Posted in

After Decades, Matt Damon Reveals the Truths about Robin Williams.

I don’t know if it’ll happen, but I really hope it does. Someone proposed to us, an artist, to do a bronze statue of Robin and permanently put it there. And the idea being that if you feel alone, or you, you know, you can go sit next to him. There is a moment Matt Damon has carried with him for nearly 30 years.

It was the very first day of filming Goodwill Hunting. He and Ben Affleck weren’t even working that day. They just showed up on set and sat off to the side of the camera to watch Robin Williams rehearse. Two young men from Cambridge who had spent five years fighting to get this movie made. And by the time someone called action, tears were already falling down Matt’s face.

When the scene ended, Robin walked over. He saw the tears. He put his hand on their heads and said, “It’s not a fluke. You guys really did this. You really did it.” After decades, Matt Damon is finally telling the full truth about what Robin Williams meant to him. And right now, in 2026, that truth is being told in a way that neither of them could have ever planned.

You probably know Matt Damon as one of the most respected actors of his generation. The guy from Goodwill Hunting and the Bourne franchise. The man who survived alone on Mars in The Martian. Who carried The Departed alongside Jack Nicholson and Leonardo DiCaprio without flinching. Who just finished filming Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey. An Oscar winner.

A box office titan. A man who has made Hollywood feel like it was built for him. But long before any of that, he was just a kid from Cambridge, Massachusetts. Born on October 8th, 1970. Growing up in a neighborhood where nothing came easy and nobody owed you anything. His parents divorced when he was two years old.

He and his older brother Kyle moved with their mother Nancy to Cambridge. Nancy was a professor of early childhood education at Lesley University. Intelligent, principled. A woman who raised her boys in a genuinely unconventional home. At one point, she moved them into a six-family communal house in Central Square.

The kind of place where ideas were always in the air and money was not. Matt has said that even without much of it, he always felt rich in another way. He had good teachers. He had a remarkable older brother. He had a mother who made him feel like what was inside his head mattered more than what was inside anyone’s wallet. But as a teenager, he has been honest about feeling lonely, like he didn’t quite belong anywhere.

He was self-conscious about his height, unsure of his place in the social order. Not one of the cool kids by anyone’s definition. He attended Cambridge Rindge and Latin School. A public school whose alumni ranged from poet E.E. Cummings to basketball legend Patrick Ewing. And he threw himself into drama with the kind of intensity that tells you someone has found the thing they were always supposed to do.

And then, when he was 10 years old, a kid moved in two blocks down the road. His name was Ben Affleck. They played baseball together. They played Dungeons and Dragons. They went to the movies and came home talking about what they’d seen for hours. Ben has said that Matt gave acting a framework, a legitimacy, a social acceptability that made it feel like something real boys could actually want.

Other students called them drama geeks. They weren’t considered cool, but they had each other. And they had a shared dream that burned with the kind of heat that doesn’t go out. After high school, Matt enrolled at Harvard University as an English major. His parents weren’t wild about the idea of an acting career for their Harvard son.

But Matt kept skipping classes to audition, to take small television roles, to keep one foot in the door of the life he wanted. During his final year at Harvard, he wrote a 40-page script for a playwriting class. A piece about a young man from South Boston. A janitor. A secret genius who couldn’t let himself be known.

It was the seed of something he could feel it. He dropped out of Harvard just 12 credits short of graduation and went to Los Angeles to try to make it happen. He showed the script to Ben, and the two of them spent the next five years making it into something. They rewrote it endlessly. They showed it to producers.

They showed it to directors. They were told no so many times that the word almost stopped meaning anything. They inserted deliberately outrageous scenes into the script just to see if anyone was actually reading it. They fought with studios over creative control. They insisted over every objection that they had to play the lead roles themselves, which made every conversation in every conference room harder than the last.

Matt has described the experience as being, “Okay, thanks.” over and over again. You walk in, you give everything you have, and someone looks up and says, “Okay, thank you.” And that’s it. But they didn’t stop. And eventually, the script made its way to Harvey Weinstein at Miramax, who saw what it could be under two conditions.

Then something happened that changed everything. A copy of the script reached Robin Williams. Robin had heard about Goodwill Hunting through Francis Ford Coppola, who had just finished working with him. He received the pages from director Gus Van Sant, who was being considered to helm the project. And he read them. Just like that, he said yes.

Matt has been direct about this in every interview where the subject has come up. It was Robin Williams’ interest, and then his commitment to the film, that finally got the whole thing made. The studio had been cautious about two unknown actors insisting they star in their own movie. But the moment Robin Williams attached his name to Goodwill Hunting, the math changed.

Weinstein moved forward. Van Sant was hired. The cameras started rolling. Robin had also negotiated something that revealed exactly how clearly he understood the script’s potential. He took a smaller upfront fee than he could have demanded, but built in an escalating participation deal. He would start earning a percentage of the profits once the film crossed $60 million at the box office.

It ended up grossing more than $225 million worldwide. Robin Williams had seen what this film was worth before most people in Hollywood would give it a serious conversation. And then came that first day on set. The day Matt sat off to the side of the camera and wept without knowing exactly why. It wasn’t just relief, though five years of rejection had certainly earned some of that.

It wasn’t just excitement, though God knows there was plenty of that, too. It was something deeper. It was the recognition that the words they had written, words about trauma and genius and the fear of being known, were being given to the right person. That Robin Williams understood something about Will Hunting that perhaps even Matt and Ben hadn’t fully articulated to themselves.

What Matt has said about working with Robin over and over in the years since is that he has never seen anyone like him on a film set. Take after take, Robin gave something different in big ways and in small ways. Always inventive. Always alive to some new possibility in the material. Matt has called him one of the hardest working people he ever encountered.

Not the effortless genius that the public image suggested, but someone who was absolutely tenacious. Who showed up and worked and worked and worked because that was how seriously he took the craft. He just was exploding with ideas and creative energy, Matt said in a 2024 interview. And he was really, really kind to everybody.

There is a scene in Goodwill Hunting that has become one of the most recognized moments in American cinema. The park bench scene. Where Sean Maguire tells Will Hunting quietly and without flinching, “It’s not your fault.” He says it once, and Will brushes it off. He says it again and Will gets annoyed. He keeps saying it gently and stubbornly until Will breaks open completely and collapses into tears in the arms of this man who refused to let him keep blaming himself for what was done to him as a child.

Matt has described watching Robin film that scene for the first time and thinking simply, “This is going to be really good.” He had one or two lines in it. The scene belonged entirely to Robin and Robin owned every frame. But there was another moment on that same set that Matt has told with a particular kind of delight.

During a scene in which Will and Sean were opening up to each other in the therapist’s office, Robin went completely off script. He improvised a story, warm and funny and unexpectedly tender about his character’s wife. And in the middle of it, he landed a specific line that Matt has described as making him grab director Gus Van Sant by the shoulders in disbelief.

“He stole my line,” Matt said laughing, because Robin had arrived at something so precise, so perfectly placed that neither he nor Ben had ever thought to write it that way in five years of working on the script. That improvised moment ended up in the final film, contributing to the performance that won Robin Williams his only Academy Award.

The film earned nine nominations at the 1998 Oscars. Robin won Best Supporting Actor. Matt and Ben won Best Original Screenplay. At 27 years old, Matt Damon stood on the most famous stage in cinema with his best friend and accepted the prize for a script he had started writing in a Harvard playwriting class.

He has talked about that night many times, but what he has never stopped returning to in interview after interview across nearly three decades is not the award, it is the man who made the whole thing possible and then stood back and let them have their moment. Robin Williams was not just a vehicle for getting Good Will Hunting made.

He was a presence on that set that changed the people around him. Matt has described watching Robin notice in the middle of a long shooting day when the cast and crew were starting to flag, when the energy was draining out of the room and everyone was running on caffeine and obligation, and Robin would launch without anyone asking him to into 15 minutes of live stand-up comedy just for the room, not for an audience, not for cameras, not for any reason except that he could see people needed it.

Matt has said it was the best stand-up he had ever seen delivered privately in the middle of a working afternoon to a group of tired people who walked away from it laughing so hard they could barely breathe and then went back to work with something restored in them. “I couldn’t have asked for a better role model,” Matt said years later reflecting on what Robin had given him, not just professionally, not just in terms of technique or work ethic, but as a human being showing another human being how to treat the people around you. After Good

Will Hunting, Matt’s career took off in every direction at once. He was in Saving Private Ryan with Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg. He was in Rounders. He was in The Talented Mr. Ripley. He was in the Oceans franchise alongside George Clooney, Brad Pitt, and Julia Roberts. He made blockbusters and independent films, played heroes and villains, earned more nominations and won more awards.

He married Luciana Barroso in 2005, a woman he met in Miami while filming, and they built a family together, four daughters, a life that by his own account has grounded him in ways that fame alone never could. But through all of it, Robin Williams stayed with him, not as a memory that fades around the edges, but as something present.

Matt has talked about taking his family, years after Robin’s death, to Boston Common, to the actual park bench where the famous scene was filmed, just to sit there. His children were too young to have seen the movie. They didn’t know what the bench meant, but Matt sat there anyway and thought about Robin for a while.

That is not something you do for a co-star. That is something you do for someone who changed the course of your life and whom you are still trying to find the right way to thank. On August 11th, 2014, Robin Williams died at his home in Paradise Cay, California. He was 63 years old. The cause was suicide. He had been suffering, it was later revealed, from Lewy body dementia, a devastating neurological disease that had gone undiagnosed while he was alive, causing confusion, paranoia, and suffering that those closest to him could see but not explain. The world stopped for a day.

People who had grown up watching him through Mork & Mindy, through Dead Poets Society, through Aladdin and Mrs. Doubtfire and Good Morning, Vietnam felt a grief that surprised them with its depth. He had always seemed like someone who would simply keep going, someone too alive to stop. For Matt, it was something different from public grief.

It was the loss of a specific person who had looked him in the eyes on a film set when he was 26 years old and told him his work was real. A man who had taken a pay cut to be in a movie made by two unknown kids from Boston because he believed in what they had written. A man who had pulled the whole thing off the ground simply by saying yes when everyone else was still deciding.

Matt’s statement in the hours after Robin’s death was quiet and unadorned. “Robin brought so much joy into my life and I will carry that joy with me forever,” he said. “He was such a beautiful man. I was lucky to know him and I will never, ever forget him.” In a conversation with fans on Reddit, he went a little further.

He wrote that Robin was one of the most generous, loving, wonderful people I’ve ever met. He described what those afternoons of impromptu stand-up on the set had felt like, everyone laughing and laughing and then going back to work with something new in them. And then he said the thing that sits at the center of all of it, the thing he has been building toward every time he has spoken about Robin Williams.

“I’ll never be able to thank him enough for what he gave us. In my heart, that’s where he is, as this person that I’m deeply, deeply grateful came into my life and changed it for the better.” The gratitude has not softened with time, it has sharpened. And now, in April 2026, something is about to happen that brings all of it full circle in a way that feels almost too carefully arranged to be coincidence.

Matt Damon and Ben Affleck are being honored together with the ninth Robin Williams Legacy of Laughter Award, presented at a sold-out fundraising event in San Francisco hosted by Bring Change to Mind, the mental health nonprofit founded by Glenn Close. The event is held at the Fort Mason Center for Arts and Culture, a few miles from the neighborhood in San Francisco where Robin lived and worked and loved the city he called home.

And the award will be placed in Matt and Ben’s hands by Robin’s own children, Zak, Zelda, and Cody Williams. Think about what that means for a moment. The children of the man who made their dreams come true standing in front of them handing them something made in their father’s name. That is not a Hollywood moment. That is a human one.

That is the kind of closing of a circle that you spend a lifetime not quite believing will actually happen. In their joint statement ahead of the ceremony, Matt and Ben said, “Robin wasn’t just someone we admired. He made our dreams come true. We owe everything to him. He said yes to our movie and we got it made. Receiving the Legacy of Laughter Award created in honor of Robin Williams is incredibly meaningful to us.

His legacy isn’t just about his talent and how much he made the world laugh. It’s about how deeply he cared. This honor carries his spirit and that means everything to us. His legacy isn’t just about his talent. It’s about how deeply he cared. That is the line that matters, because that is the thing Matt Damon has been trying to say in one form or another for the better part of 30 years.

Not the Oscar performance, extraordinary as it was. Not the improvised line that Matt grabbed a director’s shoulders over. Not the laughter that rolled through a tired film set in the middle of a long afternoon. But the deeper thing underneath all of it. The quality of attention Robin Williams brought to the people around him.

The way he could look at two young men from Cambridge sitting on the side of a camera and understand exactly what they needed to hear. The way he walked over and put his hand on their heads and told them they had really done it. That is who Robin Williams was to Matt Damon. Not a legend he admired from a distance. Not a co-star he was lucky enough to share a set with.

A man who looked at him at the beginning of everything and said, “You’re not a fluke. You really did this.” After decades, Matt Damon is finally telling that truth in full. Standing up in San Francisco, accepting an award from Robin’s own children to say out loud what he has carried quietly for so long.

Some debts you can never fully repay, but you can show up. You can stand in the room. You can take what someone’s children place in your hands and you can let them see in your face that their father’s kindness is still alive in someone he touched all these years later. That is what Matt Damon is doing.

And that is the truth he has been building toward all along. If this story moved you, don’t forget to like this video, subscribe to the channel, and turn on those notifications so you never miss a story like this. Leave us a comment below. What’s your favorite Robin Williams moment or performance? We would love to hear from you. Thanks for watching and we’ll see you in the next one.