Robert Redford, a generational icon who commanded the big screen as the star of “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” and “The Way We Were” and won awards and lasting praise for directing films such as “Ordinary People,” has died. He was 89.
Long a critical force in the elevation of independent filmmaking through the Sundance Institute, Redford died Tuesday morning at his home, his publicist confirmed. He was “in the mountains of Utah — the place he loved, surrounded by those he loved,” the statement said.
Redford was a natural star who seemed to comfortably reflect the postwar zeitgeist in America with his choice of movie roles and side projects. As Newsweek put it, “What Redford has always captured best is the flawed American hero.”
AdvertisementRedford’s most memorable roles were arguably those that exploited the juxtaposition of the actor’s chiseled, class-president good looks and his ability to conjure up a scarred and hostile psyche. Whether he was playing the sulky, driven Olympic hopeful in “Downhill Racer,” the corruptible political idealist in “The Candidate” or the charismatic outlaw in “Butch Cassidy,” Redford said he hewed to that line “between what appears and what is.”
“There was always that tension, and the darker side is what interests me,” he said. “People always ask me, ‘Why did you play all those inarticulate guys?’ Well, that was the way you made the point — playing a character who can’t always articulate what he’s feeling and who has to develop action to find out.”
AdvertisementThe late director Sydney Pollack, a frequent Redford collaborator, explained his allure this way: “Bob is a minimalist; he withholds, he never seduces his audience but makes them come to him.”
Movies
Robert Redford’s legacy in 10 essential filmsFrom ‘All the President’s Men’ and ‘The Natural’ to ‘All Is Lost,’ these films capture the legacy of Oscar winner Robert Redford onscreen and behind the camera.
Sept. 16, 2025In films such as “Jeremiah Johnson,” “Downhill Racer,” “The Candidate,” and “Ordinary People,” which were among his forites, Redford examined ways that individuals are affected and sometimes broken by their environments. Later in his career, that notion held true for his performance as Our Man, a tormented sailor adrift at sea in “All Is Lost.” Redford was the only actor in the film and had all of 51 spoken words, yet was nominated for a Golden Globe.
By turns a wry comic, matinee idol, bankable box-office draw, indie titan and devoted preservationist, Redford carefully cultivated the superstardom based on his boyish charms and capitalized on the post-studio-boss system as he became the de facto godfather of the independent film movement.
As a filmmaker — one with carefully wrought ideas and a genuine cinematic palette — Redford lobbied for various environmental causes onscreen and off, including Native American rights, offshore oil drilling and global warming.
“I ge up a long time ago the idea that a film can change people’s lives, let alone their politics,” Redford said in a 2007 Playboy interview. “I discovered we Americans enjoy the distraction of entertainment but aren’t really interested in the deeper message.”
The Santa Monica native eventually turned his back on L.A. and headed to the Rockies, where he spent his first decent paycheck on land.
“I lived through that moment when Los Angeles traded its rural soul to a smog-spewing industry machine, and it made me very sad,” he told biographer Michael Feeney Callan.
Advertisement
Movies
Sundance Film Festival picks Boulder as host city for 2027 and beyondColorado’s Boulder was selected over two other finalist cities, Cincinnati and Salt Lake City. The relocation will steer the festival toward a new era.
March 27, 2025Charles Robert Redford Jr. was born in 1936 in Santa Monica to a working-class family and grew up in a heily Latino neighborhood in South L.A.
“There was this real camaraderie, with the paper drives and everybody sacrificing,” Redford told The Times in 2007. “And suddenly the war [World War II] ended and this weird thing happened. Suddenly everything was about class. And then there was an anger you could just feel.”
His father, Charles Sr., took the family on weekly outings to the Santa Monica Public Library, where young “Charlie” devoured Greek mythology. Comic strips and radio were among the family’s affordable pleasures, but on occasion, his mother, Martha, took her son to the Aero Theatre.
“These weren’t happy times; nobody had much,” he told The Times in 2000. “The library’s where I got into this mythology. But how the people came together was radio or the funny papers. Sunday was a huge deal. You’d go racing for the funnies. Without knowing it, I was very connected to them.”
The family moved to Van Nuys, but Redford found it sterile and loathed his new neighborhood.
After graduating high school in 1954, he went to the University of Colorado on a baseball scholarship, but he promptly drank his way off the team. He briefly studied painting in Paris before returning to the U.S. to pursue acting.
Advertisement“I think part of the reason I became an actor is to deal with that exhibitionistic side of yourself,” he said. “I love performing. It’s agony, but it’s also terrific. Don’t ever let anybody tell you differently.”
Like many of his contemporaries, Redford’s road to stardom took him by way of theater and television, appearing on the usual slate of variety and anthology series in the early 1960s — “Playhouse 90,” “Perry Mason,” “Play of the Week” and “Alfred Hitchcock Presents” — while booking what he could in theaters.
Obituaries
James Redford, son of Robert Redford, dies of liver cancer at 58James Redford, a filmmaker, activist and son of actor Robert Redford, has died of liver cancer at the age of 58.
Oct. 20, 2020For the record:
12:33 p.m. Sept. 18, 2025An earlier version of this story said Redford and Pollack appeared together in an episode of “The Twilight Zone.” The two actors both appeared on the series but in different episodes.
By 1962, he and then-actor Sydney Pollack had both appeared on “The Twilight Zone” and had acted together in the low-budget Korean War thriller “War Hunt.” Pollack first directed his friend in the 1966 film “This Property Is Condemned.”
Still a relatively unknown stage actor, Redford’s break came in his 20s when director Mike Nichols cast him as the lead in Neil Simon’s Broadway comedy “Barefoot in the Park.” The 1963 comedy was a hit and Redford was touted as the new Cary Grant.
The play opened the door to more films, including the film adaptation of “Barefoot in the Park” opposite Jane Fonda, which made him a popular leading man.
But he arguably became the Robert Redford when he was paired with Paul Newman in 1969’s “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” his character later serving as the namesake for his annual film festival. The picture about two affable bandits who he outlived their time became the highest-grossing western in motion picture history and highlighted the duo’s near-perfect comic timing.
Redford said it was the most fun he had ever had on a film and cemented a lifelong friendship with Newman.
Advertisement“We developed a friendship off that film, and things fell into place,” he told The Times in 2015. “It didn’t require a lot of talk, but what came with it was fun. I owe much of my career to Paul.”
Redford followed “Butch Cassidy” with 1969’s “Downhill Racer” and then the 1972 comedy “The Hot Rock.” He re-teamed with Pollack in “Jeremiah Johnson,” in which he played a mountain man who becomes the object of a vendetta. In 1973, Redford made his producing debut on “The Candidate,” a dark, satirical look at campaigning that further established him as a serious actor.
Redford returned as a romantic lead in Pollack’s 1973 glossy “The Way We Were” with Barbra Streisand. He was the all-too-content Hubbell to Streisand’s Katie — one of the more talked-about movie couples of the year. The blockbuster won Academy Awards for original song and original music score, and a Grammy for top song from a film.
He partnered with Newman again in 1973’s “The Sting” as they played two con men trying to get even with a mob boss. Its seven Oscar wins, including best picture, capped off a great year for the actor, who received his one and only lead actor Oscar nomination for his breezy performance.
Real Estate
Robert Redford sells his slice of California wine country for $7 millionAfter 15 years in wine country, Robert Redford is ready for a change of pace.
Feb. 5, 2019His hot streak continued with Alan J. Pakula’s 1976 drama “All the President’s Men,” in which he and Dustin Hoffman embodied Washington Post newsmen Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, respectively. The film won four Oscars, including one for William Goldman’s adaptation of the Watergate reporters’ bestseller and another for Jason Robards’ role as then-Post editor Ben Bradlee. The drama was the third-highest-grossing of the year, was listed on AFI’s 100 greatest films of all time and was hailed as an instant classic by Times film critic Charles Champlin.
When it was revealed that the Watergate burglars had connections to the Nixon White House in 1972, Redford convinced Woodward to secretly meet with him in Washington, D.C., and the reporter “confessed that he didn’t think I was for real. That I was a setup,” Redford told The Times in 2006. “They were so paranoid. They knew they were being watched.”
AdvertisementRedford reached out to the reporters before their book was even written, as the story was still evolving, and bought the film rights for $450,000 through Warner Bros. in 1974.
In 1978, Redford’s production partner Sterling Van Wagenen launched the U.S. Film Festival in Utah with John Earle and Cirina Hampton. Redford’s wife Lola Van Wagenen, Sterling’s older cousin whom Redford wed in 1958, loved Utah and the star bought land there in the 1970s.
In 1981, the Sundance Institute was established, a film and theater development lab on a corner of his Utah property that spawned such films as “El Norte,” “Heartland” and the Oscar-winning “The Trip to Bountiful.” Redford’s presence at the festival was erratic, and at times shadowy, as not to eclipse the festival’s filmmakers.
“One of the things that made me nervous in the last 10 years is how the film industry has become more centralized,” Redford said. “One of the things that I think is most valuable is its diversity, which is exactly why I developed Sundance — a mechanism for developing new ideas and new talent.”
In 1984, the institute took over the U.S. Film Fest and later installed the Sundance name. Redford served as the honorary chairman, supporting independent films that help drive the organization and the festival. His annual directors’ brunch became a rite of passage for young filmmakers and a prime networking opportunity for new directors.
Movies
Robert Redford, a face for the agesFrom the matinee-idol sheen of ‘Barefoot in the Park’ to the weather-beaten sailor in ‘All Is Lost,’ actor Robert Redford’s evolving countenance reveals a journey that mirrors the country’s.
Jan. 25, 2014In the 1980s, Redford seemed to deliberately slow down in order to do more thoughtful work, such as his Oscar-winning directorial debut in 1980’s “Ordinary People,” based on Judith Guest’s novel about a repressed well-to-do family and the emptiness lurking beneath the facade of white, upper-middle-class propriety. Redford clinched an Oscar, a Golden Globe, the Directors Guild’s top prize and numerous other prizes for the film.
AdvertisementHe followed that with “The Milagro Beanfield War” and then “The Natural,” a mythical baseball story based on the Bernard Malamud novel of the same name. In 1985, he played another romantic lead in Pollack’s “Out of Africa” opposite Meryl Streep. The commercial hit earned another seven Oscars, but critics were not kind about Redford’s performance. He also starred in the widely panned 1986 romantic comedy “Legal Eagles” with Debra Winger and Darryl Hannah.
Despite his celebrity, Redford led a remarkably private life. He spent most of his time in Utah or the Napa Valley, and raised his four children with Van Wagenen in New York before they divorced in 1985. He married German abstract artist Sibylle Szaggars in Germany in 2009.
When “Hana” was released in 1990, Redford agreed to give a rare glimpse into his private life for an NBC documentary, a concession he made to help promote the film.
“I he kind of a purist view that is no longer practical, that I would rather he my work speak for me. ... But then I’ve always separated my public self from the private so I could he one. I don’t feel I’ve owed my life to the public — a performance, yes, but my life, no.”
“Hana” was his seventh and final big-screen collaboration with Pollack — a big-ticket “Casablanca”-style romance that opened during a crowded holiday season, pitting it against “Hamlet” and “The Godfather Part III,” among others.
Though he didn’t want to cast Redford in the role, Pollack praised the actor’s aristocratic qualities and the actor’s instincts and intuition. However, Redford was panned for lacking chemistry with his younger co-star, Lena Olin.
Advertisement“Bob is an easy target. You know the attitude, ‘Why does he always he to be a hero? Why doesn’t he gain 30 pounds for a role or wear a funny nose?’ ” Pollack recalled in a 1990 interview with The Times. “Well, I don’t think we want Redford to be that way. For three decades he’s been a kind of metaphor for this country and his film roles he reflected that.”
Redford acknowledged that the criticism stung.
“Yeah, it does bother me,” Redford said. “There’s not a lot I can do about it. You lose something and you gain something somewhere else. You move from doing the work and hing that carry the day to hing your own persona confused in the performance by other people and, yeah, by maybe yourself too.”
The 1990s were an up-and-down period for Redford. “Quiz Show,” a film about the real-life TV game show scandals, was nominated for four Oscars and “A River Runs Through It,” an endearing coming of age story set in the outback of Montana, was a hit with critics but less so with audiences. It won an Oscar for cinematography.
In 1993, he earned his first Razzie Award playing a rich man who offers a couple a million dollars to spend a night with the wife in “Indecent Proposal.” He fared no better in “Up Close & Personal” in 1996. He directed “The Horse Whisperer” and the golf biopic “The Legend of Bagger Vance,” neither a critical success.
He went on to work on the 2004 Che Guevara biopic, “The Motorcycle Diaries,” directed the Lincoln period piece “The Conspirator” in 2010 and “Lions for Lambs,” a 2007 Afghanistan war thriller that again paired him with Streep and Tom Cruise.
In 2012, he starred and directed “The Company You Keep,” playing a former Weather Underground militant in hiding for 30 years. Though he had been involved with smaller-scale, socially conscious dramas, he also jumped on the superhero bandwagon by enlisting in Marvel’s juggernaut franchise entry “Captain America: The Winter Soldier.”
Advertisement“I’m doing this film because it’s different. It’s a new thing for me,” he told The Times. “I think these films are really powerful. I think they’re great. This is the kind of film I would he loved to see as a kid.”
Entertainment & Arts
Betty White had a big crush on Robert Redford. And he says the feeling was mutualRobert Redford released a heartfelt statement honoring the late Betty White, who had frequently talked about her crush on the fellow actor.
Jan. 3, 2022The adulation washed over him in 2013 as the star of J.C. Chandor’s “All Is Lost,” a film with no dialogue that featured only Redford onscreen. His character, simply referred to as Our Man, was a lone sailor adrift on a broken boat. At 77, he did more of his own stunts than originally intended and said he lost 60% of his hearing in one ear after high pressure water was sprayed onto him during a storm simulation. With no dialogue or other performers as a crutch, Redford was forced to act on an elemental level in a manner he had never done before.
Though the role was physically demanding and he was unsure of what the film’s general reception would be, Redford told The Times that he “just liked doing it.”
“It was my ego,” Redford said. “My ego jumped in and said, ‘Hey, you can do this. You can do this.’”
In 2014, the International Documentary Assn. ge him the Career Achievement Award for hing had “a major impact on the documentary genre though a long and distinguished body of work.” He had already received an honorary Oscar in 2002 for his body of work. In 2016, President Obama awarded Redford with the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Much of his time was spent on activism, however. In 2012, Pitzer College in Claremont launched the Robert Redford Conservancy for Southern California Sustainability, emulating the actor’s penchant for combining art, media and environmental science to educate students about policymaking. Redford was a trustee and special advisor to the university on environmental matters.
AdvertisementAfter an aging Newman passed on joining Redford for “A Walk in the Woods” in 2004, he instead teamed up with Nick Nolte for the film, which was released in 2015. Nolte recalled the advice given to him by their mutual lawyer and Redford’s frequent partner, Gary Hendler:
“You he to he a career like Bob. He does a couple of studio movies and then gets to do one for himself.”
In 2018, Redford announced his retirement from acting ahead of the release of his lighthearted caper, “The Old Man & the Gun.”
Redford is survived by his second wife, Sibylle, children Shauna and Amy, and seven grandchildren. His son James, a filmmaker, died in 2020 at 58 of complications of cancer and his son Scott died in 1959 at 2 months old of sudden infant death syndrome.
More to Read
Sundance announces its lineup, preparing for one last celebration in Park City Dec. 10, 2025
Beyond Fest celebrates William Petersen, who made two iconic ’80s crime classics in one year Sept. 26, 2025
Voices Appreciation: Never just the Sundance kid, Robert Redford chased complexity at every turn Sept. 16, 2025