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Dustin Hoffman at 80: from flammable to mellow

Dustin Hoffman turns 80 on August 8. David Robson celebrates his career.

August 3, 2017 10:55
AFP_OP56N
3 min read

Nobody had ever seen Dustin Hoffman before he played The Graduate. He was an off-Broadway stage actor. Then suddenly, age 30, he was famous beyond belief. The film wasn’t simply a success it was, according to the New Yorker, “the biggest success in the history of movies.”

A woman seeing Hoffman and his wife creeping out of a cinema after the ecstatic audience left, said to him “Life is never going to be the same from this moment on.” That was 50 years ago and it was of course true but not perhaps in the way she would have predicted.

He wasn’t destined to become a conventional film star. Unlike his fellow 80-year-olds Jack Nicholson and Warren Beatty —  equally important figures in the new sort of films that transformed Hollywood in the 1970s — he does not have a seductive presence or men-want-to-be-him-women-want-to-be-with-him allure. You don’t go to the cinema to see a “Dustin Hoffman film” in the way you go to see a “Jack Nicholson film.” You go to see a Dustin Hoffman performance. 

And what performances! What do you do as a young leading man who’s taken America by storm? Hoffman’s next two roles were the limping, dying New York scumbag Ratso Rizzo in Midnight Cowboy then a 121-year-old in Little Big Man — magnificent but hardly the obvious thing to do.