Time heals everything is a cliché that figures in the imagination of Kiefer Sutherland. The actor who reached the top with the series 24 and who we will see in Clint Eastwood’s Jury No. 2, has trusted his ex-wife to sell a bungalow in Los Angeles. This is Kelly Winn Sutherland, who continues to use her married name although the couple broke up in 2004 and a court ratified her divorce in 2008; Sutherland alleged “irreconcilable differences” that prevented them from maintaining an eleven-year marriage. 20 have passed since the breakup and he is still an actor and she, who left modeling for the real estate business, is now in charge of selling this property that has gone on the market for 1.7 million euros.

Kelly Sutherland, 18 years as a real estate agent and office in Beverly Hills, works for Coldwell Banker and has produced The American Dream, a cable television show nominated for an EMMY Awards last year. This is how she describes her ex’s property: “Bright Tudor-style house on one of the best streets in Atwater Village, Los Angeles County. The long gated driveway leads to the rear patio with an immaculately landscaped terrace and 2-car garage. The house [built in 1927] has been updated while maintaining many of the original details.”

The property, 110 m2 and one floor, is austerely decorated. So much so that one can hardly even talk about decoration. It consists of two bedrooms and two bathrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen, a room for a washer and dryer and a garden. And nothing more.

Born in London and raised in Canada, Kiefer Sutherland made his film debut in Hello, Mr. Dugan in the early 1980s with his father, Donald Sutherland, and his first starring role in Boy from the Bay, which earned him a nomination for the Canadian Genie Awards. In 1990 we saw him in Mortal Line alongside Julia Roberts – idyll included – and he established himself with Some Good Men (1992) to see how his career declined from A Time to Kill (1996) until the pioneering series 24 (2001), in which he played Jack Bauer, brought him back to the front line.