Robert Redford: "There's only the trying", see fast
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Robert Redford: "There's only the trying", see fast |
He's a Hollywood Legend. Those of you who tuned in for our Friday night unique, saw some of Lee Cowan's visit with Robert Redford. In any case, we needed more. Which is the reason, joyfully, toward the beginning of today their discussion proceeds...
Robert Redford just wouldn't look right in a city. He's gone through the vast majority of his time on earth in places with a larger number of rocks than individuals, similar to his 250-section of land farm outside Santa Fe, New Mexico.
"You can perceive any reason why this had affect on me," he said. "When I saw that and I understood, well, there was an incredible piece of America that used to look that way. In any case, there's less and less of it now. Things being what they are, for what reason don't I get some land here where I can safeguard in any event this view?"
His affection for nature is as much his signature as his desolate hair.
In any case, it's maybe one scene from one of his most well known motion pictures, "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid," that best entireties up how Redford has carried on with his life:
Sundance Kid, gunfighter: "Would i be able to move?
Man: "Move? What the heck ya' mean, move?"
Sundance shoots, hits his objective.
"Sundance Kid: "I'm better when I move."
Cowan asked, "Is that valid for you, all things considered?"
"Better believe it, I suspect as much. I like development. I generally have."
At 82, he says it's a great opportunity to proceed onward from acting. "It's difficult for me to hear that when you say it may be your last [role]," Cowan said.
"It's difficult for me to state it!" Redford answered. "You don't care for discussing your end. That is to say, who does? I can't do this eternity. I've been doing it since I was 21. As you move into your 80s, you say, hello, no more, no more."
It's not precisely retirement; regardless he'll direct and deliver. Yet, to the extent extra large screen exhibitions, he says, it's a great opportunity to go.
His last part offers one more opportunity to flaunt his appeal and wry grin.
In "The Old Man and the Gun," he plays a maturing bank thief on the run. The story depends on a genuine man, Forrest Tucker, who began looting banks as an adolescent in the late 1930s and never ceased.
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