The I N
F O C U S
FREE
F O R
P E O P L E
OV E R
More than 200,000 readers throughout Greater Washington
VOL.23, NO.12
Robert Duvall’s Virginia roots AP PHOTO/RICHMOND TIMES-DISPATCH, BOB BROWN
By Bob Brown and Bill Lohmann The familiar figure walked into the living room of his home in The Plains, a small town just off Route 66 in Fauquier County, Va., wearing a navy-blue shirt, blue jeans and cowboy boots. He greeted a pair of strangers with the sort of geniality most of us reserve for people we actually know. “What’s up! Good to see you!” he said. “Bobby Duvall. How are you?” In a world of self-important celebrities, Robert “Bobby” Duvall — one of the great American actors of our time — exudes an authentic, down-to-earth manner, whether he’s telling a funny story about Marlon Brando, one of his acting heroes, or expressing gratitude for the more recent fertilizing work of Bubbles the Elephant on behalf of his farm’s pumpkin patch. “That whole pumpkin patch was her domain while she was here,” Duvall said of Bubbles, who resides in a wildlife preserve in South Carolina and came to Duvall’s place last spring for an event involving his charity, the Robert Duvall Children’s Fund. “I don’t know much about elephants, but she was terrific.” The legacy of Bubbles’ visit was a bumper crop of pumpkins of all shapes and sizes he displayed this fall a few hundred yards from the main house on a 360-acre farm in Fauquier County. Duvall shares the home with his wife, Luciana, an Argentine actress and director who also shares his birthday, Jan. 5, though 41 years apart. Not slowing at all, Duvall, 80, stars in the recently released Seven Days in Utopia, the story of a talented young golfer who loses his way on the course and in life, and finds himself in Utopia, Texas, where he meets an eccentric rancher who provides guidance and wisdom. Duvall plays the rancher. Last summer, Duvall finished shooting a movie in Georgia with Billy Bob Thornton (“the hillbilly Orson Welles,” as Duvall admiringly describes him). It’s titled Jayne Mansfield’s Car and focuses on the culture clash of two families from different countries. “The most unique script I’ve ever worked on,” said Duvall of the movie. “It’s wacko time, but totally legitimate because families can be crazy.” As for Thornton, who wrote, directed and
5 0 DECEMBER 2011
I N S I D E …
LEISURE & TRAVEL
Visiting Confucius’ home town in China; plus, the lively cultural scene in Asheville, N.C., how to become an airport VIP, and Bob Levey ‘s reflections on elderhood page 39
ARTS & STYLE
A delightful rendering of Pride and Prejudice on the local stage; plus, Linda Lavin on her busy career and new CD Academy Award winning actor Robert Duvall, 80, talks with visitors in the living room of his home in The Plains, Va. Duvall has starred in movies for nearly 50 years. He appeared most recently in this fall’s Seven Days in Utopia, and has completed filming the upcoming movie Jayne Mansfield’s Car, directed by Billy Bob Thornton.
acted in it, Duvall said, “He’s a character. A very, very gifted guy. That guy is great.”
A life of “interesting” roles Versatile and prolific, Duvall has played scores of roles for big screen and small. He has performed in movies of great acclaim — including The Godfather, True Grit and M*A*S*H — and uttered some of Hollywood’s most iconic lines, such as “I love the smell of napalm in the morning,” as the intense and surfing-obsessed Lt. Col. Bill Kilgore in Apocalypse Now. Next year is the 50th anniversary of his first movie role: the reclusive Boo Radley in To Kill a Mockingbird.
His characters have been tough and funny, gentle and odd, likeable and not. He doesn’t care; he just wants them to be interesting, which is why he insisted writers give his character in Utopia a bit of an edge after he read the original script and declared the rancher “too white-bread.” He is not afraid to take chances, even singing in Tender Mercies (1983) in which he played a recovering alcoholic country music singer — a role for which he won his only Academy Award for Best Actor. His favorite role? Gus McRae in the remarkably good 1989 television miniseries See DUVALL, page 56
page 54 FITNESS & HEALTH 4 k Heart ops for the inoperable k An app that may improve vision LAW & MONEY k Give to charity — but wisely k Fast food stocks on upswing
24
SPOTLIGHT ON AGING k Newsletter for D.C. seniors
34
VOLUNTEERS & CAREERS 36 k Taking the law into their hands LIFETIMES k News from the Charles E. Smith Life Communities
45
PLUS CROSSWORD, BEACON BITS, CLASSIFIEDS & MORE