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At 85, Nick Nolte Breaks Silence about the Wild Scandal with Julia Roberts.

 

In 1994, Julia Roberts called Nick Nolte utterly  disgusting. He replied that she was not that nice   and everyone knew it. The directors of I Love  Trouble started shooting their scenes separately,   using editing tricks to fake a romance between  two people who could not stand each other.   It became one of the most talked-about feuds in  Hollywood history. And then thirty years passed.

Nolte is eighty-five years old now, and recently  he said something nobody expected. He said it was   partly his fault. And then he said something about  Julia Roberts that the 1994 headlines could never   have predicted — something that turns the whole  story around. This is that story.

And it is also   the story of one of the most quietly extraordinary  careers in American cinema, told by a man who   has finally stopped running from any part of it. Nicholas King Nolte was born on February 8, 1941,   in Omaha, Nebraska. His father was a football  player turned businessman, his mother a former   beauty queen.

He grew up in Omaha and in Iowa,  in the kind of middle-American landscape that   does not particularly prepare you for anything  except knowing who you are. He was an athlete   as a young man — good enough that he attended  Arizona State University, Pasadena City College,   and several other institutions on athletic  scholarships before academic difficulty,   or more precisely a certain foundational  incompatibility with institutional authority,   ended each run. He worked odd jobs.

He eventually  found his way to the theater, through the Pasadena   Playhouse and regional companies, and discovered  there what certain people discover when they find   acting — that it was the only context in which his  intensity was an asset rather than a liability.   His early career was long and largely invisible  to anyone outside the specific world of regional   theater and television.

For over a decade  he worked steadily and without recognition,   building a foundation that would eventually  support everything else. The break came in 1976,   when he was cast as Tom Jordache in Rich  Man, Poor Man, the ABC television miniseries   based on Irwin Shaw’s novel. The role reached  sixty million viewers a week and made Nolte,   at thirty-five years old, one of the  most talked-about new faces in American   entertainment. He was nominated for a Golden  Globe. He was on the cover of Time magazine.

The industry turned to look at him  with the full weight of its attention.   He did not make it easy for the industry. That,  in retrospect, was always going to be the case.   He had spent fifteen years learning to act  without any accommodation for what the audience   or the studios might prefer, and that  independence — so useful on stage,   so useful in the smaller television dramas of the  early 1970s — was not the quality that Hollywood’s   machinery was best equipped to handle. What he  had, and what directors who worked with him early   tended to notice immediately, was an absolute  refusal to perform anything he did not believe.   The films that defined his first decade of  stardom were built around that quality. North   Dallas 40 in 1979 — a football player watching  the game he loved consume him. 48 Hrs. in 1982,

where his cop Jack Cates was not charming, was  not easy, was a man functioning at the end of his   patience, and the friction between Nolte’s gruff  immovability and Eddie Murphy’s kinetic freshness   produced something that felt genuinely  dangerous. Murphy later said they did   not get along. He was right. He also said the  film was great. He was right about that too.

What people misunderstand about the 48 Hrs.  dynamic — and about most of Nolte’s on-set   conflicts — is that the friction was never  purely personal. It was methodological. Murphy   operated through improvisation and instinct,  adjusting in the moment, finding the laugh.   Nolte operated through preparation so deep it  sometimes looked like stubbornness — a commitment   to a specific version of a character that did not  easily accommodate what was happening around him.

These are not compatible methods. The resulting  tension was real. The resulting film was electric.   In the sequel, Another 48 Hrs., the tension was  still present but something had changed. Murphy   was now a global superstar. The dynamic that  had made the first film crackle with something   unpredictable could not be recaptured  by simply reassembling the same people.

Some things only work once because the friction  that produced them cannot be manufactured.   The 1980s gave Nolte the range that his 1970s  work had promised. Down and Out in Beverly Hills,   directed by Paul Mazursky, found a warmth  and comedy in him that surprised audiences   who had filed him under gruff intensity.

Under Fire, directed by Roger Spottiswoode,   demonstrated that he could carry a film’s  moral weight without relying on the kind of   explosive physicality that action movies offered.  He was moving toward something — toward the   specific register of damaged humanity that  would produce his best work in the 1990s.   That work arrived in 1991 with The Prince  of Tides, directed by Barbra Streisand.

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Nolte played Tom Wingo, a football coach and  part-time English teacher from South Carolina   who travels to New York to  help his therapist understand   his suicidal twin sister. It was a role that  required him to be, simultaneously, charming   and broken, funny and devastated, present and  absent in ways that the film carefully mapped   across two hours. He received his first Academy  Award nomination for Best Actor.

He received   a Golden Globe nomination. The performance still  stands as one of the defining works of his career,   precisely because it required him to be  accessible — to let the audience in — in   ways that his most intense work did not. Cape Fear in 1991 — Martin Scorsese’s remake,   in which he played the vigilante father  stalked by a psychotic ex-convict played   by Robert De Niro — used the darker register.

Blue Chips in 1994 with Shaquille O’Neal,   directed by William Friedkin, gave him a different  kind of arena: a basketball coach whose integrity   is being systematically dismantled by the  demands of competitive college recruitment.   Mulholland Falls in 1995 placed him in a neo-noir  about a 1950s LAPD detective. Jefferson in Paris   in 1995 found him playing Thomas Jefferson with a  complexity that historical biopics rarely permit.

These films did not all succeed commercially,  but together they demonstrated something   that the simple narrative of difficult co-star  does not accommodate: Nolte was doing more   interesting work, across more registers,  than almost any leading actor of his era.   Cape Fear in 1991 used the darker register.  Affliction in 1998 used it most completely.

In Paul Schrader’s adaptation of Russell  Banks’s novel, Nolte played Wade Whitehouse,   a small-town cop slowly being crushed by  everything — his father, his past, his inability   to be the man he wanted to be for his daughter.  The performance is almost unbearable to watch   in certain scenes, not because it is melodramatic  but because it is so precisely right.

He received   his second Academy Award nomination. Paul Schrader  has called it one of the finest performances   in the history of American film. James Coburn  won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor   for the same film — playing Wade’s brutal,  alcoholic father — and used his acceptance speech   to speak specifically about what it had been like  to work opposite Nolte, calling it an experience   unlike any other of his career.

The  praise, from Schrader and from Coburn both,   was not excessive. It was accurate. But between The Prince of Tides and Affliction,   there was I Love Trouble.  And I Love Trouble was 1994.   The film was a romantic thriller  directed by Charles Shyer,   written by Shyer and Nancy Meyers.  The premise was clean and commercial:   two competing newspaper reporters, played by  Nolte and Roberts, stumble onto a dangerous story   and fall in love while trying to scoop each  other.

It was a vehicle designed for two stars   at the top of their commercial power.  Roberts was coming off of Pelican Brief,   Hook, the full weight of the post-Pretty Woman  moment. Nolte was between The Prince of Tides   and the work that would culminate in Affliction.  On paper, the casting made obvious sense.   What nobody had quite accounted for  was the difference in their methods.

Roberts worked with a precision that she  had developed through years of navigating   a particular kind of Hollywood expectation — she  knew what she was doing and how she was doing it,   and she expected the set to function in a way  that supported that. Nolte worked by destabilizing   his own process. He was late. He was not always  where he was expected to be.

He brought things to   scenes that had not been in the script and were  not always useful. From Roberts’s perspective,   she has said, the experience was genuinely  maddening. From Nolte’s perspective, he was   doing what he always did. The problem was that  what he always did was not compatible with what   she needed in order to do what she always did.

“What we went through was absurd,” Nolte said,   three decades later, with the equanimity of a man  who has had enough time to see the whole shape of   something. “Partly it was my fault, partly hers.”  He did not elaborate in the way that would produce   a headline. He elaborated in the way of someone  who has actually thought about it.

He said that   on a romantic comedy, the machinery requires a  different kind of presence — a willingness to   be charming, to make the other person look  good, to work toward rather than against   the effect the scene is trying to produce. He was  not, by his own account, reliably good at that. He   found the genre less interesting than the subject  matter he was more drawn to, and it showed.

He also said something about Julia Roberts  that was almost certainly not written down   by the people who had archived the 1994 feud.  But before we get there, it is worth pausing   to note something about I Love Trouble that the  feud coverage consistently overlooked: the film   was not, by objective measure, worthy of the  talent assembled for it. The screenplay was thin.

The chemistry it required was the kind that cannot  be manufactured through effort. Nolte, who had   just come off The Prince of Tides and was heading  toward Affliction, was not naturally suited   to the light comic mechanics of a Shyer-Meyers  production. Roberts, who was between Pelican Brief   and something she would be better suited for,  was not served by a script that did not match   what she was capable of.

The failure of I Love  Trouble at the box office — it made sixty-seven   million dollars against a forty-million-dollar  budget, a tepid result for a major studio release   starring two of the biggest names in the business  — was less about the feud and more about a   fundamental mismatch between material and talent.  The feud was visible. The more fundamental problem   was not. He said she was talented in ways that  he had not fully appreciated at the time.

He said   the anger of those weeks had made it difficult to  see what was actually there. He said — and this is   the sentence that the 1994 version of the story  could not have predicted — that he had enormous   respect for her career and for the person he  had come to understand her to be, at a distance,   over thirty years of not working together.  It was a generous statement.

It was also,   characteristically, not the kind of statement  that asked for anything in return. He was not   seeking reconciliation. He was simply saying what  he thought, which is what he has always done,   even when what he thinks is inconvenient. The years after I Love Trouble were among   the most significant of Nolte’s career, which  is its own kind of argument against the idea   that the conflict with Roberts defined him in any  lasting way.

Affliction in 1998 was followed by   The Thin Red Line, Terrence Malick’s World War II  film in which he played Colonel Tall — a career   officer consumed by ambition and frustration and  the specific bitterness of a man who has spent his   life waiting for the moment that would justify  everything. The role was small in screen time   and enormous in impact.

Then Hotel Rwanda in  2004, where he played the Canadian general   whose forces were prohibited by the UN from  intervening in the genocide and who stood by   helplessly as people were killed in front of  him. Then Hulk, in which Ang Lee used Nolte’s   particular capacity for manic, barely controlled  intensity to play Bruce Banner’s father — a   performance that divided critics and has acquired  a certain cult admiration in the years since.

And then Warrior, in 2011, which is the film  that a certain generation knows him from,   and which earned him his third Academy  Award nomination. He played Paddy Conlon,   an alcoholic former Marine whose two sons are  about to fight each other in an MMA tournament,   and who carries decades of failure and guilt and  the specific damage that fathers inflict when they   are present but not safe.

The performance is,  in the specific way that the best late-career   performances are, the accumulated weight of  everything that came before it. You cannot watch   Nolte in Warrior and not see Tom Wingo and Wade  Whitehouse and Colonel Tall and all the other men   he has played who were trying to hold something  together and could not. Three Academy Award   nominations across twenty years. No wins. The  Academy has occasionally been wrong about things.

The September 2002 arrest — the DUI arrest  on Pacific Coast Highway, the mugshot that   circulated everywhere, the mugshot that  circulated everywhere, the image of Nolte   looking disheveled and disoriented that became  one of the most reproduced celebrity photographs   of the decade — was a harder chapter.

He has been  honest about his struggles with alcohol over the   years in ways that do not minimize what happened  and do not perform contrition either. He has said   that he understood the appeal of substances as a  way of managing the intensity that had always been   his defining quality — that the same thing that  made him a compelling actor made him, off the set,   someone who needed to find somewhere to  put the energy. This is not an excuse.

It is an explanation, and Nolte has always been  more interested in explanations than excuses.   In 2026, Nick Nolte is eighty-five years  old. He lives on a hillside in Malibu,   in a home he has had since 1991 —  originally a treehouse-style structure   that was later renovated, a tall modern farmhouse  with floor-to-ceiling sliding glass doors that   open onto views of the city below.

He is often  seen standing by those doors in the evenings,   looking out at the lights across the hills as the  day ends. He lives there with his wife Clyde Lane   and their daughter Sophia, who is now nineteen  years old and who appeared alongside her father   in Head Full of Honey, playing his  granddaughter — which is, given the age gap,   an accurate approximation of their real-world  relationship, and which Nolte has spoken about   with the particular warmth of a man who became  a father late and has not taken it for granted.

He continues to work selectively. Poker Face for  Rian Johnson, in which he played Arthur Lipton   with the kind of restrained, watchful stillness  that late-career performances sometimes produce   in actors who have learned to do less and  mean more. The Mandalorian. Crime 101,   the Amazon MGM Studios crime heist film  scheduled for release in 2026.

He does not   pursue leading roles. He pursues interesting  roles, which is the same choice he made   when his career was at its height, and the same  choice he will make as long as he can make it.   He has been married four times. He has three  children — Brawley Nolte, now an adult, from   his relationship with Rebecca Linger; Sophie Lane  Nolte; and Stella Nolte.

He is, in the chapter of   his life that follows the turbulence, a man who  has found the quieter version of intensity — the   one that expresses itself through presence  rather than combustion. Walking in Malibu with   his family. Standing at the glass doors in the  evening. Taking the roles that mean something.   The I Love Trouble feud was one  thing.

What came before and after it   was something else entirely. Nolte has said,  about Julia Roberts, that the anger of those weeks   had made it difficult to see what was actually  there. He has said she was talented in ways   he had not fully appreciated at the time. He  has not said they should work together again,   because he is not the kind of person who says  things he does not mean.

But he has said the truth   as he understands it, which is what he has  always done — on stage in the regional theaters   when nobody was watching, on set with Eddie Murphy  and Julia Roberts and Terrence Malick, and in a   quiet house in Malibu at eighty-five, where the  lights stretch across the hills at the end of the   day and the question of what really happened in  1994 finally has something close to an answer.

He has continued, quietly, to do the  work. Lorenzo’s Oil with Susan Sarandon   in 1992. New Year’s Day, I’ll Do Anything, Mother  Night across the decade. Every project chosen with   the same question underneath: is this something  I can believe in? The question has produced,   across fifty years, a body of work that does not  have many peers. Three Academy Award nominations.

A career that began in regional theater in  the 1960s and is still producing memorable   performances in 2026. A life that has been,  by his own account, turbulent and difficult   and occasionally self-destructive, and that  has also produced Sophia, who is nineteen,   and Clyde, who is still there, and a hillside  house in Malibu where the lights stretch   across the city at the end of the day.

What do you think about Nick Nolte’s story   and his long-delayed honesty about Julia Roberts?  Leave us your thoughts in the comments below.   Don’t forget to like, subscribe, and  we will see you in the next one.