Tanzania experience changes life forever
Kim Coates is known to “Sons of Anarchy” fans for his portrayal of Alex “Tig” Trager. The prolific actor has been busy. Besides “The Land,” which recently premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, he has five other projects set to release this year, including “The True Memoirs of an International Assassin” (with Andy Garcia) and “Goon: Last of the Enforcers” (with Liev Schreiber). An edited version of our conversation follows.
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My wife and I visited Tanzania to see our daughter, who was working there for a nonprofit. When we experienced the people, the mud huts, the safaris, it was just beyond magical, and we'll never forget it, ever. It was an incredible, life-changing travel experience.
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Being Canadian, I have a big family with lots of crazy, beautiful relatives. [For three straight years, starting] when I was 14 years old, we would all meet at this Christmas lodge in Alberta, where there were more fireplaces than logs. We played amazing games of Risk, had shenanigans on the frozen pond, jumped into a snowbank from an uber-hot sauna and had cinnamon bun-eating contests. I mean, it was incredible! It was so much fun that it was like being in Vegas with no clocks on the wall, and we just kept going.
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My cabin. It's located on a lakefront in one of the most beautiful parts of Canada. You've got to bring bathing suits, you've got to bring hiking gear, you've got to bring a good attitude and you've got to be ready to chillax.
I was 9 years old, traveling with my hockey team in northern Saskatchewan. I'll never forget having colored marshmallows with hot chocolate. I never knew colored marshmallows existed, let alone having them with hot chocolate.
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Since I've been able to travel the world, I think I subconsciously incorporate a lot of it into my work. How lucky am I that I'm able to, you know? For example, last year I was shooting my movie “Strange Weather” with Holly Hunter. I was able to travel to Maine to meet the real guy who I was about to play in that film. I hung out with him; I learned his accent from him, I ate the same food he did. When I get to travel, I think I soak it all in as much as I can.
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There's something about the people in the Maritimes [Eastern Canada] that remind me so much of home. There's just something similar about the people from there and the people from the prairies. They'd all just give you the shirt off their backs, and there's nothing wrong with that.
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Iceland.
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Paris, New York, London, Montreal and Vancouver … not necessarily in that order.