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Kristine Sutherland
Kristine Sutherland
from Wikipedia

Kristine Sutherland (born Kristine Young; April 17, 1955) is an American actress best known for her starring role as Buffy Summers' mother Joyce Summers on the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, where she appeared in every season (1997–2003), and her role as Mae Thompson in Honey, I Shrunk the Kids (1989).

Key Information

Early life

[edit]

She was born Kristine Young in Boise, Idaho, and changed her name because she was often confused with another similarly named actress. The last name "Sutherland" was after her cat, whom she named "Donald" after Donald Sutherland, who, coincidentally, had a role in the original Buffy the Vampire Slayer film, Joss Whedon's first attempt to bring Buffy to audiences.[1] She is not related to Donald Sutherland, his sons Kiefer, Rossif and Angus, or his granddaughter Sarah Sutherland.[2]

She attended high school in Lexington, Kentucky, where she participated in the Tates Creek Drama program. After graduating, she enrolled in the University of Kentucky.

Career

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Sutherland's first film role was as a secretary in Legal Eagles (1986). She appeared as Mae Thompson in the 1989 film Honey, I Shrunk the Kids. Her career received a big boost when she played Buffy's mother in the action-horror television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, from 1997 to 2002.[3] Creator Joss Whedon later stated that one of the reasons he chose Sutherland for the role was that she exuded a warm demeanor, as well as what he believed to be a close resemblance to actress Sarah Michelle Gellar, who was to portray her daughter in the series. Sutherland appeared regularly on the show for the first five seasons, with only one appearance in season 6 and two in season 7.

After leaving Buffy, Sutherland attended a photography course at the Santa Monica College and subsequently set up a studio specializing in portraits. In 2008, she appeared in the television miniseries Comanche Moon and had a guest role in an episode of New Amsterdam.[3]

She voiced Haru's Mother in the English dub of The Cat Returns.

Personal life

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Sutherland is married to actor John Pankow. They have one daughter.

Filmography

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Film

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Year Title Role Notes
1986 Legal Eagles Secretary #2
1989 Honey, I Shrunk the Kids Mae Thompson
2005 The Cat Returns Naoko Yoshioka (voice) English version
2012 The Perfect Wedding Meryl Fowler
2016 Russian Doll Marjorie Ames
2016 Are You Afraid of the '90s? Jane Short film

Television

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Year Title Role Notes
1984 Hot Pursuit Episode: "Portrait of a Lady Killer"
1984 Remington Steele Pamela Jones Episode: "Let's Steel a Plot"
1986–1987 Easy Street Martha 2 episodes
1987 The Art of Being Nick Marlene Moore Television pilot
1994 California Dreams Ariel Lange Episode: "Daddy's Girl"
1997–2002 Buffy the Vampire Slayer Joyce Summers 58 episodes
2002 Providence Joyce Moore Episode: "Things Have Changed"
2008 Comanche Moon Elmira Forsythe 2 episodes
2008 New Amsterdam Didi Gleason Episode: "Reclassified"
2010–2011 One Life to Live Dean McKenzie 4 episodes
2013 The Following Parker's Mother Episode: "The Fall"

Video games

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes
2013 Grand Theft Auto V The Local Population

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Kristine Sutherland (born Kristine Young; April 17, 1955) is an American actress best known for portraying , the mother of the titular character on the supernatural drama television series from 1997 to 2002. She changed her professional surname from Young to Sutherland early in her career to avoid confusion with another actress of a similar name. Sutherland made her television debut in 1984 with a guest appearance on the crime comedy series Remington Steele, starring Pierce Brosnan. Her film breakthrough came in 1989 when she played the supporting role of Mae Thompson, the mother of the Thompson family, in the family science fiction comedy Honey, I Shrunk the Kids, directed by Joe Johnston. Over the course of her career, she has appeared in various television shows and films, including a role in the miniseries Comanche Moon (2008). Her performance as Joyce Summers earned praise for its emotional depth, particularly in storylines addressing maternal challenges and the character's untimely death in season five of Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Beyond acting, Sutherland studied theatre at the Drama Studio in London and the University of Kentucky, and later qualified as a photographer through a course at Santa Monica College. She has been married to actor John Pankow since 1986, and the couple has a daughter, Eleanore. In 1999, the family relocated temporarily to Italy to allow their daughter to attend school and learn Italian.

Early life and education

Childhood and family

Kristine Sutherland was born Kristine Young on April 17, 1955, in . Her family relocated to , during her childhood, where she spent much of her formative years. Sutherland was raised by her single mother, who faced significant challenges in that role at a time when single parenthood was uncommon and often stigmatized. This experience later informed her portrayal of maternal roles. Specific details about her mother's background or other relatives remain private. Despite sharing a , Sutherland is not related to actor or his family.

Name change and early interests

Kristine Sutherland changed her professional from Young to early in her career to avoid confusion with another actress of a similar name; she chose "Sutherland" inspired by her cat, whom she named after actor . Having relocated with her family from Boise to , Sutherland attended high school at Tates Creek High School in a stable environment that allowed her to explore emerging creative pursuits. Her initial exposure to the came unexpectedly during her teenage years when she accompanied her best friend to an audition for the high school production of the musical . Though intending only to provide moral support, Sutherland impulsively auditioned herself and was cast in the role of , the boisterous and brassy supporting character, while her friend secured the lead. This serendipitous entry into theater ignited a profound passion; as Sutherland later reflected, after her first performance and the electric connection with the audience, she was "absolutely hooked." She subsequently immersed herself in non-professional activities, including additional school plays and participation in the choral group, honing her skills through local performances before college.

University years

Kristine Sutherland attended the in Lexington, where she pursued studies in . This formal education built upon her budding interest in that had emerged during high school, providing structured training in dramatic techniques and . During her time at the university, Sutherland engaged with the theatre program, honing skills that would bridge her academic background to professional ambitions in . The program at the emphasized practical involvement in productions, allowing students like Sutherland to explore roles and directorial elements essential for a career in the field. Following her undergraduate studies, Sutherland decided to advance her training abroad, enrolling at The Drama Studio in for intensive theatre instruction. This post-university choice reflected her commitment to deepening her expertise before entering the competitive acting world, ultimately leading her toward opportunities in .

Acting career

Early roles and theater beginnings

Following her theater training at the and the Drama Studio in , Kristine Sutherland moved to in the late 1970s to pursue professional acting, marking her transition from academic pursuits to the stage. Her passion for theater, honed during university productions, motivated this shift, where she initially secured roles in touring children's theater as her first paid professional engagement. Throughout the 1980s, Sutherland built her experience through extensive stage work, focusing on and regional theater productions that provided foundational opportunities in the competitive New York scene. These performances allowed her to refine her craft in live settings before venturing into screen roles, emphasizing character-driven ensemble pieces typical of the era's regional circuits. Sutherland's screen debut came in 1986 with a minor role as Secretary #2 in the film , directed by , where she appeared alongside and in a brief office scene. This marked her entry into film, following a series of early television guest spots that highlighted her versatility in supporting parts. Her television appearances in the mid-1980s included a guest role as Pamela Jones in the 1984 episode "Let's Steele a Plot" of , playing a character involved in a mystery writers' investigation. That same year, she portrayed Patrice Ivy in the episode "Portrait of a Lady Killer," assisting in a plot subplot. Sutherland then took on the recurring role of Martha Weston in the sitcom Easy Street from 1986 to 1987, appearing in multiple episodes as a key ensemble member. In 1987, she played Marlene Moore in the television movie The Art of Being Nick, a pilot-like special centered on family dynamics. These roles represented a gradual accumulation of credits, establishing her presence in Hollywood's supporting cast landscape before more prominent opportunities.

Breakthrough in film and television

Sutherland's breakthrough role arrived in 1989 with her portrayal of Mae Thompson in the Disney family comedy , directed by . In the film, she played the affable wife of the antagonistic neighbor Russ Thompson (Matt Frewer) and mother to his sons, Russ Jr. () and Ron (), offering a warm, level-headed contrast to her husband's bullying demeanor toward the inventive protagonist Wayne Szalinski (). This supporting part marked her first substantial on-screen appearance following a minor secretary role in (1986), and the movie's massive commercial success—grossing over $222 million worldwide on a $18 million budget—significantly boosted her visibility as a character actress in Hollywood family fare. Throughout the early , Sutherland's film opportunities remained limited, with no major leading or supporting roles emerging beyond her established work in . However, she continued building her screen presence through selective television projects that highlighted her versatility in comedic and dramatic supporting capacities. In 1987, she took on the lead role of Marlene Moore, a single mother navigating life in New York City's East Village, in the unsold NBC pilot , a spin-off from featuring Scott Valentine and . This early television effort, though not picked up as a series, showcased her ability to anchor domestic storylines with relatable warmth. Later, in 1994, Sutherland made a as Ariel Lange, a romantic interest for the protagonist's father, in the episode "Daddy's Girl" of the teen sitcom . In 1995, she guest-starred as Joan Nutt in the episode "Oubliette" of . Her performance in this lighthearted family-oriented show further solidified her reputation for portraying grounded, maternal figures in episodic television. During this period, Sutherland received no major awards or nominations, but her consistent work in high-profile family comedies and pilots earned positive notices for her naturalistic delivery and emotional depth in character roles.

Role as Joyce Summers in Buffy the Vampire Slayer

Kristine Sutherland was cast as Joyce Summers, the mother of protagonist Buffy Summers, in the WB series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, which ran from 1997 to 2002. She portrayed the character in a recurring capacity across 58 episodes, primarily in the first five seasons, providing a stabilizing normalcy amid the show's supernatural conflicts. Her selection followed an audition where she was impressed by creator Joss Whedon's direction, and her prior experience in maternal roles, such as Mae Thompson in Honey, I Shrunk the Kids (1989), positioned her well for the part. Joyce's character arc begins as a divorced relocating to Sunnydale after Buffy's expulsion from her , initially viewing her daughter's duties as . Over the series, Joyce evolves into a key ally, learning of the supernatural world and offering unwavering support, such as wielding an axe against vampires in season 2's "School Hard." In the season 6 episode "Normal Again," Buffy hallucinates an alternate reality where Joyce commits her to a mental . Her storyline takes a tragic turn in season 5 with symptoms of a beginning in "Fool for Love," leading to diagnosis in "Shadow" and emergency surgery (with aftermath shown in "Listening to Fear"), from which she temporarily recovers. However, in season 5's "The Body," Joyce dies abruptly from a ( ), a plot point that underscores the vulnerability of and forces Buffy to confront profound . Behind the scenes, Sutherland found collaboration with Whedon rewarding, describing his scripts as "smart, funny, and unexpected" in contrast to typical television fare, and noted his openness to actors' input on dialogue and character nuances during rehearsals. The cast fostered familial bonds; Sutherland bonded closely with Sarah Michelle Gellar, likening their off-screen rapport to a mother-daughter dynamic, and enjoyed scenes with Michelle Trachtenberg as Dawn, treating her like a second daughter. She particularly cherished episodes like "Band Candy," where Joyce's rebellious side emerged under chocolate-induced youth regression, and "Innocence," highlighting emotional depth in her relationship with Buffy. Whedon informed Sutherland of Joyce's impending death at the end of season 3, allowing her to prepare emotionally, though she found the season 5 tumor storyline eerily prescient given her own mother's history with aneurysms. Sutherland's performance as Joyce garnered significant fan appreciation for humanizing the series' fantastical elements, with her character's death in "The Body"—written and directed by Whedon—hailed as a landmark depiction of raw grief that elevated the show's emotional stakes. Though never Emmy-nominated, the role cemented her as an iconic maternal figure in television, praised for its authenticity and impact. In reflections, Sutherland has shared how the single-mom portrayal deeply resonated, drawing from her own upbringing by a divorced mother facing societal stigma in the . Her primary regret, expressed in a 2023 interview, was the underdevelopment of Joyce's professional life as an , wishing for more scenes like the season 3 "Dead Man's Party" exhibit to showcase her independence and power beyond domesticity.

Post-Buffy projects and pursuits

Following the conclusion of her role on Buffy the Vampire Slayer in 2002, Sutherland took on selective acting projects, leveraging the enduring legacy of her television work to secure diverse opportunities. In 2004, she appeared as Ellen Williams-Gray in the episode "Lost and Found" of Without a Trace. In 2005, she provided the English voice for Haru's Mother in the Studio Ghibli animated film The Cat Returns, a whimsical fantasy about a young woman entangled with a cat kingdom. Three years later, in 2008, she portrayed Elmira Forsythe, a resilient frontier woman, in the CBS miniseries Comanche Moon, an adaptation of Larry McMurtry's prequel to Lonesome Dove that explored Texas Rangers' adventures in the 1850s. Sutherland's subsequent screen appearances included the role of Meryl Fowler, a supportive mother figure, in the 2012 independent romantic comedy The Perfect Wedding, which follows a man navigating family dynamics and unexpected romance during the holidays. By the early 2000s, Sutherland increasingly shifted her focus from to , pursuing it as a primary creative outlet and personal passion. She completed coursework at , earning qualifications as a , and has since emphasized capturing the nuances of through her lens. Her work in this medium centers on personal projects that document ordinary moments, reflecting a desire to preserve fleeting memories amid life's transitions. In recent years, Sutherland has embraced a semi-retired lifestyle, balancing occasional engagements with her interests in photography and family. A September 2025 interview on the Lament of Hope podcast highlighted her photography studies and its integration into her post-acting life, alongside reflections on career chapters and personal growth. Earlier that year, in a March Substack discussion titled "Ask Around," she offered advice on career exploration for young people, underscoring curiosity and authenticity while noting her selective approach to professional pursuits. ===== END CLEANED SECTION =====

Personal life

Marriage and family

Sutherland married actor John Pankow in 1986. The couple met in New York City during her early theater work, where both were involved in stage productions. They have one daughter, Eleanore, born in the early 1990s. In 1993, shortly after her daughter's birth, the family relocated from New York to Los Angeles to prioritize Eleanore's upbringing, with Sutherland initially intending to step back from acting. Later, in 1999, they moved temporarily to Italy for a school year to support Eleanore's schooling and allow her to learn Italian, during which Sutherland commuted back to the U.S. for her work on Buffy the Vampire Slayer.[https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0840133/bio/) One anecdote from this period involves Sutherland bringing Eleanore to the Buffy set while filming the episode "Gingerbread" in 1999. The marriage has endured for nearly 40 years as of 2025, with the couple residing full-time in , while maintaining houses in and New York.

Photography and other interests

Following the conclusion of her role on , Sutherland enrolled in a photography course at , where she qualified as a professional photographer. She subsequently established her own studio specializing in portraiture, allowing her to channel her creative energies into capturing personal and familial moments. This pursuit marked a deliberate shift from the demands of full-time , providing her with a flexible outlet to document everyday life and preserve family histories through images and interviews. Sutherland's photography often integrates with her personal life, as seen in her emphasis on portraying ordinary scenes and intimate portraits that reflect seasonal living and familial bonds while residing full-time in . There, she has embraced complementary hobbies such as —aligning plantings with lunar cycles and focusing on seasonal eating—and maintaining a wood stove, which underscore her appreciation for hands-on, grounded activities. These interests highlight her transition to a more balanced lifestyle, blending artistic expression with domestic tranquility. After returning from the temporary 1999 relocation, the family settled back in the U.S. but later moved full-time to . In recent years, Sutherland has extended her passions into mentorship, offering career advice to young people through public discussions. In a 2025 , she encouraged youth to explore vocations by questioning adults about their daily work, likes, and dislikes, while urging them to align pursuits with innate curiosities rather than external prestige. This advocacy reflects her own journey of diversifying beyond , fostering curiosity in others as a way to navigate life's chapters.

Filmography

Film roles

Sutherland made her film debut in 1986, portraying a secretary in the Ivan Reitman-directed legal thriller , starring and , which grossed approximately $50 million worldwide. In 1989, she played Mae Thompson, the supportive neighbor to the Szalinski family, in the Disney family comedy , directed by ; the film became a major box office success, earning over $222 million globally and spawning a franchise. In 2016, she appeared as Marjorie Ames in the thriller Russian Doll. Sutherland provided the voice for Naoko Yoshioka (Haru's mother) in the English dub of the 2002 animated feature (U.S. release 2005), directed by , a whimsical tale of a girl transported to a cat kingdom. In 2012, she appeared as Meryl Fowler, the mother of the bride, in the The Perfect Wedding, a lighthearted story of family dynamics and pretense during holiday celebrations. In 2020, she played Pat Lonergan in the dramedy Before/During/After.

Television roles

Sutherland began her television career with guest appearances in the . She portrayed Pamela Jones in the episode "Let's Steele a Plot" of the detective series in 1984. From 1986 to 1987, she appeared as Martha Weston in two episodes of the comedy Easy Street. These early roles established her presence in episodic television, often in supporting maternal or everyday character parts. In the , Sutherland continued with guest spots, including Ariel Lange in the episode "Daddy's Girl" of the teen sitcom in 1994. Her breakthrough came with the role of , the devoted mother of the titular character, on the supernatural drama from 1997 to 2003. She appeared in 58 episodes across the series' run, providing emotional grounding amid the show's fantastical elements; notable appearances include the pilot "," where Joyce relocates to Sunnydale with her daughter, and the poignant season 5 episode "The Body," highlighting her character's sudden illness and death. The role earned her recognition for embodying a relatable parental figure in a genre series. Following Buffy, Sutherland took on recurring and guest roles in various dramas. In 2002, she guest-starred as Joyce Moore in an episode of the medical family series Providence. She appeared as Elmira Forsythe in two episodes of the 2008 Western miniseries , a to , depicting the character's involvement in frontier life. That same year, she played Didi Gleason in an episode of the fantasy crime series . In 2010, Sutherland had a recurring role as Dean McKenzie in four episodes of the soap opera . Her later television work includes the guest role of Parker's Mother in the 2013 episode "The Fall" of the thriller series . No scripted television roles have been reported for Sutherland since 2013 as of November 2025.

Voice work and video games

Kristine Sutherland lent her voice to the English dub of the animated film (2002; U.S. release 2005), portraying Haru's mother, Naoko Yoshioka, a supporting character who provides maternal guidance amid the story's fantastical elements. This role marked one of her contributions to dubbing, showcasing her versatility in animated media beyond live-action television. In video games, Sutherland provided additional voices for (2013), credited as part of the "local population" to enhance the game's expansive open-world environment in Los Santos. This minor but integral role involved voicing incidental characters, reflecting her occasional forays into interactive entertainment. No further details on recording sessions for these projects have been publicly documented.

References

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