Robert Redford (1936 - 2025)
It’s been five years since I last wrote about the passing of someone whose work I admired. Not because there’s been a shortage of such people dying. Sadly, it happens all too often. I stopped because I was experiencing my own grief over the loss of my parents in 2020 and 2022. So I wrote about other things instead and got out of the habit of “RIP” posts. Yet the recent death of Robert Redford has compelled me to write something, because he was so many things. An old school star from an important era of US filmmaking. He was also a much better actor than some think, as well as a talented director who didn’t just use his fame to make vanity projects. His passing was somewhat of a shock because I had seen him recently make a cameo in the TV show Dark Winds, of which he was an executive producer. It was his last onscreen appearance.
It’s been five years since I last wrote about the passing of someone whose work I admired. Not because there’s been a shortage of such people dying. Sadly, it happens all too often. I stopped because I was experiencing my own grief over the loss of my parents in 2020 and 2022. So I wrote about other things instead and got out of the habit of “RIP” posts. Yet the recent death of Robert Redford has compelled me to write something, because he was so many things. An old school star from an important era of US filmmaking. He was also a much better actor than some think, as well as a talented director who didn’t just use his fame to make vanity projects. His passing was somewhat of a shock because I had seen him recently make a cameo in the TV show Dark Winds, of which he was an executive producer. It was his last onscreen appearance.
Robert Redford came to my attention, during the seventies when I was growing up. It was a time of newspaper adverts for the latest film releases, something that I frequently perused having gained a liking for film and the promise of seventies film poster art. I remember seeing promotional material for Three Days of the Condor (1975) and being enthralled by it. I also recollect radio adverts, which were big at the time and hearing snatches of dialogue and suppressed gunfire. I finally saw the film eight years later and it lived up to my expectations. Redford’s character was resourceful and far from indestructible, in this well crafted thriller. His charm and charisma were self-evident but he had other qualities that helped him rise above his matinee idol persona that he was trying to break free from at the time.
Slowly, I caught up with many of his most iconic roles such as Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969), The Sting (1973), and All the President’s Men (1976). It was clear that Robert Redford was growing as an actor and his choice of roles became increasingly more complex and nuanced throughout the eighties and nineties. He also tried his hand behind the camera, with his directorial debut Ordinary People (1980). The story of the implosion of a wealthy family from Illinois, following the accidental death of one of their two sons and the attempted suicide of the other, was deftly handled with Redford garnering praise for his emotional intelligence. About this time, he also established a yearly independent film festival which was eventually renamed the Sundance Film Festival. Success outside of acting led to him establishing two production companies, Wildwood Enterprises, Inc. and Sundance Films and financing such titles as A River Runs Through It (1992) and The Motor Cycle Diaries (2004).
Another surprising aspect of Robert Redford was his activism with regard to environmental issues and Native American rights. At a time when much of Hollywood was awash with stars revelling in their own iniquities, seeing someone of that ilk with a modicum of principle and concern for things outside of themselves was refreshing. Furthermore, as filmmaking and its associated culture evolved over time (and seldom for the better), it was reassuring to see someone from a prior golden age, still acting, making films and being relevant. Which is why so many of us just assumed he’d go on forever. As previously mentioned, his latest endeavour was bringing a new adaptation of the Leaphorn & Chee novel series by Tony Hillerman to television, with the gritty and authentic drama Dark Winds. And then he was gone.
A few years ago, I worked my way through all the episodes of The Twilight Zone television series. I was pleasantly surprised to see Robert Redford in an early role, in a story titled Nothing in the Dark,. He was young, handsome and certainly had a cinematic quality about him. He got far on his sex appeal at the start of his career yet was fortunate to have other talents at his disposal as he matured. When age changed him, as it does to us all, he still had that easy going charm, tempered with worldly experience. It’s what made his final cinematic role in The Old Man & the Gun (2014) so enjoyable. It is often considered cliched to state that the passing of someone of this nature is the end of an era but in Robert Redford’s case, it really is. There are no modern equivalents.