Robert Duvall, the Academy Award-winning actor renowned for his portrayals of complex characters across a six-decade career, has died, his family announced. He was 90 years vintage.
Duvall’s passing prompted an outpouring of tributes from fellow actors and filmmakers, celebrating a career marked by versatility and a quiet intensity. Alec Baldwin shared a video on social media, recalling Duvall’s hauntingly silent performance in To Kill a Mockingbird. “Duvall, of course, occupies a very unusual place in my life,” Baldwin said. “When he did To Kill a Mockingbird, he just destroyed you. In his performance, he didn’t employ a single word and leaves you stunned. Those scenes with Duvall are simply impactful.”
Stephen King remembered Duvall with a quote from Apocalypse Now, a film in which Duvall delivered the iconic line, “I love the smell of napalm in the morning.” King wrote, “I love the smell of napalm in the morning. Rest in peace, Robert Duvall.”
Director Scott Cooper, who collaborated with Duvall on Crazy Heart and The Pale Blue Eye, described the actor as his “most vital artistic mentor.” Cooper stated, “He produced and acted in my first film, Crazy Heart, and from that moment on, he read almost every script I wrote, offering his quiet wisdom and unwavering belief in me. He was my fiercest advocate, not with grand gestures, but with honesty, rigor, and a love for the work itself.”
Born January 5, 1931, in San Diego, California, Duvall spent his formative years in Annapolis, Maryland, the son of a U.S. Navy admiral. He studied drama and briefly served in the Army before honing his craft at Novel York’s Neighborhood Playhouse School under the tutelage of Sanford Meisner. He married four times and, according to his family, is not survived by any children.
Duvall’s career spanned a remarkable range of roles, from the pragmatic lawyer Tom Hagen in Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather (1972) and its 1973 sequel – a role that cemented his place in cinematic history alongside Marlon Brando and Al Pacino – to the troubled country singer Bad Blake in Crazy Heart. He also appeared in films such as M*A*S*H, Apocalypse Now, The Plague, The Apostle, Assassination Tango, Jack Reacher, and, more recently, Hustle and The Pale Blue Eye (2022).
Despite seven Academy Award nominations, Duvall won the Oscar only once, in 1984, for his performance in Tender Mercies. Accepting the award, he expressed his gratitude for being recognized among “such talented people” and emphasized that the true value of awards lay in celebrating the best of cinema.
Beyond his Oscar win, Duvall received a BAFTA Award for Apocalypse Now, two Primetime Emmy Awards for Broken Trail, four Golden Globe Awards – for Apocalypse Now, Tender Mercies, Lonesome Dove, and Stalin – and a Screen Actors Guild Award for A Civil Action. He was also honored at international film festivals, including Venice, and at the Independent Spirit Awards.
The family has stated that no formal memorial service will be held, in accordance with Duvall’s wishes.