Robert Redford: A tribute to Hollywood’s golden boy with a Midas touch

Robert Redford during a photocall for the film ‘All is Lost’ presented out of competition at the 66th edition of the Cannes Film Festival on May 22, 2013. Photo: Christine Poujoulat/AFP

With his all-American good looks, Robert Redford, who died on Tuesday aged 89, was the eternal Sundance Kid, a US screen legend both in front of and behind the camera.

The tousled-haired heartthrob made his breakthrough alongside Paul Newman as the affable outlaw in the Western Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid in 1969.

After 20 years as one of Hollywood’s hottest actors, he moved behind the camera becoming an Oscar-winning director and co-founded the Sundance Film Festival, which became a springboard for a new generation of independent film-makers like Quentin Tarantino.

“Few careers have had such an impact on the history of cinema,” said French producer Alain Terzian before awarding him the French equivalent of an Oscar in 2019.

Outlaw

But the athletic young Redford’s beginnings were far from a smooth ascent to the top. The son of an accountant from Santa Monica, California, his mother died in 1955, a year after he finished high school.

He won a scholarship to the University of Colorado thanks to his baseball skills, but lost it a year later because of his heavy drinking.

Redford spent the next months travelling around Europe before enrolling in the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in 1959.

After various television roles, his first big screen break was in the romantic comedy Barefoot in the Park (1967) opposite Jane Fonda.

Two years later his career went stellar with Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid about two outlaw buddies who flee to Bolivia to escape US authorities.

The film became an instant classic, launching Redford and burnishing the career of the older Newman, who became a lifelong friend.

The pair also teamed up as 1930s con artists in The Sting (1973), which won Redford his only nomination for an Oscar for best actor.

Paul Newman (left) and Robert Redford attending the Sundance Institute’s 25th anniversary celebration at Metropolitan Pavilion in New York City on November 6, 2006. Photo: Evan Agostini/Getty Images North America/AFP

Behind the camera

Now a household name, he starred in a succession of major films such as The Great Gatsby (1974), Three Days of the Condor (1975) and the critically acclaimed All the President’s Men (1976), playing Bob Woodward, one of the Washington Post journalists who broke the Watergate scandal.

In another career high, he won an Oscar for his directorial debut with Ordinary People in 1980.

The baseball classic The Natural followed in 1984 before Redford had another generation of women swooning in the epic romance Out of Africa (1985), in which he starred alongside Meryl Streep.

Cap: Robert Redford and director Sydney Pollack during the International Film Festival in Cannes in May 1972. Photo: AFP

He went on to star with a young Brad Pitt in A River Runs Through It (1992) and the Oscar-nominated Quiz Show (1994).

“At one time I thought when I was making films… that might have an effect on the country or the future,” he said in 2007. “I don’t think so anymore.”

“If you look at All The President’s Men and what it was saying about the relationship between the media and government and the corporate powers, and then look where we are now, it’s worse than it was,” he added.

“Robert Redford’s work… always represents the man himself: the intellectual, the artist, the cowboy” − Barbra Streisand

“Robert Redford’s work… always represents the man himself: the intellectual, the artist, the cowboy,” said singer Barbra Streisand as she presented the avowed liberal and environmentalist with a Lifetime Achievement Oscar in 2002.

The actress, who played his lover in The Way We Were (1973), said: “He’s always interesting, he’s always interested. He’s very smart, very private, he’s self-assured, but shy.”

Robert Redford holding his honorary Oscar with US actress and singer Barbra Streisand at the 74th Academy Awards on March 24, 2002. Photo: Mike Nelson/AFP

Indie guru

Redford always saw his part in launching the independent Sundance Film Festival in 1985 as one of his greatest achievements.

Created to help aspiring film-makers disaffected with Hollywood’s commercialism and lack of diversity, it has fostered leading independent directors such as Jim Jarmusch, Tarantino and Steven Soderbergh.

In 2013 Redford said that by pursuing the indie path, he had ensured his own survival in the movie business.

“Had I given in to living in the (Hollywood) system, I don’t know that I would be here right now.” 

The Sundance Egyptian Theatre on Main Street in Park City, Utah, displaying a message honouring late actor Robert Redford on the day of his death. Photo: George Frey/AFP

 #Metoo

Aged 76, he was back on screen for one of his meatiest starring roles in years, a solo performance as a lost-at-sea yachtsman in All Is Lost (2013).

He also had a role in Marvel Studios’ superhero blockbuster Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014) and a cameo in its record-shattering Avengers: Endgame (2019).

The official trailer for All is Lost (2013).

In 2018 Redford said that the greatest change in Hollywood over his 60-year career had been the #MeToo movement, a “tipping point” he said would change the industry’s attitudes towards women and sexual misconduct.  

Redford had four children with his first wife, Lola Van Wagenen, one of whom died as an infant. 

He married German artist and longtime girlfriend Sibylle Szaggars in 2009.

The actor and his wife Sibylle Szaggars at the 69th Venice Film Festival on September 6, 2012. Photo: Tiziana Fabi/AFP
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