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BumRushDaShow

(167,570 posts)
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 01:21 PM 17 hrs ago

Robert Duvall, All-Purpose Actor With Few Peers, Dies at 95

Source: Hollywood Reporter

February 16, 2026 10:05am


Robert Duvall, the steely-eyed actor whose performances in the first two Godfather films, Apocalypse Now, The Great Santini, Lonesome Dove and The Apostle made him one of the finest actors of any generation, has died. He was 95.

Duvall, who received an Academy Award — one of his seven Oscar nominations — for his performance as an alcoholic country singer in Tender Mercies (1983), died Sunday at home on his Virginia ranch, his wife, Luciana, announced.

“To the world, he was an Academy Award-winning actor, a director, a storyteller. To me, he was simply everything,” she said in a statement. “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 distinguished himself as an actor of major promise — even though he didn’t have a line of dialogue — when he portrayed the reclusive Boo Radley in To Kill a Mockingbird (1962). Horton Foote, the film’s screenwriter, personally recommended him for the role after seeing Duvall onstage in New York a few years earlier in Foote’s The Midnight Caller.


Read more: https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/robert-duvall-dead-godfather-apocalypse-now-1236506861/

46 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Robert Duvall, All-Purpose Actor With Few Peers, Dies at 95 (Original Post) BumRushDaShow 17 hrs ago OP
Duvall sure could cowboy, too. Kid Berwyn 17 hrs ago #1
Lonesome Dove...one of my favorites of all time! RIP mtngirl47 16 hrs ago #11
Mine too Gak73 14 hrs ago #20
Open Range..... SergeStorms 15 hrs ago #16
He was one of the legitimately greatest Hey Joe 17 hrs ago #2
That performance as Boo Radley is underappreciated. ificandream 17 hrs ago #3
RIP maxsolomon 17 hrs ago #4
What a loss. DenaliDemocrat 17 hrs ago #5
Yes, DD Leghorn21 17 hrs ago #6
Not too many Godfather actors still alive. LoveSucky 17 hrs ago #7
Al Pacino is still around BumRushDaShow 16 hrs ago #8
I had read the book first, so I knew it was coming FakeNoose 16 hrs ago #13
Pacino was much younger than Brando or Duvall BumRushDaShow 16 hrs ago #15
I read the book, but was glad the film didn't include AdamGG 4 hrs ago #42
Didn't know he was still alive Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin 16 hrs ago #9
A great actor. milestogo 16 hrs ago #10
RIP area51 16 hrs ago #12
I loved/hated him in "A Civil Action". I kept forgetting I was watching an actor, not a real-life villain. eppur_se_muova 16 hrs ago #14
"" AllaN01Bear 15 hrs ago #17
One of the greats. R.I.P. OGBuzz 15 hrs ago #18
Duvall and Gene Hackman roomed with Dustin Hoffman BigmanPigman 14 hrs ago #19
Oh my gosh, I never knew that FakeNoose 13 hrs ago #21
While Duvall was uncredited they worked together in Copolla's The Conversation. pecosbob 1 hr ago #44
I love the movie "Tender Mercies" IcyPeas 13 hrs ago #22
Oh, man........ Bayard 12 hrs ago #23
RIP mdbl 11 hrs ago #24
Of all the great roles he played, this is the one that stands out to me. Freaking iconic! wolfie001 11 hrs ago #25
Me too, He brought the Gung-Ho mentality in that moment. OAITW r.2.0 9 hrs ago #36
He had seven Oscar nominations and this movie was one of them..............The Judge in 2014 turbinetree 11 hrs ago #26
Another role he played nwliberalkiwi 11 hrs ago #27
He was one of our regular customers at a workplace years ago happybird 11 hrs ago #28
One of the Greats Sam I Yam 11 hrs ago #29
Damn.... Talitha 10 hrs ago #30
I loved him in secondhand lions srose58089 10 hrs ago #31
IMO the true measure of an actor MaineNative 9 hrs ago #32
One of my all-time favorites MissMillie 9 hrs ago #33
A great actor...in many films that made an impression on me. OAITW r.2.0 9 hrs ago #34
A sad loss, he will be missed JoseBalow 9 hrs ago #35
You get a two point conversion for the "Santini" reference. Prof. Toru Tanaka 1 hr ago #46
A great loss Loisita123 8 hrs ago #37
RIP Mr Duval... electric_blue68 7 hrs ago #38
One of the best of our time. Upthevibe 6 hrs ago #39
He was the first to get into Major Hotpants pants as a god fearing Major Frank Burns tirebiter 6 hrs ago #40
So many good performances, but I love Secondhand Lions, and another movie called A Family Thing with James Earl Jones. HeartsCanHope 5 hrs ago #41
No knock on his acting abilities but... SamuelTheThird 1 hr ago #43
The Outfit 1973...OG neo-noir classic. pecosbob 1 hr ago #45

SergeStorms

(20,250 posts)
16. Open Range.....
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 03:18 PM
15 hrs ago

another great Western he played in.

In my opinion, there wasn't a single film he did that wasn't improved upon by his presence in it. He was that damned great.

Hey Joe

(521 posts)
2. He was one of the legitimately greatest
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 01:30 PM
17 hrs ago

actors of my generation.
Always a pleasure watching him portray any role with ease and confidence.
A natural.

ificandream

(11,790 posts)
3. That performance as Boo Radley is underappreciated.
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 01:39 PM
17 hrs ago

That was one hell of a performance for his film debut.

Leghorn21

(14,057 posts)
6. Yes, DD
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 01:59 PM
17 hrs ago

It's a new world now

At least he will be properly mourned and appreciated by his myriad admirers

It sure stings, though...

BumRushDaShow

(167,570 posts)
8. Al Pacino is still around
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 02:22 PM
16 hrs ago

but we did lose Diane Keaton this past fall.

I remember seeing the first "Godfather" back in '72 on the HUGE SCREEN (drive-in). I know people always reference the "horse's head" scene but I'll never forget what happened to James Caan and the slow-motion machine gun dispatching (and I was a fan of James Caan and was like - WAIT! NO! ).

FakeNoose

(40,895 posts)
13. I had read the book first, so I knew it was coming
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 02:49 PM
16 hrs ago

... I'm referring to James Caan's shooting scene.

But Robert Duvall - the Consigliere - he was a revelation in the first Godfather. Even having read the book first, I thought Duvall played the part so much better on the screen than he was written in the book. The audience expects Marlon Brando to dominate, and he did. But Duvall handled it and played off him in every scene they were in together. They were brilliant and the main reason it was such a great movie. In my opinion Al Pacino did more of a star-turn in Godfather II.

Rest in Peace, Robert Duvall, and thanks for all the great movies!

BumRushDaShow

(167,570 posts)
15. Pacino was much younger than Brando or Duvall
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 03:01 PM
16 hrs ago

so he was just getting his feet wet so that he could eventually take off in "Godfather II".

With all the "mafia" films that happened since that first "Godfather" (like "Goodfellas" ), I think they set the stage for taking it up a notch on "the little screen" with "The Sopranos" (RIP James Gandolfini).

AdamGG

(1,874 posts)
42. I read the book, but was glad the film didn't include
Tue Feb 17, 2026, 02:49 AM
4 hrs ago

details about Lucy Mancini's vagina.

eppur_se_muova

(41,452 posts)
14. I loved/hated him in "A Civil Action". I kept forgetting I was watching an actor, not a real-life villain.
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 02:55 PM
16 hrs ago

The character he portrayed was loathsome, but dangerously shrewd. It really made the movie.

BigmanPigman

(54,862 posts)
19. Duvall and Gene Hackman roomed with Dustin Hoffman
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 04:52 PM
14 hrs ago

in NYC in the 1960's. Hackman died just about a year ago a d he was 95 too.

"Robert Duvall was roommates and close friends with both Gene Hackman and Dustin Hoffman in New York City during the late 1950s and early 1960s while they were all struggling, unknown actors. The trio, often referred to as "the three musketeers," lived in or shared apartments on the Upper West Side and supported each other through a period of, at times, uncertain futures before becoming major Hollywood stars."

IcyPeas

(25,195 posts)
22. I love the movie "Tender Mercies"
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 05:11 PM
13 hrs ago

He did the actual singing in the movie and wrote some of the songs too.

Bayard

(29,088 posts)
23. Oh, man........
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 06:22 PM
12 hrs ago

One of my great favorites, especially in the Westerns, Lonesome Dove, and Open Range. As one character said in OR--he sure could cowboy.

Not many like him anymore.

turbinetree

(27,282 posts)
26. He had seven Oscar nominations and this movie was one of them..............The Judge in 2014
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 07:37 PM
11 hrs ago

and he was a Private First Class.............

happybird

(5,382 posts)
28. He was one of our regular customers at a workplace years ago
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 08:01 PM
11 hrs ago

Not only was he a legendary actor, but also a genuinely nice guy, totally down-to-Earth and gracious. It was always exciting when he came into the shop, to interact with him, but we were good at cloaking the awe and treating him like any other customer, which I think he appreciated.

May he rest in peace.

Sam I Yam

(73 posts)
29. One of the Greats
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 08:02 PM
11 hrs ago
The Great Santini is in my Top 20 Movies of All Time list.
Apocalypse Now is in my Top 5.

MaineNative

(84 posts)
32. IMO the true measure of an actor
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 09:10 PM
9 hrs ago

is how much he or she makes your skin crawl. He did that as Lt. Col. William Bill Kilgore, in Apocalypse Now, and later Swing-blade. RIP and thank you for so much.

MissMillie

(39,606 posts)
33. One of my all-time favorites
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 09:43 PM
9 hrs ago

His performance in Tender Mercies was beyond stellar.

RIP Mr. Duvall. Thank you for sharing your gifts w/ us.

Prof. Toru Tanaka

(2,917 posts)
46. You get a two point conversion for the "Santini" reference.
Tue Feb 17, 2026, 05:54 AM
1 hr ago

Duvall was so versatile and he played that role as Marine Lt. Col. “Bull” Meechum to the hilt.

Loisita123

(9 posts)
37. A great loss
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 10:54 PM
8 hrs ago

The movie Tomorrow has stayed with me all these years since I saw it in 1972, in a theatre in Grants New Mexico. I may have been the only person in the theatre that night.
RIP

electric_blue68

(26,524 posts)
38. RIP Mr Duval...
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 11:03 PM
7 hrs ago

I remember him (he was 33) as Agent Ballard in a 2 part Outer Limits in 1964.
He was investigating ?Korean War soldiers who had become geniuses in several fields of science, and finance; becoming involved in some mysterious project together.

tirebiter

(2,683 posts)
40. He was the first to get into Major Hotpants pants as a god fearing Major Frank Burns
Tue Feb 17, 2026, 12:23 AM
6 hrs ago

Oh, Frank!

HeartsCanHope

(1,579 posts)
41. So many good performances, but I love Secondhand Lions, and another movie called A Family Thing with James Earl Jones.
Tue Feb 17, 2026, 01:40 AM
5 hrs ago

He was such a versatile actor. May he rest in peace.

SamuelTheThird

(793 posts)
43. No knock on his acting abilities but...
Tue Feb 17, 2026, 05:34 AM
1 hr ago

Anyone who would appear on the 700 club is not someone I'd admire

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