Actor Robert Duvall, known for his ability to portray complex characters with a "compassionate center," died on Sunday at the age of 95. His wife, Luciana, announced his passing on Monday via Facebook, stating he "passed away peacefully at home, surrounded by love and comfort."
Duvall's career spanned decades, during which he brought a wide range of characters to life, from tough Marines to tender-hearted cowboys. His first major movie role was in 1962, though he had no lines. According to Variety, Walter Hill, director of "Broken Trail," remembered Duvall as a "marvelous actor" whose performance "raised everybody else."
Duvall was a true original, on and off the screen, with a multitude of interests.
In other news, the Epstein files saga appears to be gaining traction. According to Vox, anti-system voters are turning on Trump over Epstein, and young Republicans are particularly enraged.
In other news, a little after 10 p.m. on the night of April 18, 1775, the Patriots best express rider, Paul Revere, set out from Boston by rowboat, then horseback, to warn the countryside that Royal soldiers were marching toward the towns of Lexington and Concord. By dawn on April 19, those soldiers, the Regulars, had reached Lexington, where they met resistance from provincial forces. The battles of the American Revolution had begun.
In other news, German filmmaker Ulrike Ottinger teamed up with Nobel laureate Elfriede Jelinek for a loopy, queer Viennese vampire hunt that couldn't be more exquisitely tailored for its star.
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