While his fellow ‘70s greats, Al Pacino and Robert De Niro, are still out there acting in films, Jack Nicholson, 87, has more or less decided to quit movies in favor of a more solemn life on Mulholland Drive, his home since 1975.
It’s been 13 years since Nicholson appeared in a film, the last time being James L. Brooks’ “How Do You Know,” a romcom starring Reese Witherspoon, Paul Rudd and Owen Wilson. In 2017, he was also rumored to star in a remake of the German comedy “Toni Erdmann, and has since dropped out, derailing the project in the process.
Nicholson never actually announced his retirement, but, given that he’s now 87 years old, the chances of ever seeing him on-screen again seem nil to none. With that said, we actually have a new sighting of the man. In a photo shared on Instagram, by his daughter, Nicholson can be seen staring at the camera, and more importantly, looking good and healthy (via Instagram).
During an interview in the “WTF With Marc Maron” podcast, record producer, and longtime Nicholson friend, Lou Adler shared a recent chat he had with Nicholson. It turns out that the actor is apparently still refusing movie roles:
A friend of mine wanted to put him in a movie. Jack said, ‘I don’t want to do it. You know what I did today? I sat under a tree and I read a book.’ […] He’s doing whatever he really wants to do. He wants to be quiet. He wants to eat what he wants. He wants to live the life he wants.
In a September 2013 Vanity Fair article, Nicholson stated that he did not consider himself retired, merely that he was now less driven to “be out there anymore”. He did make a special appearance in 2015 as a presenter on SNL 40, the 40th anniversary special of Saturday Night Live.
In 2017, The New York Post's Page Six had Nicholson's great pal, the late great Peter Fonda, quoted as saying: “I think he is basically retired. I don’t want to speak for him, but he has done a lot of work and he has done very well as a person financially. Sometimes people have a reason that you don’t know, and it’s not for me to ask. I don’t call him up and say, ‘Johnny,’ I call him Johnny Hop, ‘What are you doing?’ I would say, ‘How are you, how do you feel?’”
Nicholson is a national treasure, and in the pantheon of the great post-60s American actors, I’d put him right up there with Pacino, De Niro and Hackman. His charismatic, loose style of acting has been copied, but never duplicated — the sardonic drifter, the eternal outsider, a man that rebelled against a societal structure.
There are too many great performances in his vast and eclectic filmography: “Five Easy Pieces,” “Chinatown,” “The Last Detail” “The Passenger,” “One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest,” “The Shining,” “Terms of Endearment,” “Prizzi’s Honor,” “Broadcast News,” “Batman,” “A Few Good Men,” “As Good As it Gets,” “The Pledge,” “About Schmidt,” “The Departed” … I could probably add another dozen roles. Legend.