Robert Duvall, the Oscar-winning actor acclaimed for his iconic performances in The Godfather films, Apocalypse Now, Tender Mercies, Lonesome Dove, Network and many others, died Sunday night at his home in Middleburg, Virginia. He was 95.
His death was announced by his wife Luciana Duvall.
“Yesterday we said goodbye to my beloved husband, cherished friend, and one of the greatest actors of our time,” Luciana Duvall said in a Facebook post today. “Bob passed away peacefully at home, surrounded by love and comfort. To the world, he was an Academy Award-winning actor, a director, a storyteller. To me, he was simply everything. 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.”
A cause of death was not immediately available, though the initial announcement indicated he died peacefully with his wife by his side.
With a celebrated career spanning more than six decades, Duvall was a generational performer, breaking into the national consciousness with a brief but haunting 1962 feature film debut as neighborhood recluse Boo Radley in To Kill a Mockingbird and continuing in the immediate following years on television (The Outer Limits, The Fugitive and the hourlong Twilight Zone episode “Miniature”), theater and, most indelibly, a run of the most significant films of the 1970s and ’80s that continued well into the 21st century.
Among the outstanding performances of an outstanding career, Duvall portrayed mob consigliere Tom Hagen in The Godfather (1972) and The Godfather Part II (1974); Lt. Colonel Kilgore, who loved surfing and “the smell of napalm in the morning” in equal measure, in Apocalypse Now (1979); and his Oscar-winning performance as washed-up, alcoholic country singer Mac Sledge in Tender Mercies (1983).
In the Best Picture Oscar-winning Network (1976), he was the ruthless TV exec Frank Hackett, who authorizes the assassination of his anchorman for the crime of low ratings, and in The Great Santini (1979), he played the authoritarian family man Lt. Col. “Bull” Meechum.
On television, he played Augustus “Gus” McCrae in the western miniseries Lonesome Dove, which was a ratings behemoth for CBS during the sweeps era in 1989. As a director, he made his feature debut in 1997’s critically acclaimed The Apostle. He previously had helmed the documentaries We’re Not the Jet Set (1974) and Angelo My Love (1983).
In addition to his Academy Award win for Tender Mercies (1983), Duvall was Oscar-nominated for The Godfather, Apocalypse Now, The Great Santini and The Apostle (1997), A Civil Action (1998) and The Judge (2014). He took the Screen Actors Guild Award for A Civil Action.
On the TV side, Duvall won two Primetime Emmy Awards — as a producer and lead actor — for AMC’s 2006 limited Western series Broken Trail. He previously had been Emmy-nominated for Lonesome Dove and for the title role in HBO’s 1992 film Stalin. Another Emmy nomination came in 1996 for his dual performance as Adolf Eichmann and Ricardo Klement in TNT’s telefilm The Man Who Captured Eichmann.
Other milestones in Duvall’s career include The Conversation (1974), True Confessions (1981), The Natural (1984), Days of Thunder (1990), Rambling Rose (1991), Falling Down (1993), The Paper (1994), Sling Blade (1996), Gone in 60 Seconds (2000), Open Range (2003), Crazy Heart (2009), Get Low (2010), Jack Reacher (2012), Widows (2018) and Hustle (2022).
He received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2003.
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Born January 5, 1931, in San Diego to William Duvall, a U.S. Navy rear admiral, and Mildred Hart, Duvall was raised primarily in Annapolis. He earned a bachelor’s degree in drama from Principia College and briefly serving in the U.S. Army before enrolling in 1955 at the Neighborhood Playhouse School in New York, where he studied under renowned acting teacher Sanford Meisner. His classmates there included Dustin Hoffman, Gene Hackman and James Caan, and all four would remain lifelong friends while reaching the pinnacle of success among actors of their generation. (Caan died in 2022 at age 82, and Hackman died last year at 95).
Duvall made his stage debut while performing with the Gateway Playhouse theater company on Long Island in the early 1950s, where he would remain, save for his 1953-54 Army stint, for the remainder of the decade. Among his credits there were productions of William Inge’s Picnic, Arthur Miller’s The Crucible (August 1955), William Berney and Howard Richardson’s Dark of the Moon (September 1955), Miller’s A View from the Bridge (1957) and Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire (1959), among others.
Duvall made his Off Broadway debut in a 1958 Gate Theater production of George Bernard Shaw’s Mrs. Warren’s Profession. Other early 1960s Off Broadway credits include Michael Shurtleff’s Call Me by My Rightful Name and William Snyder’s The Days and Nights of BeeBee Fenstermaker.
Duvall won an Obie Award in 1965 for reprising his role at the Sheridan Square Playhouse of Eddie Carbone in Miller’s A View from the Bridge, directed again by Ulu Grosbard with Dustin Hoffman as co-director.
Duvall made his Broadway debut opposite Lee Remick the following year in Frederick Knott’s Wait Until Dark, and he returned to Broadway in 1977 as Walter Cole in David Mamet’s American Buffalo, co-starring Kenneth McMillan and John Savage.
In keeping with Duvall’s wishes, no formal memorial service will be held. The family “encourages those who wish to honor his memory to do so in a way that reflects the life he lived by watching a great film, telling a good story around a table with friends, or taking a drive in the countryside to appreciate the world’s beauty.”
Complete information on survivors other than Duvall’s wife was not immediately available. .









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