Friday, February 06, 2009
Kilmer Says He's Still Considering Gov. Race
By Deborah Baker
Associated Press
SANTA FE Holy hornet's nest, Batman! The New Mexico governor's mansion?
Fresh from the inauguration a commemorative coin still in his pocket actor Val Kilmer is pondering the pull of public service.
Some "serious people" want him to consider running for governor, he said in an interview with The Associated Press.
"I'm just looking for ways to be contributive," Kilmer said. "And if that ends up being where I can make a substantial contribution, then I'll run."
But there's no decision yet.
"It's really day to day," he said.
New Mexicans elect a governor again in 2010, when Democrat Bill Richardson's second term ends.
Kilmer's screen credits include Batman in "Batman Forever" in 1995 and brash fighter pilot Lt. Tom "Iceman" Kazansky in the 1986 hit "Top Gun." He also starred as rock icon Jim Morrison in the 1991 Oliver Stone film, "The Doors," and played gunslinger Doc Holliday in "Tombstone" in 1993.
Kilmer, who lives on a ranch southeast of Santa Fe, says he has been responsible as an artist, a parent he has two children with his former wife, British actress Joanne Whalley and a community member, "but I've never done much in a public way."
That includes voting.
"I haven't voted very much," he acknowledges although he cast a ballot for Barack Obama from Bulgaria, where he was filming.
Before that, Kilmer hadn't voted in New Mexico since he registered in 1992, according to registration records.
Kilmer, 49, said he hasn't sought much recognition for his charitable work nationally and internationally in Africa, for example, or in post-Katrina New Orleans, where he heads in a couple of weeks. He'll be celebrity king in the pre-Mardi Gras Krewe of Bacchus parade and visit Children's Hospital.
"In general, as an actor, I didn't choose to be very vocal about stuff," he said.
And he's not a politician, he said.
"So I'm not going to try to become one," he added. "I have no interest in being governor of New Mexico for ... fame and power."
Nor would he have to run a conventional campaign, he said.
As an entertainer, he'd benefit from an indisputable fact : People want to meet him.
"If I run, I'm going to be the next governor," he predicted.
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