Robert Redford died at 89. For many on Mallorca, he remains the enigmatic artist who found peace and new perspectives here.
Robert Redford died at the age of 89
The news came quietly, yet like a blow: Robert Redford has died. The actor and director who shaped generations died in his sleep at his house in Utah. For us on Mallorca, that means: a figure who often appeared here only in between moments — as a neighbor, as a vacationer, as someone who sought peace — now belongs completely to history.
Why the island meant so much to him
Mallorca in Redford's stories was not a postcard. He came as a young man, stayed for a while, painted, wandered the peninsulas, and later spoke of how that time gave him direction and calm. In the mid-1960s he is said to have lived with his family in Port d'Alcúdia — a period when, between children's laughter at the harbor and long walks along the coast, he weighed whether the stage would really be his home.
I remember conversations with neighbors who only glimpsed him: at the corner bakery, with a sketchbook under his arm, or at the market where he bought olives and bread. Such small encounters make a person feel familiar here, even if you never truly know him.
More than just roles
His films — from clever heist stories to grand dramas — are part of our cultural memory. But Redford also sought answers away from the limelight. A sabbatical in Andalusia, the early days as a painter: all that shows a side that surprises many. He was not only an actor or director, but someone who consistently sought freedom.
For Mallorca his departure means a connection is lost that often spoke with few words. The island has celebrities who shine in photos — and those who sit at the window at night, painting, thinking. The latter remain in memory in a quieter, more personal way.
If you stroll through Palma now, along Passeig Mallorca, you hear conversations about his films, about the old stories from Port d'Alcúdia, and about the image of a man who kept retreating to find strength. This is not a loud remembrance. It is more a collective pause — a thanks for the moments when his work touched us.
Our thoughts are with his family and all who loved him. The films remain. The memories here on the island, too.
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