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Robert Duvall talks best movie roles in his final USA TODAY interview

Story Center by Story Center
February 16, 2026
Reading Time: 9 mins read
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Robert Duvall talks best movie roles in his final USA TODAY interview

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Robert Duvall, legendary ‘Godfather’ actor, has died

Oscar-winning actor Robert Duvall portrayed unforgettable characters during his seven-decade Hollywood career.

Editor’s note: Robert Duvall, the actor best known for “The Godfather,” “Apocalypse Now” and “Tender Mercies,” has died. He was 95.

In his final interview with USA TODAY, he told entertainment reporter Patrick Ryan about his 2021 film “12 Mighty Orphans,” his proudest performances and why he wouldn’t retire.

Acting is Robert Duvall‘s first love, but football ranks a very close second. 

Someone once said that “American football is the greatest game ever invented, and I would have to go along with that,” says Duvall, 90, who played defensive back on his high school team growing up in St. Louis. 

So it’s no surprise that the seven-time Oscar nominee (and proud Clemson Tigers fan) was drawn to football drama “12 Mighty Orphans.” Based on Jim Dent’s 2008 book, the film tells the true story of the Mighty Mites, an underdog football team from a Fort Worth, Texas, orphanage that went all the way to the state championships in the 1930s. Luke Wilson and Martin Sheen play coaches, while Duvall makes a cameo appearance as former orphan Mason Hawk, who helps finance their efforts. 

More: Robert Duvall, ‘Apocalypse Now’ and ‘The Godfather’ icon, dies at 95

“It’s a very good human story with a lot of positive notes that make it quite attractive,” Duvall says. “It’s a little part, but I wanted to support this wonderful little film in any way I could.” 

“Orphans” reunites Sheen and Duvall onscreen for the first time since Francis Ford Coppola’s 1979 war epic “Apocalypse Now.” That’s one of the countless classic films lining Duvall’s six-decade-longrésumé, including two “Godfather” films, “To Kill a Mockingbird,” “Tender Mercies” (which earned him the 1983 best actor Oscar), and “Network,” co-starring the late Ned Beatty, whom he remembers as a “terrific” and “talented guy.” 

Duvall called up USA TODAY earlier this week from his Virginia home, where he’d just finished lunch and a workout.

Question: What was it like getting back on set with Martin Sheen for your scene in “12 Mighty Orphans”? 

Robert Duvall: It’s been many, many years, and we didn’t have much to do. We just kind of had a quick embrace and that was it. We talked a little bit. It was nice to see him again, it really was. We had a good time doing “Apocalypse Now” with the great Francis Ford Coppola. 

Was Marlon Brando really as intimidating as all the stories make him out to be?

Duvall: No, I was never intimidated by him – I had great respect for the guy. He was kind of like our “Godfather,” in a way. He’d come down in the jungle in his baby blue Mercedes, do a day’s work and then go home, wherever that was.

What do you recall about Martin’s heart attack during the filming of “Apocalypse”? He reportedly claimed it was a heat stroke, so production wouldn’t shut down. 

Duvall: I guess, yeah. And when it happened, Coppola scanned other movies Marty had done to try and make some kind of small compilation to supplant Marty if he died, which kind of sounds cold and calculated. But I guess that’s what you’d have to do in a situation like that. But Marty survived and he’s still surviving, years and years and years later. 

Looking back, is there a performance that you’re proudest of? 

Duvall: Well, there’s some I wanna forget, but there are some I feel good about. I would say probably the one that people respond to the most, and one I remember with a great deal of affection, was the miniseries “Lonesome Dove.” The Western is our genre in the United States of America. The English have Shakespeare, the French have Molière, the Russians have Chekhov, but we have the Western. 

What was it about that project that made it so memorable? 

Duvall: It was just a great character. My good friend Hank Whitman, who’s head of the Texas Rangers, made me an honorary Ranger. And that day, a woman came up to me and said they watch it as a family once a year, at least. She said, “I would not allow my daughter’s fiancé to marry into the family until he had seen ‘Lonesome Dove.’ ” It’s held in great reverence, particularly in the state of Texas. 

So I guess that’s part of my legacy that will live on for a while. There are other parts I enjoyed doing very much and thought I did OK. One of them is when I played Joseph Stalin (in HBO’s “Stalin” in 1992). There were certain Russian people who embraced what I did in a positive way. 

What about The Apostle, Mac Sledge, or Boo Radley? Would any of those roles be pretty high up on the list for you, too? 

Duvall: Yeah, very much so. “The Apostle” was a thing where I wrote, directed and financed it myself. I felt it was a great slice of Americana that, when it was usually shown, it was much more on the level of caricature. But I used real preachers and tried to make it as valid as possible.

But no matter what you do in a positive way, there’s always somebody around the corner who doesn’t accept it. There was a well-known director who came up to us at the St. Regis (Hotel in New York) after “Godfather 1.” Jimmy Caan and all of us were there. And this director said, “I loved you boys in the movie. I don’t know about the movie, but you guys were terrific.” In three lifetimes, this director could never do what Coppola did in “Godfather 1.” But that’s the furthest I’ll go. 

I read that you were considered for roles in both “Nashville” and “The Silence of the Lambs.” Do you wish you had done either? 

Duvall: Absolutely not, no. There are a few things I look back on that I wonder if I should have done – I turned down the lead in “Jaws.” But not so much either of those. 

Do you want to continue working as long as possible, or do you have any desire to retire at some point? 

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Duvall: I haven’t worked in a year or two, but if certain things come along that appeal to me – and a few are coming along now – I’ll consider if I’m able to do it. I mean, I feel pretty fit.

What do you look for in projects at this point in your career? 

Duvall: It’s always the character: What could I do with that? Scott Cooper is doing a movie now on Edgar Allan Poe (“The Pale Blue Eye”), so I have a small part in that and it’s very, very fascinating. Then I may do a really nice cameo with Adam Sandler in a basketball movie (“Hustle”). But sometimes what comes around the corner is better for you than what you’re planning to do anyway. 

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.usatoday.com ’

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