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Donald Sutherland, Star of ‘M*A*S*H’ and Much More, Dies at 88

Donald Sutherland, whose ability to both charm and unsettle, both reassure and repulse, was amply displayed in scores of film roles as diverse as a laid-back battlefield surgeon in “M*A*S*H,” a ruthless Nazi spy in “Eye of the Needle,” a soulful father in “Ordinary People” and a strutting fascist in “1900,” has died. He was 88.

His son Kiefer Sutherland announced the death on social media on Thursday. He did not say where or when Mr. Sutherland died or specify the cause.

With his long face, droopy eyes, protruding ears and wolfish smile, the 6-foot-4 Mr. Sutherland was never anyone’s idea of a movie heartthrob. He often recalled that while growing up in eastern Canada, he once asked his mother if he was good-looking, only to be told, “No, but your face has a lot of character.” He recounted how he was once rejected for a film role by a producer who said: “This part calls for a guy-next-door type. You don’t look like you’ve lived next door to anyone.”

And yet across six decades, starting in the early 1960s, he appeared in nearly 200 films and television shows — some years he was in as many as half a dozen movies. His chameleon-like ability to be endearing in one role, menacing in another and just plain odd in yet a third appealed to directors, among them Federico Fellini, Robert Altman, Bernardo Bertolucci and Oliver Stone.

Mr. Sutherland on the set of “Ordinary People” (1980) with Robert Redford, who was making his debut as a director.Credit…Paramount, via Everett Collection
Mr. Sutherland with Federico Fellini on the set of “Fellini’s Casanova” (1976). “Working for Fellini,” Mr. Sutherland said, “was the best experience of my life.”Credit…Produzioni Europee Associati, via Everett Collection

“For me, working with these great guys was like falling in love,” Mr. Sutherland said of those filmmakers. “I was their lover, their beloved.”

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