Robert Duvall is dead

  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
Actor Robert Duvall has died — he brought a compassionate center to edgy hard roles
February 16, 20261:39 PM ET
Glen Weldon at NPR headquarters in Washington, D.C., March 19, 2019. (photo by Allison Shelley)
Glen Weldon

Robert Duvall in February 2005.
Robert Duvall in February 2005.

Mark Mainz/Getty Images
Over a long career, actor Robert Duvall brought a wide range of characters to life, from tough Marines to wistful, tender-hearted cowboys.

Duvall died on Sunday. His wife, Luciana, posted on Facebook on Monday, "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."

He was 95 years old.

In his first major movie role, in 1962, Robert Duvall appeared in only a handful of scenes. He didn't have a single word of dialogue. Yet the actor managed to make an indelible, star-making impression. The film was To Kill a Mockingbird. The role was Boo Radley.

Boo is the small town's recluse; he spends the movie as little more than a mysterious shape, cloaked in shadows. But in the film's final moments, he steps out nervously, into the light.

Duvall's features soften, he smiles slightly — and the menacing presence of Boo Radley transforms before our eyes into a figure radiating kindness and concern. The pure, elegantly nuanced physicality of that moment launched his career.

Robert Duvall came from a military family. He told NPR's All Things Considered in 2010 that he didn't so much discover acting as have it thrust upon him by his parents.

"I was at a small college in the Midwest," he said. "It was the end of the Korean war. I did go in the army eventually but [only] to get through college, to find something that would give me a sense of worth, where I got my first 'A'. It was my parents I had to thank for that."

As a young actor, he ended up in New York City, where he palled around with Gene Hackman, James Caan and his roommate Dustin Hoffman. It was over many coffees and conversations with them at Cromwell's Drug Store on 50th and 6th Avenue that he struck upon his personal philosophy of acting. His approach was direct and unpretentious, as he explained to the TV series Oprah's Masterclass in 2015: "Basically just talk and listen, and keep it simple. And however it goes, it goes."

After Mockingbird, his parts grew bigger: Films like Bullitt, True Grit, and M*A*S*H, in which he originated the role of the uptight Major Frank Burns.

But it was his role in 1972's The Godfather, as Tom Hagen, the Corleone family lawyer, that changed everything. Amid the film's operatic swirl of emotion, Tom Hagen was an island of calmness and restraint, so it might seem odd that Duvall often said it was one of his favorite roles of his career.

But his strength as an actor was always how unforced he seemed, how true. Others around him emoted, showily and outwardly — he always directed his energy inward, to find a character's heart. This was true even when he played roles with a harder edge.

In two films that came out in 1979 — The Great Santini and Apocalypse Now, both of which earned him Oscar nominations — Duvall played military men. In Santini, he was a bluff, belligerent Marine who bullied his sensitive son in an attempt to harden him into a man.

In Francis Ford Coppola's epically trippy Vietnam War film Apocalypse Now, Duvall was all charismatic swagger as Lieutenant Colonel Kilgore, who calls down an airstrike and delivers one of the most quotable lines in film history: "I love the smell of napalm in the morning. ... It smells like ... victory."


YouTube
As he told Terry Gross on Fresh Air in 1996, the words followed him for the rest of his life.

"Yeah, that was a wonderful line," he said. "People come up to me and quote it to me like it's this in thing between me and them. Like they're the only ones who ever thought of it, but it happens with everyone in the same way."

He finally won the Oscar for 1983's Tender Mercies. He played a recovering alcoholic country singer trying to start his life over. Duvall did his own singing in that film.

He directed 1997's The Apostle, which he also wrote, produced and starred in, as an evangelical preacher on the outs with God. It earned him his fifth Oscar nomination for acting.

Over the course of an acting career that spanned decades, Duvall appeared in over 90 films. He took traditional, old Hollywood archetypes of masculinity — soldiers, cops and cowboys — and imbued them with notes of melancholy, a vulnerability that made them come alive onscreen.


Archive coming soon

Edit: https://archive.is/wip/g3R1N
 
I still preferred his portrayal of general lee in gods and generals over martin sheen's in gettysburg. I still don't see why that movie got such a bad reputation. Because it had a pro confederate slant when showing the confederate side of things? That is the point and seems to have been missed by alot of people. The final film in the trilogy, if it had been made would have done a similar thing from the union perspective. They explicitly stated this at the time. Also liked him in open range - and if you're a western fan and haven't seen that I highly recommend it

and everybody forgets he was the creepy priest on the swing in the beginning of invasion of the body snatchers and a surprisingly large number of people aren't aware he was in mash
 
The guys of American Thinker posted this tribute to Robert Duvall.

Actor Robert Duvall’s quiet testimony on screen​

From Frank Burns to The Apostle, a six-decade career wrestled honestly with faith.

Greg Richter | February 16, 2026

ctor Robert Duvall, who passed away Sunday at 95, captivated audiences for more than six decades, embodying an extraordinary range of characters — from the silent Boo Radley in To Kill a Mockingbird (1962) to the swaggering Lt. Col. Bill Kilgore in Apocalypse Now (1979), who famously declared his love for “the smell of napalm in the morning.”


Over a career spanning more than 100 roles, Duvall repeatedly gravitated toward spiritual terrain. He portrayed characters reflecting nearly every shade of Christianity — from the Pharisaical to the flawed but faithful.

Most notable from the hypocritical class: Maj. Frank Burns in M*A*S*H (1970).

Before the sniveling TV version made famous by Larry Linville, Duvall played the philandering, Bible-thumping Army surgeon on film. Burns’ first scene finds him on his knees beside his cot, a large family Bible in hand, putting on a theatrical display of prayer — even as he blames inexperienced corpsmen for his own medical blunders.

He teams up with head nurse Maj. Margaret Houlihan to snitch on the antics of the other (far more competent) doctors, and his married self eventually lands in a compromising position that ends with Burns being hauled off in a straitjacket.
 
His mere presence alone seemed to outclass anyone else on the set - even when he was silent.
 
Back
Top Bottom