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Hollywood star Robert Redford dies at the age of 89

Hollywood star Robert Redford dies at the age of 89

Emma SaundersCulture reporter

Getty Images Robert Redford on set of Three Days of the Condor (1975)Getty Images

Butch Cassidy and the Sundance kid’s writer, William Goldman, initially dismissed Redford as “just another California blonde”

US acting legend Redford, best known for roles in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and The Sting, has died at the age of 89.

In a statement, his publicist Cindi Berger, said: “Robert Redford passed away on September 16 at his home at Sundance in the mountains of Utah – the place he loved, surrounded by those he loved. He will be missed greatly. The family requests privacy.”

Tributes have been paid to the Oscar-winning star of Out of Africa, by stars including Meryl Streep and Jamie Lee Curtis.

Redford, also famous for founding Utah’s Sundance Film Festival, won a best director Oscar in 1980 for Ordinary People. He announced his retirment from performing in 2018, having said in 2016 that he was “tired of acting.”

Getty Images Robert Redford headshot, he is wearing a white shirt and jacketGetty Images

Hollywood actress Streep, who co-starred with him in Out of Africa, led the tributes, saying saying: “One of the lions has passed. Rest in peace my lovely friend.”

Jane Fonda, a lifelong friend of Redford who starred alongside him in films such as 1967’s romcom Barefoot in the Park, said he “was a beautiful person in every way.”

“It hit me hard this morning when I read that Bob was gone. I can’t stop crying. He meant a lot to me and was a beautiful person in every way. He stood for an America we have to keep fighting for,” she added.

Jamie Lee Curtis posted on Threads: “A life! Family. Art. Transformation. Advocacy. Creation. Legacy. Thank you Robert Redford.”

Director Ron Howard, writing on X, described Redford as “a tremendously influential cultural figure” and an “artistic gamechanger”, while actor Colman Domingo posted: “With love and admiration. Thank you Mr Redford for your everlasting impact. Will be felt for generations. RIP.”

Leonardo DiCaprio added on Instagram: “Actor, activist, passionate environmentalist, and champion of the arts. His unwavering commitment to protecting our planet and inspiring change matched his immense talent. His impact will endure for generations to come.”

AFP reported that US President Donald Trump told journalists as he left the White House on Tuesday: “Robert Redford had a series of years where there was nobody better. There was a period of time when he was the hottest. I thought he was great.”

Former secretary of state and presidential candidate Hillary Clinton described Redford as a “true American icon”.

Posting on Instagram, she said: “I always admired Robert Redford, not only for his legendary career as an actor and director but for what came next.

“He championed progressive values like protecting the environment and access to the arts while creating opportunities for new generations of activists and filmmakers.”

Getty Images Butch Cassidy and the Sundance KidGetty Images

Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid turned its stars Redford and Paul Newman into global stars

It was 1969’s Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, a Western film about two bank robbers, co-starring Paul Newman, that made Redford an overnight star.

But despite his success, Redford was never comfortable with his tag as a good-looking heartthrob.

“People have been so busy relating to how I look, it’s a miracle I didn’t become a self-conscious blob of protoplasm. It’s not easy being Robert Redford,” he once told New York magazine.

He teamed up again with Newman for crime caper The Sting in 1973, also considered a classic.

But despite their long-running friendship and on-screen chemistry, the pair never appeared on screen together again.

Sundance impact

Redford’s biggest contribution to film was arguably Sundance Film Festival, which helped boost independent film-making in the late 80s and early 90s, to rival the period which launched his career.

Films that premiered at Sundance and went onto huge success include Four Weddings and a Funeral, Precious, Manchester by the Sea, Little Miss Sunshine, The Blair Witch Project and Get Out.

In 2014, Redford spoke with the BBC about the festival – saying at the time: “I didn’t want to do it in New York or LA […] I said, let’s put it in Utah, let’s make it hard to get to. Let’s make it weird.

“We started Sundance as a place to come and develop new artists, with the ambition of creating a community and giving them a platform for their work. I don’t think our mission has changed at all,” he explained.

“Thirty years ago, these people had nowhere to go. Now I’m very proud that actually, the directors of Gravity and American Hustle – Alfonso Cuaron and David O Russell – actually came up through Sundance, and now they work in the mainstream.”

Many of the films that make it to the Oscars were helped by Sundance along the way.

“Our film, Coda, came to the attention of everyone because of Sundance,” wrote actress Marlee Matlin on X, who starred in the film.

“Sundance happened because of Robert Redford. A genius has passed. RIP Robert.”

Coda went on to win best picture at the Academy Awards in 2022.

On-screen chemistry

Redford’s other roles included The Candidate, All the President’s Men, Indecent Proposal and The Way We Were.

He also turned his hand to directing, including A River Runs Through It, starring Brad Pitt, in 1992, Quiz Show (1994) and The Horse Whisperer (1998), in which he starred opposite Scarlett Johansson and Kristin Scott Thomas.

Redford was also a keen environmental campaigner.

He leaves behind his wife Sibylle Szaggars who he married in 2009, according to CBS News.

He had previously been married to Lola Van Wagenen – the couple had four children before divorcing in 1995.

One of their children, Scott, died at the age of two months from sudden infant death syndrome, CBS reports, and James, died of cancer in 2020.

He is survived by two daughters – Shauna, an artist, and Amy, a director.



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Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel on Thursday said, “We don’t want that [confrontation] but it is our duty to be ready to avoid it… and if it were unavoidable, to win it.”

Diaz-Canel made the remarks in Cuba‘s capital Havana during a ceremony marking the 65th anniversary of the US‘s failed 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion — a CIA-backed operation launched after US-owned properties and businesses on the island were nationalized by Fidel Castro and his fellow revolutionaries.

Diaz-Canel told thousands gathered for the event that the nation is “ready” for another attack as US President Donald Trump continues to threaten the tiny southern neighbor.

Cuba faces economic collapse as US oil blockade hits tourism

Cuba and the US: A long and contentious history between neighbors

The US and Cuba have been archenemies since the country’s 1959 revolution and Trump has breathed new life into the 1823 Monroe Doctrine, a US policy designed to thwart European meddling in the Western Hemisphere.

Late last year, Trump ordered US warships to the Caribbean to sink what the US has described as drug smuggling boats in the region.

In January, Trump cited the policy when the US military arrested Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro and extradited him to the US to stand trial on drug trafficking charges.

After Maduro’s abduction, Trump ordered a blockade of oil and gas to Cuba and began threatening that “Cuba’s next.”

After launching a war against Iran on February 28, Trump has again floated the idea of “taking” Cuba, which has also suffered massive nationwide blackouts as a result of the US oil blockade.

Diaz-Canel: ‘Cuba is a besieged state’

In his Thursday remarks, Diaz-Canel called the current situation “very grave,” yet he also drew on the Socialist ideals espoused by Fidel Castro at the start of the Cuban revolution.

Further, he rejected Trump’s claims that Cuba is “a failing nation,” accusing the US of looking for a pretext for action.

“Cuba is not a failed state. Cuba is a besieged state,” said Diaz-Canel. “Cuba is a state facing multidimensional aggression: economic warfare, an intensified blockade and an energy blockade.”

Recently, talks between both sides — designed to reduce tensions — have been ongoing, yet few details have emerged.

The trade embargo that the US placed on Cuba in response to its revolution remains in place nearly 70 years later.

Is Donald Trump going to take on Cuba next?

Edited by: Wesley Dockery 

#Cuban #president #vows #defense #island #invades">Cuban president vows defense of island if US invadesCuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel on Thursday said, “We don’t want that [confrontation] but it is our duty to be ready to avoid it… and if it were unavoidable, to win it.”

Diaz-Canel made the remarks in Cuba‘s capital Havana during a ceremony marking the 65th anniversary of the US‘s failed 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion — a CIA-backed operation launched after US-owned properties and businesses on the island were nationalized by Fidel Castro and his fellow revolutionaries.

Diaz-Canel told thousands gathered for the event that the nation is “ready” for another attack as US President Donald Trump continues to threaten the tiny southern neighbor.

Cuba faces economic collapse as US oil blockade hits tourismTo view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video

Cuba and the US: A long and contentious history between neighbors

The US and Cuba have been archenemies since the country’s 1959 revolution and Trump has breathed new life into the 1823 Monroe Doctrine, a US policy designed to thwart European meddling in the Western Hemisphere.

Late last year, Trump ordered US warships to the Caribbean to sink what the US has described as drug smuggling boats in the region.

In January, Trump cited the policy when the US military arrested Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro and extradited him to the US to stand trial on drug trafficking charges.

After Maduro’s abduction, Trump ordered a blockade of oil and gas to Cuba and began threatening that “Cuba’s next.”

After launching a war against Iran on February 28, Trump has again floated the idea of “taking” Cuba, which has also suffered massive nationwide blackouts as a result of the US oil blockade.

Diaz-Canel: ‘Cuba is a besieged state’

In his Thursday remarks, Diaz-Canel called the current situation “very grave,” yet he also drew on the Socialist ideals espoused by Fidel Castro at the start of the Cuban revolution.

Further, he rejected Trump’s claims that Cuba is “a failing nation,” accusing the US of looking for a pretext for action.

“Cuba is not a failed state. Cuba is a besieged state,” said Diaz-Canel. “Cuba is a state facing multidimensional aggression: economic warfare, an intensified blockade and an energy blockade.”

Recently, talks between both sides — designed to reduce tensions — have been ongoing, yet few details have emerged.

The trade embargo that the US placed on Cuba in response to its revolution remains in place nearly 70 years later.

Is Donald Trump going to take on Cuba next?To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video

Edited by: Wesley Dockery 
#Cuban #president #vows #defense #island #invades

Cuba‘s capital Havana during a ceremony marking the 65th anniversary of the US‘s failed 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion — a CIA-backed operation launched after US-owned properties and businesses on the island were nationalized by Fidel Castro and his fellow revolutionaries.

Diaz-Canel told thousands gathered for the event that the nation is “ready” for another attack as US President Donald Trump continues to threaten the tiny southern neighbor.

Cuba faces economic collapse as US oil blockade hits tourism

Cuba and the US: A long and contentious history between neighbors

The US and Cuba have been archenemies since the country’s 1959 revolution and Trump has breathed new life into the 1823 Monroe Doctrine, a US policy designed to thwart European meddling in the Western Hemisphere.

Late last year, Trump ordered US warships to the Caribbean to sink what the US has described as drug smuggling boats in the region.

In January, Trump cited the policy when the US military arrested Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro and extradited him to the US to stand trial on drug trafficking charges.

After Maduro’s abduction, Trump ordered a blockade of oil and gas to Cuba and began threatening that “Cuba’s next.”

After launching a war against Iran on February 28, Trump has again floated the idea of “taking” Cuba, which has also suffered massive nationwide blackouts as a result of the US oil blockade.

Diaz-Canel: ‘Cuba is a besieged state’

In his Thursday remarks, Diaz-Canel called the current situation “very grave,” yet he also drew on the Socialist ideals espoused by Fidel Castro at the start of the Cuban revolution.

Further, he rejected Trump’s claims that Cuba is “a failing nation,” accusing the US of looking for a pretext for action.

“Cuba is not a failed state. Cuba is a besieged state,” said Diaz-Canel. “Cuba is a state facing multidimensional aggression: economic warfare, an intensified blockade and an energy blockade.”

Recently, talks between both sides — designed to reduce tensions — have been ongoing, yet few details have emerged.

The trade embargo that the US placed on Cuba in response to its revolution remains in place nearly 70 years later.

Is Donald Trump going to take on Cuba next?

Edited by: Wesley Dockery 

#Cuban #president #vows #defense #island #invades">Cuban president vows defense of island if US invades

Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel on Thursday said, “We don’t want that [confrontation] but it is our duty to be ready to avoid it… and if it were unavoidable, to win it.”

Diaz-Canel made the remarks in Cuba‘s capital Havana during a ceremony marking the 65th anniversary of the US‘s failed 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion — a CIA-backed operation launched after US-owned properties and businesses on the island were nationalized by Fidel Castro and his fellow revolutionaries.

Diaz-Canel told thousands gathered for the event that the nation is “ready” for another attack as US President Donald Trump continues to threaten the tiny southern neighbor.

Cuba faces economic collapse as US oil blockade hits tourism

Cuba and the US: A long and contentious history between neighbors

The US and Cuba have been archenemies since the country’s 1959 revolution and Trump has breathed new life into the 1823 Monroe Doctrine, a US policy designed to thwart European meddling in the Western Hemisphere.

Late last year, Trump ordered US warships to the Caribbean to sink what the US has described as drug smuggling boats in the region.

In January, Trump cited the policy when the US military arrested Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro and extradited him to the US to stand trial on drug trafficking charges.

After Maduro’s abduction, Trump ordered a blockade of oil and gas to Cuba and began threatening that “Cuba’s next.”

After launching a war against Iran on February 28, Trump has again floated the idea of “taking” Cuba, which has also suffered massive nationwide blackouts as a result of the US oil blockade.

Diaz-Canel: ‘Cuba is a besieged state’

In his Thursday remarks, Diaz-Canel called the current situation “very grave,” yet he also drew on the Socialist ideals espoused by Fidel Castro at the start of the Cuban revolution.

Further, he rejected Trump’s claims that Cuba is “a failing nation,” accusing the US of looking for a pretext for action.

“Cuba is not a failed state. Cuba is a besieged state,” said Diaz-Canel. “Cuba is a state facing multidimensional aggression: economic warfare, an intensified blockade and an energy blockade.”

Recently, talks between both sides — designed to reduce tensions — have been ongoing, yet few details have emerged.

The trade embargo that the US placed on Cuba in response to its revolution remains in place nearly 70 years later.

Is Donald Trump going to take on Cuba next?

Edited by: Wesley Dockery 

#Cuban #president #vows #defense #island #invades

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