Paul Newman with daughter Clea and wife Joanne Woodward, 1968.
Paul Newman with daughter Clea and wife Joanne Woodward, 1968.
Leonard McCombe—Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images
Years before he became a salad dressing mogul, Paul Newman's own Hollywood kitchen saw him cooking eggs for good pal Anthony Perkins in 1958. (Newman's wife Joanne Woodward removes sweet rolls from the oven.)
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Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman, whose marriage would last 50 years (until his death in 2008), share a laugh as they get dressed in their Hollywood home in 1959.
Paul Newman as Douglas Fairbanks.
Paul Newman as Douglas Fairbanks.
John Dominis—Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images
At home in Utah, Redford wraps an arm around a cutout of his Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid co-star Paul Newman, a gift from Grauman's Chinese Theater in Los Angeles. The movie -- the first on-screen pairing of Redford and Newman -- is beloved for the easy chemistry between the two men, who were buddies behind the scenes as well. "Whenever he'd make a mistake on set, he would enjoy it more than anybody," Redford recalled of his late friend in a 2008 TIME tribute. "He'd look at me, and I'd say, 'You're not fooling anybody; you've lost your line.' And he'd roar with laughter."
Allan Grant—Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images
Paul Newman having make-up removed on the set of The Battler (TV play), 1955.
DREAMWORKS
Paul Newman and Tom Hanks in the film "The Road to Perdition"
Ralph Crane—Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images
Connecticut delegates and Eugene McCarthy supporters Paul Newman (right) and playwright Arthur Miller during the contentious 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
Mark Kauffman / Time Life Pictures / Getty
Actor Paul Newman died Friday, Sept. 26, at 83, after a long battle with cancer
JIM COOPER/AP
Actor Paul Newman at his New York apartment
DREAMWORKS
Tom Hanks and Paul Newman in a scene from "Road to Perdition"
Everett
Robert Redford, left, and Paul Newman in "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid", 1969.
They don’t make them like they used to. That assertion, although often colored by a rose-tinted nostalgia, seems to hold some genuine truth nowadays, when...