
Many of us think we know Robert De Niro. We know him as Travis Bickle  or Vito Corleone or any number of other gangsters or bad guys. His  ability to combine corrupted virtue with deep sorrow and wit — along  with a fearsome sensuality — has made him a film hero with a tough  exterior. Perhaps that’s why it’s so shocking to see him shake and sob  as he talks about his late father, who lived openly as a gay man.
It’s been more than 20 years since Robert De Niro Sr.’s death from  cancer, but his memory is fresh for his son, who has preserved his  father’s final home and studio in New York City’s SoHo. Filled with  books, paintbrushes, and hundreds of canvases, some of which he never  finished, it looks like pop stepped away for a coffee and should be back  to finish another still life before dinner. The loft remains a quiet  shrine to an artist that few recognize, perhaps mistaking his figurative  paintings for a late Matisse or another French master. “It was the only  way to keep his being, his existence alive,” De Niro explains. “To me,  he was always a great artist.”
Now 70, the actor has decided to reveal this hidden sanctum and his own struggle with his late father’s memory in a new documentary that premieres June 9 on HBO. In Remembering the Artist: Robert De Niro, Sr.,  directed by Perri Peltz, the son tears up as he reads from his father’s  diaries. He shares intimate stories of his father’s despair about his  sexual orientation and his stagnant artistic reputation. At one point,  as De Niro was ascending to Hollywood’s top tier, he made a last-ditch  effort to rescue his father, who was sick in Paris, where he’d been  living as a starving artist. It’s clear that De Niro regrets that he  wasn’t able to help him more before he died, and the film becomes a  moving portrait of a son who wants to resurrect his father’s legacy  before it’s too late. Out was given a rare glimpse into the legendary  actor’s personal life, spending a day in his father’s studio. De Niro  revealed a fragile, tender side as he explained why he hopes his dad’s  work will live on.
After seeing the studio in the documentary, I wondered what this space meant to you. Do many people visit?
I’ve  brought people here over the years. I’ve had a reception or two here.  When I thought I was going to have to let it go, three or four years  ago, I videotaped it and had photos taken and documented everything. But  then I said, “I just can’t do it.”
It’s a different experience when you’re here than when you see it in  photos. I did it for the grandkids and my young kids, who didn’t know  their grandfather.
It amazes me that SoHo has these hidden spaces that, no matter what, never seem to change.
Exactly.  And I like things that don’t change. I like consistency. Constancy.  People look forward to tradition, they come back, it’s still there,  nothing’s changed. Like when you go to a certain restaurant and you go  back, and all of sudden it’s changed because they hired a new chef. If  it’s not broke, don’t fix it. This space is here, and in 20 years,  people won’t know what a real space like this will be unless it was in a  museum and they recreated it.
After your father’s death, did you lock the door and not come  back? Or did you take a while before you decided what to do with it?
I  didn’t think of just selling it and dismantling it. Luckily, I could  afford to keep it going, so I left it as is. My mother was alive then. I  don’t remember what we discussed. I documented and went through  everything to make sure we catalogued it, and then I said, “I’m keeping  it like this.”
His older studios, like, a block away, maybe 60 years ago, were not  like this. Then it was Siberia — for real — on West Broadway or  LaGuardia Place. My mother had this place first and then she gave it to  my father; they were friends. She came down here a long time ago. She  had a place in the Meatpacking District, like, 50 years ago.
When did you begin to read his diaries?
I haven’t  even read all the diaries — I started. I read the ones for the film,  but I haven’t read all the other material. I will, of course.
One of the things that was very moving for me in the film was  the fact that you’re named after your father. How do you feel about  that — sharing a name — and when you become more famous than the person  you’re named after?
[De Niro begins to cry, takes off his glasses, and pauses to collect himself.]
I get emotional. I don’t know why.
When you were younger, it sounded like you had problems connecting with each other.
We  were not the type of father and son who played baseball together, as  you can surmise. But we had a connection. I wasn’t with him a lot,  because my mother and he were separated and divorced. As I say in the  documentary, I looked after him in certain ways.
In what ways?
I think of my own kids. I try to  communicate with them, but it’s hard. I joke about it with them. They  have their issues as teenagers. I give them their space, but when I have  to step in and be firm about something, I am. But my father wasn’t a  bad father, or absent. He was absent in some ways. He was very loving.  He adored me... as I do my kids. 
 
