All posts tagged: robert duvall

Robert Duvall Remembered by Tender Mercies Director Bruce Beresford

Robert Duvall Remembered by Tender Mercies Director Bruce Beresford

Following the death of the legendary actor Robert Duvall on Sunday at the age of 95, Bruce Beresford, the Australian filmmaker who directed Duvall in 1983’s Tender Mercies, for which Duvall won the best actor Oscar in 1984, shared his memories of Duvall exclusively with The Hollywood Reporter. As you can read below, Beresford — whose credits also include 1979’s Breaker Morant, 1986’s Crimes of the Heart and 1989’s Driving Miss Daisy, which won the best picture Oscar — remembers the actor as “surly” but “absolutely great.” * * * I never saw Duvall again after Tender Mercies. It was on in Cannes, but I was filming something else, so I never got to Cannes. And then we were both nominated for Oscars, but I was somewhere else filming. The film was written by Horton Foote. Horton had written other roles for Bob. In fact, Horton suggested Bob for his first film, To Kill a Mockingbird. And Horton wrote Tender Mercies specifically for Bob. I had the script sent to me by the Hobels [Philip Hobel …

Robert Duvall Could Go Scarily Big or Hauntingly Small: Critic Tribute

Robert Duvall Could Go Scarily Big or Hauntingly Small: Critic Tribute

When people talk about an actor with range, they usually mean the wide variety of roles they can play. De Niro going from Travis Bickle to Jake LaMotta. Brando going from On the Waterfront to Guys and Dolls. Pacino playing both Michael Corleone and Tony Montana, two gangsters with diametrically opposed approaches to criminality. The same holds true for Robert Duvall, a tremendous screen actor who died on Monday at the age of 95, and whose credits — over 150 in a career spanning six decades — include everything from a Texas Ranger (Lonesome Dove) to a Texas outlaw (True Grit); a sinister TV boss (Network) to an enlightened L.A. cop (Colors); an ex-con pulling off one last job (The Outfit) to an aging rancher protecting his land (Open Range); a conniving sports journalist (The Natural) to an editor-in-chief seeking redemption (The Paper) to a Soviet dictator (Stalin). There are a hundred other examples in Duvall’s vast filmography, which lasted all the way till he was over 90, when he held his final roles as …

Robert Duvall’s Life in Photos

Robert Duvall’s Life in Photos

Fans of Robert Duvall are mourning his passing on Sunday February 15 at age 95. The star of films including 1962’s To Kill a Mockingbird (he played Boo Radley), Robert Altman’s M*A*S*H, and Network began his career on stage, then working alongside fellow icons Gene Hackman and Dustin Hoffman. In the 1970s and ’80s, Robert Duvall was a big-screen mainstay, even winning the Academy Award in 1983 for his role as a down-on-his-luck country singer in Tender Mercies. Below, find 28 images that barely scratch the surface of his epic career. Source link

Robert Duvall, Oscar-Winning Actor, Dies At Age 95

Robert Duvall, Oscar-Winning Actor, Dies At Age 95

As Tom Hagen, the trusted consigliere to the Corleone crime family in The Godfather saga, Robert Duvall did what he did better than any other actor of his generation—a generation that fed and fueled the New Hollywood revolution of the late ‘60s and ‘70s—he listened. Make no mistake, Duvall was a bona fide Hollywood star with seven Oscar nominations and one win (for 1983’s Tender Mercies) to his credit. But deep down, the California native was a character actor through and through. On screen, he was authentic and selfless, pushing those around him to shine a little brighter than they otherwise would have. Showboating just wasn’t his style. Instead, he propped up others like a reinforced steel buttress, never demanding the close-up or the girl. No one could turn a side dish into an entrée like Duvall did during his brilliant seven-decade career. “It all begins with and ends with talking and listening,” Duvall once said. “I talk, you listen; you talk, I listen…. That’s the journey in an individual scene. There’s no right or …