Albert S. Ruddy , who earned two Best Picture Oscars for producing The Godfather and Million Dollar Baby , died May 25 at UCLA Ronald Reagan Medical Center after a brief illness, a family spokesman said. He was 94.
Ruddy is one of nine producers ever to earn two or more Best Picture Oscars, and has the distinction of winning them with the largest interval in between — 32 years. Related Stories News Hollywood & Media Deaths In 2024: Photo Gallery & Obituaries Obituaries Fred Roos Dies: Oscar-Winning ‘Godfather Part II’ Producer & Longtime Coppola Collaborator Was 89 He recently was portrayed by Miles Teller in the Paramount+ miniseries The Offer, which chronicles Ruddy’s experience making the 1972 film that Coppola directed and adapted with Mario Puzo from the latter’s bestselling novel. “Al was truly one of the great Hollywood mavericks,” The Offer director Dexter Fletcher said in a statement.
“One of the last Mohicans who created great movies which still influence and inspire to this day. From humble beginnings to the highest of Hollywood accolades. His was an incredible journey.
Achieved through the sheer power of his determination, strong will, irrepressible energy and charm and a rarely matched love for the art of film.” RELATED: Peter Bart: ‘The Offer’ Spins A Mafia Tale About ‘The Godfather’ That’s Really More Fiction Than Fact Teller said in a statement: “It was an honor and a privilege to portray Al in The Offer . Al lived a life most cou.
