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Robert Redfordcharismatic star and Oscar-winning directordies at age 89

Academy Award-winning actor and director Robert Redfordone of the biggest movie stars to ever grace the screen and whose startlingly magnetic charisma in such films as "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid," "The Way We Were" and "The Sting" made him an iconhas died. He was 89.

Cindi BergerCEO of the publicity firm Rogers & Cowan PMKconfirmed Redford's death to CBS News in a statement. Berger said he died Tuesday at his home in the mountains of Utah surrounded by those he loved. She didn't provide details about the circumstances surrounding his death.

Barbra Streisandwho starred alongside Redford in the 1973 romantic drama "The Way We Were," said the Hollywood legend was "one of the finest actors ever" in a tribute on social media.

"Every day on the set of The Way We Were was excitingintense and pure joy," Streisand said. "We were such opposites: he was from the world of horses; I was allergic to them! Yetwe kept trying to find out more about each otherjust like the characters in the movie."

Actor Robin Wrightwho worked with Redford on his 2010 film "The Conspirator," praised the actor and director during an interview on "CBS Mornings Plus" after news of his death was announced.

"He was amazing," Wright said. "I meanwhat an iconand his body of work will live on forever. And to be able to be directed by an actorthat was fantasticand that's such a rarity. And he's an icon that's going to be greatly missed."

Speaking to reporters outside the White House before traveling to the U.K.President Trump said"I'll tell youRobert Redford was great. He had a series of years that he was — there was nobody better."

Redford burst into the Hollywood stratosphere in the late 1960swhen he was paired with Paul Newman in the Western "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid." Their charm playing lovable outlaws was undeniablebut it would be Redford's nonchalance about his striking good looks that helped sell his characters — in comediesdramas and adventures — making him one of the leading box office draws of the 1970s and '80s.

Thenas founder of the Sundance Institutehe used his celebrity to help nurture independent films while promoting generations of young filmmakersas well as environmental and social justice issues. Since 1985the institute has hosted the internationally famous Sundance Film Festivalwhich has been the launching pad for innumerable talentsfrom Quentin TarantinoJohn Sayles and Christopher Nolan to the Coen brothers. In 1989the New York Times called Redford "a godfather to the American independent film movement."

In a joint statement with other Sundance Institute leadershipacting CEO Amanda Kelso said"Today is a sad day for the Sundance Institute community. Bob's vision launched a movement thatover four decades laterhas inspired generations of artists and redefined cinema in the U.S. and around the world."

"The vibrant storytelling landscape we cherish todayboth as artists and audiencesis unimaginable without his passionate drive and principled leadership. Beyond Bob's enormous contributions to culture at largewe will miss his generosityclarity of purposecuriosityrebellious spiritand his love for the creative process," the statement saidin part.

According to Redfordhis fame was hardly predictable.

"I was so much the last choice" for the role of the Sundance Kidhe told CBS' "Sunday Morning" in 2006. "They tried everything to keep me out of the picture because I wasn't knowncompared to Paul [Newman]."

His performance changed all that. The comedy-dramadirected by George Roy Hilltopped the box office chart for 1969.

Four years laterRedford and Newman teamed up again in Hill's caper "The Sting," which won seven Academy Awardsincluding best picture. Redford was also nominated for best actor for his performance as a small-time con artist out for revenge against a big-city gambler (played by Robert Shaw).

Redford would star in 16 features between 1969 and 1980many of them hits that traded on his remarkable screen presence: "Downhill Racer," "The Hot Rock," "Jeremiah Johnson," "The Candidate," "The Great Gatsby" with Mia Farrow"The Great Waldo Pepper," "Three Days of the Condor" with Faye Dunaway"The Electric Horseman" with Jane Fonda and "Brubaker." So bright was his star power that he reportedly earned a $2 million paycheck for what was barely a walk-on in the World War II epic "A Bridge Too Far."

But his most surprising film was one which he produced and fought for: the acclaimed 1976 drama "All the President's Men," the story of Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernsteinwho uncovered the Watergate scandal.

Photo montage of Robert Redford film roles
Clockwise from top left: Robert Redford with Barbra Streisand in "The Way We Were"; with Mia Farrow in "The Great Gatsby"; "The Electric Horseman"; "Jeremiah Johnson"; with Dustin Hoffman in "All the President's Men"; and with Robert Shaw and Paul Newman in "The Sting." Getty Images

"It took four yearsand the studiothey said'Politics? I don't think so,'" Redford said in 2006. "You know'Watergate is a dead issue.' And I said'It's not. It's a detective story about investigative journalism and about the American trait of hard workand hard work led to something that spared us the loss of our First Amendment. Thatto meis worth making.'"

The film was nominated for eight Oscars and won fourincluding for its screenplay by William Goldmanand for Jason Robards' performance as Washington Post editor Ben Bradlee.

Redford starred in hit after hitbut he told "Sunday Morning " in 2018 many of those films he's never watched. Really? "I don't know. I haven't ever counted 'embut a lot," Redford said. "'Cause I thought if I look at myself too muchI'm gonna be too aware of myself and that means when I go to do something newI won't be able to do it without being slightly aware of what I'm doing rather than just being free."

He moved on to a job where he wouldn't have to look at himself — behind the cameraas director of "Ordinary People." Based on the novel by Judith Guestit tells of an affluent family whose veneer of stability is shattered after one son dies in a boating accident and another attempts suicide. It starred Donald SutherlandMary Tyler Moore in a rare dramatic roleJudd Hirsch and Timothy Huttonwho won a best supporting actor Academy Award for his feature film debut. The film also won best pictureand for Redford a best director Oscar.

In the decade following "Ordinary People," he appeared on screen only a few times — in the baseball tale "The Natural," the Oscar-winning "Out of Africa" opposite Meryl Streepand the romantic comedy "Legal Eagles."

He would also return to the director's chair eight timeswith an eclectic mix of stories and genres: "The Milagro Beanfield War," about a land war pitting a Hispanic farmer against real estate interests; "A River Runs Though It," a period drama of family and fly-fishingwith Brad Pitt; "Quiz Show," about TV's quiz show scandal in the 1950s; "The Horse Whisperer," about a horse trainer with a remarkable gift; "The Legend of Bagger Vance," a golf fable with Will Smith and Matt Damon; "Lions for Lambs," a political drama of wartime co-starring Tom Cruise and Streep; "The Conspirator," about the Confederate plot surrounding Lincoln's assassination; and the political thriller "The Company You Keep."

"One of the lions has passed," Streep said in a statement Tuesday. "Rest in peace my lovely friend."

Scarlett Johanssonwho said Redford cast her in "The Horse Whisperer" when she was just 11 years oldremembered him as someone who was "patient and warm and kind."

"Every day before each scenehe would take the time to sit with me and walk me through all of the beats that led my character up until that particular point in the story. No matter the reality of the days rushI always felt he had all the time in the world for our work," Johansson said. "Bob taught me what acting could beand it was from his generosity and patience that I was inspired to pursue the possibilities of the craft."

Redford made perhaps his biggest contribution to movies by founding the Sundance Institutewhich developed and fostered the work of young and diverse independent filmmakers outside of mainstream Hollywood. Begun in 1981Sundance encompassed workshops with writersdirectors and actorsand later hosted the internationally recognized film festival.

Asked by Collider in 2019 his reasons for founding the instituteRedford said"The goal for me was very simple: to celebrate people who don't get celebratedwho are ignored or undiscovered and who deserve to be discovered."

The road to stardom

Charles Robert Redford Jr. was born on Aug. 181936in Santa MonicaCalifornia. Raised in Van NuysRedford described his neighborhood as "lower working class." Though he lived in the shadow of Hollywoodhe had no interest in a career in the movies. 

"I grew up in kind of a rough neighborhood," he said. "We'd go to matineesany time there was a love scene on the screenwe'd go'Oh booyou tell 'em lover,' you knowand make fun of the scene. The idea that I would be that guy is just too much for me to take!"

He attended the University of Colorado in Boulderwhere he had an athletic scholarshipbut was kicked out after his freshman year for drinkingshortly after the death of his motherMarthain 1955.

He ventured to Europestudying art in FranceItaly and Spainbefore settling in New York Citywhere he took art classes at the Pratt Institute while also studying acting at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. He described being self-conscious in his early experiences onstagebut soon recognized "something unfamiliar was clicking inside." He performed in school productions of "The Seagull" and "Antigone," attracting an agentand was soon on Broadway in "Tall Story" and "The Highest Tree," before starring with Julie Harris in "Little Moon of Alban," in 1960.

He also made guest appearances on TV shows such as "Maverick," "Playhouse 90," "Perry Mason," "Naked City," "Route 66" and "The Twilight Zone." He co-starred with Jason Robards in a 1960 TV version of Eugene O'Neill's "The Iceman Cometh," directed by Sidney Lumet.

In 1961 he starred on Broadway in "Sunday in New York," and two years later in the Neil Simon comedy "Barefoot in the Park," directed by Mike Nichols. It was a role he repeated in the 1967 filmopposite Jane Fonda.

"I held some fantasy out in my head that I would return to artand I carried that maybe five years into my acting career," Redford said"and then finally one day just looked at myself in the mirrorand I said'Who are we kidding? This is what you do. This is what you do well and like it. Give up the idea that you're going to maintain this career in art.'"

His film appearances grew following a big screen debut in the 1962 World War II drama "War Hunt" (co-starring future director Sydney Pollack).

But Redford wasn't considered a big enough name to co-star with Paul Newman in "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" — the studio wanted anyone but himeven after the film's director and screenwriter went to bat for him. It wasn't until Newman11 years his senior and already a big namemet with Redford and told the studio he wanted Redford to co-starthat he got the part.

Robert Redford and Paul Newman on the set of "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid"
Robert Redford and Paul Newman on the set of "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid," directed by George Roy Hill. Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images

It was a generosity that Redford returned some years laterwhen he went to bat for Newman to co-star in "The Sting."  

"Follow the money"

While on a press tour for "The Candidate," his 1972 satire about a California lawyer's run for Senate against a popular incumbentRedford sought out Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward after reading some of the reports he and Carl Bernstein had written on the 1972 break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters. The movie star was rebuffed. [Bernstein feared Republican backlash to their reporting if it was found out they were talking with Hollywood.] They finally met up in 1973along with screenwriter William Goldmanand in 1974 Redford bought the film rights to the pair's yet-to-be-published book"All the President's Men," for $450,000.

Starring Redford as Woodward and Dustin Hoffman as Bernsteinand directed by Alan J. Pakulathe film captured the intensity of the reporters' hunt for answers as they sought to "follow the money" and unravel the Watergate scandal.

Never mind that audiences knew how the story ended (Nixon resigned); the film was a critical and commercial hitand became an inspiration for generations of young journalists.

Once Redford had gotten the taste of directing with "Ordinary People," his appearances in front of the camera grew fewer: "Havana," "Sneakers," "Indecent Proposal," "Up Close & Personal," "The Last Castle," "Spy Game," and "An Unfinished Life" filled out his acting resume for the years between 1990 and 2005. He also narrated the 1992 documentary "Incident at Oglala," about Indigenous activist Leonard Peltier. Redford's companiesWildwood Enterprises and Sundance Productionsproduced at least two dozen feature films.

Meanwhilemuch of his energy was devoted to the success of the Sundance Institute and its film festivalheld in the mountains of Utah each January. 

Welcome to Sundance

In 1978 the Utah Film Commission established the United States Film Festival as a means to draw visitors to the Wasatch Mountains for something other than skiing. The festival was co-created by Sterling Van Wagenenwho was a cousin of Redford's then-wifeLola Van Wagenen. Advocating to include independent features in the programRedford agreed to show up at the festival and participate in a panel. Afterwardshe formed the Sundance Instituteto aid filmmakers wishing to make stories that could not find a home among Hollywood studios that were chasing hugely commercial pictures.

In 1985 the U.S. Film & Video Festival was struggling financiallyand so Sundance took it overeventually replacing the name with its own. Moved to Park Citythe festival drew ever-increasing numbers of filmmakersbuyersagentspublicistsjournalists and fans to the tiny town. Beyond the festivalindustry professionals would mentor young filmmakers in workshops and screenwriting labs. Wes Anderson's "Bottle Rocket," Kimberly Peirce's "Boys Don't Cry," Paul Thomas Anderson's "Hard Eight," and Miranda July's "Me and You and Everyone We Know" were all developed in the Sundance Labs.

In 1989 the festival blew up with the success of Stephen Soderbergh's "sexliesand videotape," which won the Audience Award and was picked up by Miramax. Its subsequent theatrical release earned the low-budget dramedy a cool $25 million and an Oscar nomination. 

Robert Redford speaks at the Sundance Film Festival in 2015
Robert Redford speaks at the Sundance Film Festival on Jan. 222015in Park CityUtah.  George Pimentel/Getty Images for Sundance

Since thenfilms and filmmakers who have broken out at the festival have included Quentin Tarantino ("Reservoir Dogs")Robert Rodriguez ("El Mariachi")Kevin Smith ("Clerks")Christopher Nolan ("Memento")Todd Solandz ("Welcome to the Dollhouse")Ryan Coogler ("Fruitvale Station")Damien Chazelle ("Whiplash")Jordan Peele ("Get Out")and the audience favorites "Little Miss Sunshine," "Beasts of the Southern Wild" and "The Blair Witch Project."

Sundance also started a program to develop theatrical workswhich has resulted in such productions as "The Laramie Project," "Light in the Piazza," and "Angels in America."

Not quite retiring

In 2012 Redford was executive producer and narrator of the documentary "Watershed," about the politics surrounding the Colorado River — the environmental and cultural damage from misuse of a vital natural resource. Asked by ThinkProgress whether his films can make a differenceRedford said"I've given up the idea that I can really change anythingand I just do the best I can. It's either that or do nothingand we know that nothing doesn't work."

The following year Redford starred in "All Is Lost," playing a solo sailor facing disaster at sea when his small craft is crippled in an accident. He did much of the stunt work himselfin a "storm-tossed" water tank (the spray from fire hoses cost him partial hearing in one ear). He was hailed for his remarkable performance in which he uttered virtually no dialogue.

"All in allit was worth it," he told the Salt Lake Tribune. "I'm proud of the work. I felt it was a chance to do something at this point that was different and bold."

Redford also added his name to the roster of Hollywood stars recruited for the Marvel Universeappearing in "Captain America: The Winter Soldier" and "Avengers: Endgame" as (spoiler alert) the leader of a plot against S.H.I.E.L.D. He also starred opposite Nick Nolte in "A Walk in the Woods," played Dan Rather in "Truth," and appeared opposite an animated creature in the Disney film "Pete's Dragon." He also reteamed with Jane Fonda in the romance "Our Souls at Night," their fourth film together.

In 2018 he starred in "The Old Man & the Gun," as an aging bank robber on the run. Redford told "Sunday Morning" that he connected very easily with the protagonist as an outlaw: "I think probably I must've been born with an outlaw sensibilityin terms of my natureyeah. Because from the time I was just a little kidI was always wanting to go away from the rules. I wanted to — I didn't want to break anyI just didn't want to be held by them. In kindergartenI ran away three times!"

With the film's release he announced he would be retiring from acting — but he remained active with voice work and producing documentaries.

In addition to his Oscar win for "Ordinary People," Redford was nominated for directing and producing "Quiz Show," and in 2002 he received an honorary Academy Award for his impact on the industry. Three years later he was named a Kennedy Center honoree. At the Washington ceremonyPaul Newman ribbed Redfordreferring to his reputation for lateness: "Backstage they think the only reason he's even in the vicinity was because they told him this whole thing was yesterday."

In 2016 Redford received the Presidential Medal of Freedom. The citation read: "His art and activism continue to shape our nation's cultural heritageinspiring millions to laughcrythinkand change." At the presentation ceremonyPresident Barack Obama remarked"As an actordirectorproducerand as an advocatehe has not stopped — and apparently drives so fast that he had breakfast in Napa and dinner in Salt Lake."

Redford was married to Lola Van Wagenen in 1958; they divorced in 1995. They had four children: Scottwho died at age 2 months from sudden infant death syndrome; Shaunaan artist; James (Jamie)a filmmaker and environmental activistwho died of cancer in 2020; and Amya director. 

In 2009Redford married artist and environmental activist Sibylle Szaggars.

In 2018the private Redford reflected to "Sunday Morning" on a favorite saying by T.S. Eliot: "'There's only the trying. The rest is not our business.' It's one of my favorite phrases. Because you can't guarantee where the trying is going to get you. Soyou can't guarantee the result. The only thing there is in its place is the trying. That's where the action is."

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