Montreal Gazette

Bolt waiting to finally exhale

Fastest man on Earth says film captures precisely who he is

- TIM REYNOLDS The Associated Press

KINGSTON, JAMAICA Usain Bolt is now a movie star. He refuses to say he’s an actor.

Such a distinctio­n is important for the Jamaican sprinting great and nine-time Olympic champion. Until his competitiv­e career ends next year, Bolt will continue playing only one role — that of the world’s fastest man, someone who beat the odds to acquire immense fame and fortune on his way to becoming one of the biggest stars in global sport.

As such, it’s not a made-forHollywo­od version of himself that takes centre stage in the documentar­y I Am Bolt, which is being released Nov. 27.

The Bolt who is in the film is the very same one that his friends, family and other members of his closeknit inner sanctum have seen for as long as they’ve known him.

“I wasn’t an actor,” Bolt said. “I wasn’t trying to push a different person forward.”

This is Bolt, a behind-the-scenes view of the superstar that took about two years to make and has him holding the camera at times. The idea in large part surrounds Bolt’s quest for the so-called triple-triple — three gold medals in three events at three consecutiv­e Olympics, something no sprinter in the history of the sport had ever accomplish­ed.

He pulled it off, to little surprise, at the Rio Games.

And then he could finally exhale, knowing this film would have the perfect ending.

“Oh my God, you have no idea the pressure that I was under,” Bolt said in a recent interview as the production was winding down. “But I live for these moments. I love the pressure. And I have all the confidence in myself and my coach and the team I have that it would come true for me. The pressure was there, but the confidence was always there, which made it much easier.”

Bolt agreed to make this film after realizing he would be able to convince both his fans and his detractors that what they see on the track — a free-spirited showman who tries to be stoic and serious only when absolutely necessary — is what they would get if they tagged along with him on a typical day.

He shows off some of the spoils of his life, whether it’s the party scene or travelling or enjoying luxury.

He also shows how all that is possible, with 5:30 a.m. workouts that he groaned through and the rigours of what’s needed to keep an elite athlete in top physical condition.

“I live a simple life, you know what I mean?” Bolt said.

“One of the things that made me really want to do this was people always saying: ‘Aw, this is not really who he is. He’s not always laughing. It’s not always fun for him.’ This is who I am. I really wanted to show people this is who I am.

“I like to have fun. I like to chill. I like to go out. That’s just a part of me. The part that people don’t see, that’s the part I want to show people behind the scenes, the hard work.”

The triple-triple was the capper to a storied Olympic career.

But without those three gold medals from Rio de Janeiro, Bolt would have felt somewhat unfulfille­d. Bolt’s plan is for the world championsh­ips next year in London to be his final meet.

From there, who knows.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The documentar­y I Am Bolt reveals what Usain Bolt hopes is a more complete picture of how he became a nine-time Olympic champion.
DAVID J. PHILLIP/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The documentar­y I Am Bolt reveals what Usain Bolt hopes is a more complete picture of how he became a nine-time Olympic champion.

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