R.I.P Robert Duvall, Oscar-winning actor of unlimited range
Duvall, who appeared in films like The Godfather and Network, was 95.
Photo by Bill Nation/Sygma via Getty Images
Robert Duvall, the firm screen presence that brought authority and soul to some of the greatest movies ever made, has died. The Oscar-, Emmy-, and Golden Globe-winning actor created more than 145 films, each benefitting from Duvall’s stern looks and serene presence. His wife Luciana shared the news on Facebook. “Yesterday we said goodbye to my beloved husband, cherished friend, and one of the greatest actors of our time. Bob passed away peacefully at home, surrounded by love and comfort,” reads her statement. “To the world, he was an Academy Award-winning actor, a director, a storyteller. To me, he was simply everything. His passion for his craft was matched only by his deep love for characters, a great meal, and holding court. For each of his many roles, Bob gave everything to his characters and to the truth of the human spirit they represented. In doing so, he leaves something lasting and unforgettable to us all. Thank you for the years of support you showed Bob and for giving us this time and privacy to celebrate the memories he leaves behind.” Duvall was 95 years old.
Often considered one of the greatest actors of his or any generation, Duvall came up at a time when Hollywood overflowed with subtle and explosive leading men. However, while the paranoia of Al Pacino and Robert De Niro added an unknowability to their performances, Duvall always anchored himself to a heartland believability. Shrinking in the corner, his heavy brow weighing his hangdog head down, Duvall often held the foundation, providing degrees of irritability and warmth to gangster films, westerns, comedies, and dramas with commitment and experience. Few screen actors are as believable as Duvall. Now, there’s one fewer.
Unlike many of his Godfather counterparts, Duvall was not a method actor. “I just follow the script,” he told Stephen Colbert in 2021. “One scene to the next scene […] You talk, I listen, that’s the beginning and end of it right now.” Duvall always preferred playing characters rather than leading men, which probably explains how he became the standout of so many classics, particularly for Francis Ford Coppola. Duvall was the director’s secret weapon across Coppola’s most successful run of films. The pair first worked together on The Rain People, a role, as fate would have it, Duvall picked up after Rip Torn dropped out.
As the outcast consigliere Tom Hagen, Duvall made one of his signature roles—one that seemingly resembled his actual personality. Always a step removed from the center of the action, Hagen, the Jewish surrogate son of Vito Corleone, was the best pick to run the organization. The mirror reflection of first-born Sonny (James Caan), Hagen is haunted and frustrated by the limits of his role within the family. Duvall brought a bit of that buried pain to the fringes of the screen, always listening and observing. But Hagan’s quiet calculations and level-headed strategies defined the brooding Duvall; another role for Coppola brought out the bluster.
Duvall continued to work with Coppola throughout the ‘70s, nabbing an uncredited role in The Conversation before making his other signature role in Apocalypse Now. Showing he could yell with the best of them, Duvall fired off memorable lines at a machine gun clip as the Lt. Col. Bill Kilgore, a surf-obsessed war hawk who loves the smell of Napalm in the morning. Duvall received his first Academy Award nomination for his performance and helped change the way people heard Wagner’s “Ride Of The Valkyries.”
In between jobs for Coppola, Duvall starred as television executive Frank Hackett in Network. Peter Finch’s “I’m mad as hell monologue” may be the most oft-quoted from the film, but Duvall’s firing of Max Schumacher (William Holden) remains just as explosive and precise. Known for being the quiet man out, Duvall drips with personal satisfaction as he unloads on Holden.