Donald Sutherland says Louis Riel's story isn't his to tell

He was born in New Brunswick, raised on the east coast, went to school in Toronto and has parental roots in Alberta. On CBC's Midday he explains why he's interested in a Saskatchewan story.

After working on a CBC Radio drama about the Métis leader, the actor had questions

Donald Sutherland: truly Canadian

40 years ago
Duration 2:43
Fresh from a CBC radio drama about Louis Riel in 1985, the actor explains why he's not the guy to make a Riel movie.

Over his years as a film actor, Donald Sutherland has portrayed real-life figures from Canadian history such as Dr. Norman Bethune and manhunting Mountie Dan Candy. But his interest in Canadian historical figures didn't end there.

In 1985, for a CBC Radio drama coinciding with the 100th anniversary of the Riel Rebellion, Sutherland played the role of commissioner of an inquiry into the history and survival of the Métis.

The film he wouldn't make

While talking about the role, he told a CBC interviewer he had once considered making a film about Métis leader Louis Riel, but then thought better of it.

"I'm not the person to make a film about Riel, " he told interviewer Jonathan Shanks. "That person has to be someone with a Métis heart. That is a very distinct and specific thing."

Why Sutherland's interest in Riel's story, which is rooted in Western Canada, when he was born in Saint John, N.B., raised partly in Nova Scotia and went to university in Toronto, Shanks asked. 

"I'm a Canadian," responded Sutherland, explaining his parents' connections to Alberta and the west. "My humour, who I am as a person, is rooted here."  

Actor Donald Sutherland blows a kiss to the crowd after receiving the Governor General's Performing Arts Award during a ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa, Friday, Nov. 3, 2000. (/Jonathan Hayward/Canadian Press)