Robert Redford Opens Up About Infant Son's Death

The famously private Robert Redford has never fully recovered from the tragic SIDS death of his baby boy more than 50 years ago, he says in a rare interview.
Redford's son with first wife Lola Van Wagenen died of
sudden infant death syndrome when he was only 5 months old, in 1959.
"It was really hard," Redford, 74,
tells AARP The Magazine for its March/April cover story. "We were very young. I had my first theater job, which didn't pay much. We didn't know anything about SIDS, so the only thing you think is that you've done something wrong. As a parent, you tend to blame yourself. That creates a scar that probably never completely heals."
Redford and Van Wagenen, whom he divorced in 1985 after almost 30 years of marriage, had three other children together. The actor, director and founder of the Sundance Film Festival remained single until 2009, when he married longtime girlfriend Sibylle Szaggars.
"She's a very special person," he says of his current wife. "She's younger than I am, and European, which I like, so that's a whole new life."
As for how he's been able to stay private, even as he rose to stardom and became one of the greatest and most prolific film actors of his generation, Redford says it has always just been about the work for him. Until recently, that is.
"When I got into the business, I had this naive idea that I'd let my work speak for me. I just was never interested in talking about myself," he tells AARP. "However, we're in such a different time and celebrity is so much in the mainstream. I thought, 'I might as well enter this zone, but go a toe at a time.'"
He also has treated fame very gingerly.
"I dealt with it the way I wanted to," Redford says. "I felt that if you were fortunate enough to have success, you should shadowbox with it but never embrace it, because it has a demon side."
It still sometimes surprises the star of 'The Horse Whisperer,' 'Indecent Proposal,' 'The Sting' and more than 60 other films that he became an actor in the first place, he says.
"I never imagined being an actor. I wanted to get a formal education in art so I could go back to Europe and paint," he says. "Something clicked. It was the beginning of everything coming into focus with me."
At 74, Redford still remembers "going into hiding" when he turned 40 -- while his close friend Jane Fonda threw herself a big bash for the same birthday. Since then, he has learned to accept but not obsess about aging and stay active along the way.
"I ride horses, ski, play pretty hard tennis. I still have energy. When that starts to shut down, I might start to think about age," he says. "When you get older, you learn certain life lessons. You apply that wisdom, and suddenly you say, 'Hey, I've got a new lease on this thing. So let's go.'"
Redford, whose most recent project is as director of 'The Conspirator,' does take issue with being called a "living legend" because it makes him sound close to the end. And he is anything but.
"That really bothers me," he tells the magazine. "Does that mean I'm bronzed? Whoa! It's not over yet, folks!"
http://xml.channel.aol.com/xmlpublisher/fetch.v2.xml?option=expand_relative_urls&dataUrlNodes=uiConfig,feedConfig,entry&id=775255&pid=775254&uts=1273239596
http://www.popeater.com/mm_track/popeater/music/?s_channel=us.musicpop&s_account=aolpopeater,aolsvc&omni=1&ke=1
http://cdn.channel.aol.com/cs_feed_v1_6/csfeedwrapper.swf
Caught in Action: Celebrities Hard at Work
Jon Hamm, star of the hit series "Mad Men", is spotted filming scenes for the upcoming season. Jon was all smiles while filming in a red, vintage Imperial convertible.
Pacific Coast News
Pacific Coast News
Add a comment
Well. well... the quiet ppl whisperer has finally decided to talk, but now we don't Want to hear him. The living fossil, ooops, lengend, that is, believes somebody still cares ... Bwah hahaha.
Reply
That is pretty nasty. I like Redford.
I care...
You know what " haily " ? Maybe when you grow up you can see beyond this article being so much about an actor and more as a guy with a really great attitude about the phases of life! He is happy and he is active and he does good things for people. That in itself makes him a good guy.
Go lay an EGG!
Like, Oh mah Gawd, like, you need to get back to your texting your BFF while driving.......Delta, Delta, Delta, can I help ya, help ya, help ya??
Like, "Oh mah Gawd", you need to get back to your texting your BFF while driving.......Delta, Delta, Delta, can I help ya, help ya, help ya??
You must be a SKANK
I feel his pain. I too, lost a son to SIDS. It will ALWAYS be the toughest day of my life and I will never get over either. God Bless all the little people and their parent who have died from this.
Reply
I'm with you, I lost a son ten years ago and you Never get over loosing a child.
Reply
I know how it feels to lose a child to SIDS. Our family lost "Baby Heather" over 26 years ago and we still feel the pain. Her 2 older siblings on the 25th anniversary of her death created a foundation called "Big Love, Little Hearts" in her honor. To date they have arranged over 200 heart operations worldwide to save the lives of infants. (Many deaths attributed to SIDS tears ago were in fact a form of heart defect that today can be diagnosed and cured). Our liitle Heather up in heaven has good reason to be proud of her sister and brother as well as us parents. Love your children today, you never will know what tomorrow brings.
Reply
I recently lostr my 24 yr old son, he's right, you blame yourself,you are never ok again, and it leaves a permanent scar that never heals.
Reply
Robert Redford is one of my heroes for what he stands for and what he does to make this world a better place.
He and his friend, Paul Newman, are and were gifts to our world.
We love you, Robert
Reply
CAN ANYONE SPELL???
Reply
Yess.
My spelling is generally OK. I keep a dictionary handy and routinely look up words for the correct spelling. I just can't type worth a hoot. You might also take into consideration that the internet is not confined to the U.S. Some words are spelled differently in other countries and American English as a second language will leave some people confused with differentiating the correct spelling of words like there, their, and they're. And of course, here in the U.S., schools graduate a lot of dummies.
Sharon.........I would much rather read someone's incorrectly spelled words than read a message from someone who is too ignorant to know that using all caps is the same as shouting....take a pill and chill toots
I never respond on these pages, but I just can't understand why people can't be nice. If you can't say something nice about someone, why say anything at all?
Reply
What are you saying hallie? Don't say a bad word about Charles Manson? Ted Bundy? Barack Obama?............By your logic we shouldn't judge criminals at all lest we hurt their precious "feelings". Please go away.
No, Hallie, they can't. They hide and curse the part of the world that doesn't run their way, and can't see any good in anyone who isn't just like them.