sense of uneasy excitement. "We definitely
talked about it," Clarke says. "I remember every week,
Carlos [Bernard, who plays CTU agent Tony Almeida] would say, 'I
think [the mole is] you.' And I would say, 'No, it couldn't be me
because I love Jack. I think it's you.'"
In retrospect, Clarke is grateful for the producers' stealth.
"I might have started getting into this whole secret world
that might have distracted me from what they needed me to do up
to that point," she says. According to executive producer
Robert Cochran, the creators knew they could probably trust
Clarke. "But we're all human," he says. "So it's
just better not to let anyone know anything until they need
to."
When Clarke did find out, she had to re-evaluate her own
character. Nina had previously been romantically involved with
Jack while he was separated from his wife. Once she knew the
truth about Nina, she saw this liaison in a different light.
Indeed, it could have been merely an element of Nina's hoax.
"The way I looked at it is that I saw Nina as very
ambitious," she says. "Now let's say she's placed in
the agency two years beforehand, and she knows that Jack Bauer is
the guy that they're going to bring down. She definitely wouldn't
instigate anything that would provoke suspicion, but I think
there was a nice opportunity for her to take advantage of what
was happening between him and his wife."
Clarke is, quite clearly, fascinated by Nina. "There's a
scene where Jack's wife confronts me that she knows [about our
affair]," she continues. "And I think you empathize
with both characters at that moment." But looking at that
same scene in retrospect - after Nina's double identity is
revealed - the dynamic between the women is even more
complicated. "I go back to that scene now, and it's funny to
think about it," Clarke says.
Off-screen, her love life has been equally furtive - but much
less complicated. She met her fiancé, Xander Berkeley (who plays
surly CTU supervisor George Mason), while filming the pilot of 24.
"We were hanging out in the makeup trailer," says
Berkeley, 40, "and the power went out. So we sat there and
talked in the dark. It had a really interesting effect of bonding
us in some strange way, because it was just our voices without
any distractions. It was one of those absolute, complete,
swept-off-the-feet feelings from the word go. There was
very little either of us could say or do about it."
There was also, they agreed, little reason to tell their cast
mates right away. "I just kind of wanted to keep it to
ourselves for a while," Clarke says with a smile. "I
don't know if I was just practising the whole CIA thing! But we
started telling people in the new year."
As for Nina's fate next season, Clarke needn't call on her secret
keeping abilities. The producers have left her in the dark. She
can, however, reveal what she knows of her own future: This
summer, she'll shoot two independent films, both of which costar
her fiancé. In September, she and Berkeley will wed. (The couple
share a home in Los Angeles.) And in the fall, both husband and
wife will return for the new season of 24.
"After they made me so evil, I can't imagine anyone wanting
me to live and be free," she says. But Jack might need her.
"She won't come back in the same job, obviously," says
Cochran, "but she might come out of prison to be used for
something." Nina's been sidelined for the moment, but she's
still in the game.