
Robert Benton obituary
Combined with a sparse output, those qualities kept him on the periphery of mainstream cinema and its publicity treadmill – despite Oscar-winning successes including Kramer vs. Kramer (1979) and Places in the Heart (1984), plus one of the most celebrated debuts in movie history when, at 35, he won his first Oscar nomination as co-writer of Bonnie and Clyde (1967). He was 40 when he made the Jeff Bridges western Bad Company – the first of only 11 feature film directorial credits.
Born in a small town not far from Dallas, Texas, to Dorothy (nee Spaulding) and Ellery Benton, who worked for a telephone company, Robert studied art at the state university before joining the army, where his talent found a modest outlet in the painting of dioramas. He subsequently studied at Columbia University before joining the art department of Esquire magazine, eventually becoming a contributing editor until he finally abandoned journalism in 1972.
During those years he formed two relationships crucial to his life and career. The first was with the artist Sallie Rendig, who illustrated his children's book, Little Brother No More, in 1960. Four years later they were married. He also met David Newman, a slightly younger fellow editor on Esquire and they became regular collaborators, initially on books and then on an unsuccessful Broadway show, It's a Bird … It's a Plane … It's Superman. When they wrote a film script it was with the French new wave director François Truffaut in mind, but luckily Bonnie and Clyde became a project for director Arthur Penn and actor-producer Warren Beatty.
This highly original take on 1930s rural lawlessness blended grotesque comedy with brutal actuality and became one of the most imitated of all movies. It enjoyed the rare distinction of being a cult success that moved on to become a critical and commercial hit.
The duo, who won two Writers Guild of America awards for best drama and best original screenplay, stayed in their day jobs while working on their next project, another brilliant, literary screenplay for a quirky western. There Was a Crooked Man (1970) starred Henry Fonda as a prison governor and Kirk Douglas as a devious convict. It was innovatory and witty, giving colourful roles to the fine supporting cast, just as its predecessor had done.
Having up-ended aspects of the western and gangster genres, the pair were called on for a script indebted to the screwball comedies of the 1930s in general and Bringing Up Baby in particular. Their screenplay, polished by Buck Henry, became What's Up Doc? (1972) and won the WGA's award for best comedy.
After contributing to Oh! Calcutta! that same year, they wrote what became Benton's first – and most original – movie. Bad Company (1972) had a youthful cast headed by Jeff Bridges and Barry Brown as draft dodgers from the American civil war, travelling west and leading a small gang into lawlessness on their traumatic journey.
Once again the work took an almost perversely original view of its subject, blending dark comedy with a vivid portrait of a world where poverty is rife, thievery is commonplace and the myth of chivalry out west – perpetuated by movies – is completely demolished.
Benton gave up journalism, having enjoyed several productive and profitable years, although it was a further five years before his next movie, The Late Show (1977), written by him and produced by Robert Altman. Showing that nothing was sacred, Benton turned his attention to the private eye works of the 1930s and 40s with a sympathetic, even nostalgic, film that added a wryly comic twist to familiar characters. The hard-boiled detective had aged, there was a capricious modernity to the narrative and an elegance in the performances, the script and direction typical of his best work.
He received an Oscar nomination for the film and a lucrative commission to help on the screenplay for the 1978 Superman, directed by Richard Donner. After that blockbuster Benton made his first adaptation of a novel for the screen and the result remains his most famous work.
Although inherently conventional, Kramer vs. Kramer transcended melodrama to become, in the words of one commentator, 'an upmarket new-fashioned tearjerker'. Its story, of a couple who divorce and start a battle over the custody of their son, struck a chord with audiences and with the less cynical critics. It also struck gold at the Oscars, with Meryl Streep and Dustin Hoffman collecting statuettes and Benton taking two, for best direction and best adapted screenplay.
As usual he had surrounded himself with the cream of the movie business. His rapport with actors meant that stars including Streep, Bridges, Hoffman, Bruce Willis and Paul Newman returned to work with him, as did the composer Howard Shore and designer Paul Sylbert, while the great cameraman Néstor Almendros shot five of his movies, before his untimely death in 1992 after filming with Benton on Billy Bathgate.
Despite the success of Kramer, Benton took time out before his next project and, interestingly, never looked to television or the theatre to mop up periods of inactivity. In 1982, another genre fell under his acquisitive gaze and, reunited with Streep, he wrote and directed the thriller Still of the Night. Some critics found Alfred Hitchcock's influence oppressive and the story, of a psychiatrist who falls in love with his possibly murderous patient, conventional. The literary screenplay allowed the actors to adopt an overly serious tone for what was an old-fashioned suspense story brought into the 1980s.
Perhaps to shake off the claustrophobia of that movie, Benton headed for his native Texas and a sentimental story, which offered his lead actor, Sally Field, a heaven-sent opportunity to plunder Oscar-ville. It was a chance she successfully took through playing a tough, put-upon farmer battling against the Depression. Places in the Heart was filmed in and around Benton's home town, drawing on locations and values of a time past and containing specific references to his ancestors. The highly personal work gained him another Oscar, for the screenplay, plus the Berlin festival Silver Bear for best direction.
Benton remained in Texas for Nadine (1987), a movie with roots in the screwball comedies and thrillers of Hollywood's golden age that reunited him with Bridges. Considered a comparative misfire, it had admirers but proved difficult to assess, since various cuts gave the movie running times of between 78 and 88 minutes.
The gap between this mild-mannered movie and Billy Bathgate (1991) was several years, and his ambitious return to period-set gangsterdom failed commercially. It was the first time that he had worked as a director for hire, from a discursive screenplay by Tom Stoppard based on EL Doctorow's novel. Hoffman took the lead, giving an intriguingly mannered performance as the vicious hoodlum Dutch Schulz. Visually it was memorable, but audiences were mystified by the sometimes witty and oblique tone, used as they were to more visceral depictions of 30s gangsterdom.
However, Benton was not a director given to compromise. His penultimate movie, Nobody's Fool (1994), was a characteristically graceful work, starring Newman as a wilful 60-year-old living alone in a small town, forced to confront his alienation by the return of his son.
Benton introduced personal elements into his screenplay – not least for Newman, whose own estranged son had killed himself, and for Jessica Tandy as an elderly woman facing death. Critically the film was well received, but audiences showed scant regard for such a thoughtful character study.
Newman received an Oscar nomination for his cleverly nuanced performance, and four years later made yet another sortie from 'retirement' to star in Twilight, the director's second private eye movie. Heading a cast that included Gene Hackman, Susan Sarandon and James Garner, Newman was well cast as another ageing, alcoholic misfit – a detective living with a terminally ill actor and his wife, embroiled in a complicated blackmail scam.
Co-scripted with Richard Russo, whose novel was the basis of Nobody's Fool, it owed much to 40s noir movies, but at 90 minutes seemed leisurely and was subject to postproduction editing. Praised for its atmosphere, laconic dialogue and ensemble acting, it proved overly sophisticated for modern-day cinemagoers.
The same could be said of his next film, The Human Stain (2003), which he directed, but did not write, from a novel by Philip Roth. Starring Anthony Hopkins and Nicole Kidman, it was an intriguing story of a distinguished academic who for years has hidden his racial origins. The film was crafted with Benton's usual skill but was not a commercial success. Two years later he was reunited with his friend Russo on the screenplay of The Ice Harvest, a lively thriller with a witty and literate script directed by Harold Ramis. His final directorial credit was on a meditative film, Feast of Love (2007), concerning four different couples. It was not well received critically and took less than $6m worldwide.
However, it could not detract from the brilliant Bad Company, the witty homages to various film genres and the Oscar-winning successes of Kramer vs. Kramer and Places in the Heart by one of Hollywood's most independent and original writer-directors.
Sallie died in 2023. Benton is survived by their son, John.
Robert Douglas Benton, film writer and director, born 29 September 1932; died 11 May 2025
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
8 minutes ago
- The Independent
Biggest Loser's Bob Harper says Jillian Michaels didn't reach out after heart attack
The Biggest Loser staple Bob Harper has revealed that former co-star Jillian Michaels never reached out after he suffered a massive, near-fatal heart attack. The pair worked together for years on the mega-hit weight-loss reality series after joining its debut 2004 season as part of the original trainers lineup. Harper, 59, remained with the show for its entire 17-season run, taking over as host in 2015, while Michaels, 51, appeared intermittently across 12 seasons. In 2017, a year after the show ended, Harper, then 51, had a 'widowmaker' heart attack that left him clinically dead on the floor of his gym for nine minutes, he told The Guardian in a new interview. Miraculously, a doctor, who was present, performed CPR on him, and he was rushed to the hospital. Reflecting on the serious health scare caused by an undiagnosed genetic issue, Harper admitted it 'f***ed me up.' He recalled struggling mentally during his recovery after realizing he had gone from being a physically fit man in his fifties to 'a person that couldn't walk around a city block.' Bob Harper and Jillian Michaels (pictured in 2013) worked together for 12 seasons of 'The Biggest Loser' (Getty) He remembered many people from The Biggest Loser got in touch after hearing about the medical event — but not Michaels. While he acknowledged that they 'weren't besties,' Harper noted: 'But we were partners on a television show for a very long time.' He said that her silence 'spoke volumes to me,' adding, 'I would not expect Jillian Michaels to do anything other than what she wants to do.' The Independent has contacted Michaels's representative for comment. The Biggest Loser , which aired on NBC from 2004 to 2017 before returning for a 2020 reboot on USA Network, followed obese people as they attempted to lose weight as quickly as possible using only diet and exercise, with the help of celebrity trainers. The person who lost the most weight was awarded a $250,000 cash prize. Bob Harper suffered a near-fatal heart attack in 2017 (Getty Images) A new Netflix documentary, Fit for TV: The Reality of the Biggest Loser , featuring interviews with past contestants, trainers, and producers, is set to debut Friday, August 15. The three-part feature will lift the curtain on behind-the-scenes moments and how the show came about. 'I had first heard about the making of The Biggest Loser , a show that you only have diet and exercise to work with, and I thought, 'Oh, well, that's interesting,'' Harper recalled in the documentary. Despite the trainer's association with the show and weight loss, he had 'never worked with obese people.' 'I worked with very fit people who were trying to be a size zero or have a six-pack,' he said. 'It was a huge wake-up call for me.' Harper became well-known for aggressively yelling at contestants as they worked out. 'When it comes to The Biggest Loser , always remember we were trying to make an entertaining show that was on prime time network television,' Harper said. 'What's more important for weight loss? We all know it's diet. But that becomes boring television.'


The Independent
8 minutes ago
- The Independent
Bob Odenkirk isn't an action newbie anymore
Bob Odenkirk ducks into a West Village coffee shop wearing sunglasses and a Chicago Cubs cap. Some degree of subterfuge might have been necessary for Odenkirk years ago. Surely fans of 'Mr. Show' or 'The Larry Sanders Show' might have recognized him. But with time, Odenkirk has traveled from the fringes of pop culture to the mainstream. He's well-known now, but for what is a moving target. At 62, Odenkirk is not only a comic icon, he's a six-time Emmy-nominated actor, for 'Better Call Saul,' a Tony-nominated Broadway star, for 'Glengarry Glen Ross,' and, most surprisingly, an action star. He's not even a newbie, either. With 'Nobody 2,' the sequel to the 2021 pandemic hit original, Odenkirk's butt-kicking bona fides are more or less established. In the sequel, which opened in theaters Thursday, he returns as Hutch Mansell, the suburban dad with latent powers of destruction. This time, he and his family go on vacation to Wisconsin Dells, where they run into trouble. 'My goal is Jackie Chan's 'Police Story,'' Odenkirk says, sipping an iced tea before a day of promotion obligations. 'It exists to be funny. The disconnect is the lack of irony. Hutch has to mean it.' Odenkirk's unlikely but sincere turn into Keanu Reeves territory has, in a way, only illuminated the rage that bubbled throughout his comedy. Chatting casually but intensely, Odenkirk explained how all of these iterations of him make sense — and how 'Nobody' might have even saved his life. AP: Your friends in comedy, have they been funny about you as an action hero? ODENKIRK: The whole time I was training I was thinking: They're not going to make this movie, and I'm getting free exercise training. The second thing I was thinking: If they make this movie, David Cross, Conan O'Brien, Adam Sandler, David Spade, these people are going to see me do this thing and go, 'Really?' It's just so fundamentally discordant. I could have asked for more comedy in the first one. And I didn't want that. I wanted to either make a real action movie — which would blow my friends' minds — or don't do it at all. If you're just going to ridicule the form, don't do it. Or just do 'Naked Gun,' which is super fun, too. I thought the funnier thing — what I did — was to do it. That's a joke on a cosmic scale. I'm literally pranking the universe. I am, right? That's the big joke. Now, what do I do with it? That's the question. AP: With the 'Nobody' movies and your recent Broadway experience, you've set a high bar for surprising people with what you're capable of. ODENKIRK: I thought about the character of Saul. He never quits. He gets pushed around. He's clever. He's in a spot and he has to think of a way out. That's an action character. While it's true that it feels like, 'Oh, boy, you went so far away.' I didn't really go that far away. It's one step. It's a big step. Everything else is in Saul. I did think that for people who know my comedy, this is going to be a hard sell. But that's not that many people. That's a cult group. AP: And it might not be that hard of a sell to your comedy fans, either. The lie detector 'Mr. Show' sketch, in which you calmly confess to outlandish things, has a similar what's-under-the-surface quality like the 'Nobody' movies. ODENKIRK: (Laughs) Yeah, yes. AP: Maybe the most relevant sketch, though, is the one where you and David Cross playtough guys who bump into each other in a bar and then remained locked in mutual animosity through their lives, even through marriage. 'Nobody 2' kicks off with a similar encounter. ODENKIRK: It's a tap on the shoulder that sets this whole thing off. He agrees to leave. Then this little tap happens. Then he leaves. He's outside. He can keep walking, which is what you would do. You'd get home and tell your wife, 'That guy tapped her on the back of the head.' It would just sit with you forever. The whole thing could have been avoided if it wasn't for who Hutch is, which is a person who allows himself to go crazy. AP: Allowing yourself to go crazy isn't a radically different impulse in comedy. Did you always feel like rage or anger was fueling some of the funniest things you did? ODENKIRK: For sure. I remember sitting with David Cross in the morning. We would start our time at 'Mr. Show' trying to generate ideas, sitting around with the paper. Oftentimes, it was: 'This really pisses me off,' or 'Look at this stupid thing.' So, yeah, frustration, anger, those are the very raw materials of comedy. AP: You're just funneling that rage into a different place. ODENKIRK: Life conjures up this rage in you, but there is no place that deserves it. In the first film, the first place he goes to exact revenge, he realizes all these people have nothing, they don't deserve it. In the second film, he goes after this guy and he's like, 'I'm under her thumb.' It's really not something you're supposed to do in an action movie, and I love that. You don't just get to find a bad guy around the corner. You've got to go looking. AP: You've said you'd like to do a third one that ends with Hutch having nothing. ODENKIRK: Yeah, the moral would be that everything he loves is gone. He burned everything he loved. We let him get away with it because the movie is an entertainment and it's meant to tell you: Yes, you can let go of your rage in this magical world. But in the end, I would think that it's an addiction. And he does want to do it. He does want to have a go, and so does every guy. That's why we have movies. And that's why we have boxing matches. AP: How much credit do you give these movies for saving your life? After you had a heart attack in 2021 on the set of 'Better Call Saul,' you attributed your narrow survival to your 'Nobody' training. ODENKIRK: When I had my EKG, where you can see the heart, the doctor explained that I had almost no scarring from that incident. And that's kind of weird because of how long that incident went on and how drastic it was. They were like: 'This should all be scar tissue, and there's none.' They said that's because these other veins are bigger than we're used to seeing, and that's from all the exercise you've been doing. And, dude, I did a lot. I went from a comedy writer who exercised just by riding a bike three or four times a week to the action I did in those movies. AP: You told Marc Maron you saw no white light and tongue-in-cheek advised him to 'go for the money.' ODENKIRK: Well, I got nothing. Nothing. I did talk to my family the next day. I woke up the next day around 1:30 and talked to my wife and kids. I was talking to people for the next week, and I don't remember any of it, or the day that it happened. AP: But did the experience change you? ODENKIRK: (Long pause) It's a big component of my thinking about who I am and what I want to do with myself and my time. The thing that's driven me the most in my life is a sense of responsibility. Not just like, 'Oh, I have kids. I have to make money and take care of them.' But, like, responsibility to the universe. 'Oh, they'll let you do this action movie.' Well, then you better do a f------ great job. 'They want you do 'Better Call Saul.'' Well, let's go. The universe is saying: You can do this. And you owe that opportunity that's so unjustified and magical. I just feel responsibility almost too readily. But the heart attack, however you want to feel about everybody's expectations of you, I mean, you're going to be gone. The world's going to go on without you, just fine. So I don't know, man. Yeah, you've got to come through for people. But you've also got a lot of freedom to invite who you want to be.


Daily Mail
8 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Taylor Swift slammed for treating Travis Kelce like a 'dumb pet' during lengthy New Heights podcast
Taylor Swift set fans into a tailspin after announcing her 12th studio album on Wednesday - but not all those who listened to the multi-hour podcast extravaganza were charmed by the singer. The Eras Tour hitmaker, 35, released the cover and track list for her upcoming album, The Life Of A Showgirl, on her boyfriend Travis Kelce 's New Heights podcast, with excited fans thrilled to see her collaborating with her beau. The fiercely private star gave a peek into her relationship during the episode, as they packed on the PDA while sat next to each other, giving some insight into their high-profile relationship. During the episode, the Grammy-award winning artist schooled her boyfriend, and his co-host and brother Jason Kelce, on numerology, Shakespeare and showed off her vocabulary. However, some have slammed the artist for treating The Chiefs tight end like he was a child, taking to social media to share their thoughts. 'The way Taylor speaks is unnatural like she's a pretentious alien struggling to pass for human,' one Reddit user declared. Another compared her to a 'my know-it-all friend' they had in in middle school who 'got a thesaurus for Christmas at 12 and suddenly discovered four syllable words that she would just inject into every sentence possible.' 'This is giving me baby talking to my cat. "Oh, you're so stupid! You're so cute and stupid! Just a tiny braincell! Such a cute stupid baby!"' someone else joked. 'It's giving him being slow, and her treating him like a dumb pet,' declared another. During the podcast, Kelce praised his girlfriend for using 'big words,' with the singer replying with a loving 'you're handsome.' While the couple - who have been dating since 2023 - had plenty of people declaring their relationship 'couple goals' on the podcast, they also had some dubious responses. 'Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce are like if I were to picture my nightmare relationship that's exactly how it would look. Beer pong? Bread puns?? Human exclamation point ? Numerology ?? Kill me,' an exasperated user wrote. 'I was trying not to scratch my eyes out when he asked what numerology was…you can't like…critically think for two seconds at what that might have to do with?? Really? There is literally no way,' someone else said. 'Always knew the Swifties were insufferable because of Taylor Swift,' snarked another. Other people suggested that Swift was too intelligent for Kelce. 'I think Taylor Swift probably is very smart but to be fair Travis Kelce probably thinks anyone who can read is a genius,' a Reddit user wrote. However, some have slammed the artist for treating The Chiefs tight end like he was a child, taking to social media to share their thoughts 'Travis Kelce is actually King of the Himbos and simps and I hope he becomes a role model for every dumb white man,' joked someone else. 'She is just sooooo much smarter like incredibly smarter than them and I don't know how she stands hanging out with them for more than 38 seconds at a time bc she's had to explain herself about 113 times this whole show,' said another. The Grammy winner alluded to Shakespeare with the opening song on her record as well as the album cover. Swift also revealed that she had to give Kelce a crash course on the plot of Shakespeare's tragedy, Hamlet, as he's never read it. While showing off the vinyl to the Kelce brothers, the singer shared that the first track is titled 'The Fate Of Ophelia.' Ophelia is a character from Hamlet. She is the love interest of Prince Hamlet, and tragically dies by drowning in a brook. After Swift announced the name of the first track on the podcast, her boyfriend jokingly asked his brother, 'Do you know what Fate of Ophelia is?' Meanwhile the singer looked at the athlete while smiling and asked, 'You want to talk about Hamlet?' 'I don't want to get Jason all riled up,' the Kansas City Chiefs tight end replied. Swift then told Jason that her boyfriend 'might not have read Hamlet' but that she 'explained it to him.' 'Don't tell my middle school English teacher I didn't read it. Because I definitely was supposed to,' the athlete quipped. After his brother poked fun at him, Kelce replied, 'It's alright, I watched the Lion King.' 'See, he knows what Hamlet is,' Swift concluded, referencing how the Disney animated musical was inspired by the play. The football star's brother was surprised by this, asking, 'Wait, Lion King is based off Hamlet?' 'Yes!' Swift exclaimed. The hitmaker's new album will see a huge change in mood after she revealed a very sexy cover for her upcoming album, one of which showed her posing provocatively as she bit her finger. Swift In the cover, Swift flashed the flesh in a skimpy green jeweled bodysuit while submerged in water in what appeared to be a bathtub.