"It's really lucky when you have a set-up when so many things are unsaid between characters. As long as you trust the energy of the other person, it's all going to translate." - Sarah Clarke
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NINA MYERS: It didn't have to be like this, Jack. I never meant for it to be personal. - "24"
Press
"Long day's journey into stardom" YOU
Magazine (3/9/2003)
by Stuart Husband
When Sarah Clarke got her big break as double agent Nina
Myers in the hit TV series "24", she was swept away by
the dizzying pace and excitement. Little did she know her
character would turn into the ultimate double-crossing bad
girl...
People give me weird looks when I go out these days,' says Sarah
Clarke. 'It's kind of worrying.' But not altogether surprising.
Sarah Clarke is striking for a number of reasons: her gamine good
looks, her confident, breezy manner. And then there's the little
matter of being television's top traitor. If you missed the first
series of "24", last year's big US TV hit that clocked
up five million BBC2 viewers, the latter accolade may not mean
much, but luckily you can plunge in with a thrilling new series.
Innovative and breakneck, the first 24 'real-time' episodes made
up a hellish day in the life of Jack Bauer (played by Kiefer
Sutherland), a counter-terrorism agent with the CIA. This mission
to foil an assassination attempt on black presidential candidate
David Palmer (Dennis Haysbert) was hindered by multifarious gangs
of terrorists, numerous kidnappings of his wife and daughter and
the presence of a mole at the heart of his organisation. Finally,
in episode 23, the mole was revealed as Nina Myers, played by
Sarah, Jack's seemingly steadfast right-hand woman (and former
lover).
She was dragged off to prison, but not before shooting dead
Jack's hapless wife Teri for good measure. "24" addicts
were shocked, but Sarah was aghast.
'No one told me that it was going to be me!' she says. 'None of
the cast knew until about five episodes from the end. We were
only shooting a few weeks ahead, and everyone had looked as
guilty as hell at different points.' She soon got used to the
idea, however. 'In the end, I thought it was a pretty cool
illustration of someone who is so deeply buried in their
double-agent role, they've hoodwinked everyone.'
With its numerous explosions, endless twists and knife-edge
tension, "24" cranks up the adrenalin to such a pitch
that the myriad plot implausibilities can be overlooked. 'The
great thing about the show,' says Sarah, 'is that it's completely
ridiculous on one level, but completely serious on another.'
The series is 30-year-old Sarah's big break. She hails from St
Louis, Missouri, and, while her mother was an actor 'in a
small-scale kind of way', Sarah's interest in the profession
sprang from a university exchange year spent in Italy. 'A friend
suggested I do some acting classes while I was there as I'd long
had the desire to perform,' she says. 'I had to take on these
roles in Italian and it kind of freed me. I discovered all these
different sides to myself.' She pulls herself up. 'Oh God, it
sounds like pretentious actor rubbish, doesn't it? But that's
where the initial spark came from.'
On graduating from college, she got a job as an architectural
photographer, and managed to secure free acting lessons in return
for photographing an arts centre. That led her to New York's
Circle in the Square Theatre School and 'various funky
productions way off Broadway'. She'd only done 'one tiny TV role'
when she flew out to Los Angeles in early 2000 to read for the
part of Nina. 'We did a pilot and I was asked back a month later.
I got there, read the script, met the director, did a test with
the network, got booked and was on set by that afternoon. It was
a whirlwind. But I was happy to get swept up in it.'
The dizzying pace was maintained over the course of 24's first
series - 'Sometimes you're like, "Where's the scene where I
just walk casually down the street instead of zinging around like
a ping-pong ball?'" - and the new series, for which all the
cast members, minus Teri, of course, have returned, is just as
frenetic. President Palmer is now in the White House and Jack has
a new set of horrors to endure, Nina foremost among them. While
the plot details are closely guarded, it's safe to say she won't
remain incarcerated for long.
'I thought there was no way they could do a second run,' says
Sarah. 'I mean, what more can they put Jack Bauer through? But
they've come up with a really great concept. If anything, it's
even faster than the first one. One thing I have noticed,' she
says, 'now I'm the bad guy, is that people aren't treating me so
nicely on set. I've had a few digs in the ribs about my new
baddie persona!'
Not, though, from Xander Berkeley, who plays Nina's boss George
Mason. Sarah and Xander embarked on a clandestine relationship
during the first series. 'We met on the pilot,' says Sarah, 'and
started dating pretty much straight away, but we kept it close to
our chests. We just didn't want it to get in the way.'
They eventually broke the news to the cast halfway through
filming. They were gobsmacked,' says Sarah. There were all these
rumours about who I was dating, but I don't think anyone was
expecting that.' The pair tied the knot at the end of the first
series. 'Xander's character is really grumpy in the show, but
he's a riot in real life,' she says. 'He was the only person I
knew in LA when I went out to work on the show. So there was a
nice air of synchronicity to the whole thing.'
Sarah, whose performance in "24" catapulted her on to
the A list, has been getting used to the growing attention.
Recently, a man approached her at the Sundance Film Festival and
announced that she was his obsession. 'Hmmm,' she mutters, 'I
wasn't quite sure what to say to that.'
She was at Sundance to promote her film "Thirteen", a
movie exploring a teenage girl's descent into a sex and drug
hell. Co-written by and based on the experiences of a 13-year-old
girl, it has caused a predictable stir. 'It's a supporting role,'
says Sarah, 'but I loved doing it. It'll be quite sobering for
any parent to watch.'
She and Xander are also hoping to get some of their own projects
off the ground. 'He's keen to direct,' she says, 'and I'm keen to
star. So who knows?'
Right now, though, there's "24" to wind up. Will there
be a Scooby-Doo moment to match Nina's unmasking this time round?
Sarah clams up. 'All I'll say is, stay alert,' she says
cryptically. 'No one is what they seem.'