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Film Legend Charlton Heston Dead at 84 Sunday, April 6, 2008 By BOB THOMAS Associated Press Writer LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Charlton Heston, the Oscar winner who portrayed Moses and other heroic figures on film in the '50s and '60s and later championed conservative values as head of the National Rifle Association, has died. He was 84. The actor died Saturday night at his home in Beverly Hills with Lydia, his wife of 64 years, at his side.
Charlton Heston was seen by the world as larger than life. He
was known for his chiseled jaw, broad shoulders and resonating
voice, and, of course, for the roles he played," Heston's family
said in a statement. Heston revealed in 2002 that he had
symptoms consistent with Alzheimer's disease.
With his large, muscular build, well-boned face and sonorous voice, Heston proved the ideal star during the period when Hollywood was filling movie screens with panoramas depicting the religious and historical past. "I have a face that belongs in another century," he often remarked. In 2003, President Bush awarded Heston with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civil honor. "He was a man of character and integrity, with a big heart," Bush said in a statement on Sunday.
Heston lent his strong presence to some of the most acclaimed
and successful films of the midcentury. "Ben-Hur"
won 11 Academy Awards, tying it for the record with the more
recent "Titanic" (1997) and "The Lord of the Rings: The Return
of the King" (2003). He won the 1959 best actor Oscar as the
chariot-racing "Ben-Hur." Other hits include: "The Ten
Commandments," "El Cid," "55 Days at Peking" and "Planet of the
Apes."
He liked to cite the number of historical figures he had portrayed, including Moses ("The Ten Commandments"), John the Baptist ("The Greatest Story Ever Told") and Michelangelo ("The Agony and the Ecstasy").
Heston made his movie debut in the 1940s in two independent
films by a college classmate, David Bradley, who later became a
noted film archivist. He had the title role in "Peer Gynt" in
1942 and was Marc Antony in Bradley's 1949 version of "Julius
Caesar," for which Heston was paid $50 a week.
Director Cecil B. DeMille had long planned a new version of "The Ten Commandments," which he had made as a silent in 1923 with a radically different approach that combined biblical and modern stories. He was struck by Heston's facial resemblance to Michelangelo's sculpture of Moses, especially the similar broken nose, and put the actor through a long series of tests before giving him the role. The Hestons' newborn, Fraser Clarke Heston, played the role of the infant Moses in the film.
Heston plunged into the role, rehearsing two months for the
furious chariot race. He railed at suggestions the
race had been shot with a double: "I couldn't drive it well,
but that wasn't necessary. All I had to do was stay on board
so they could shoot me there. I didn't have to worry; MGM
guaranteed I would win the race."
At his birth in a Chicago suburb on Oct. 4, 1923, his name was Charles Carter. His parents moved to St. Helen, Mich., where his father, Russell Carter, operated a lumber mill. Growing up in the Michigan woods with almost no playmates, young Charles read books of adventure and devised his own games while wandering the countryside with his rifle. Charles's parents divorced, and she married Chester Heston, a factory plant superintendent in Wilmette, Ill., an upscale north Chicago suburb. Shy and feeling displaced in the big city, the boy had trouble adjusting to the new high school. He took refuge in the drama department. "What acting offered me was the chance to be many other people," he said in a 1986 interview. "In those days I wasn't satisfied with being me." Calling himself Charlton Heston from his mother's maiden name and his stepfather's last name, he won an acting scholarship to Northwestern University in 1941. He excelled in campus plays and appeared on Chicago radio. In 1943, he enlisted in the Army Air Force and served as a radio-gunner in the Aleutians. In 1944 he married another Northwestern drama student, Lydia Clarke, and after his army discharge in 1947, they moved to New York to seek acting jobs. Finding none, they hired on as co-directors and principal actors at a summer theater in Asheville, N.C. Back in New York, both Hestons began finding work. With his strong 6-feet-2 build and craggily handsome face, Heston won roles in TV soap operas, plays ("Antony and Cleopatra" with Katherine Cornell) and live TV dramas such as "Julius Caesar," "Macbeth," "The Taming of the Shrew" and "Of Human Bondage." Heston wrote several books: "The Actor's Life: Journals 1956-1976," published in 1978; "Beijing Diary: 1990," concerning his direction of the play "The Caine Mutiny Court Martial" in Chinese; "In the Arena: An Autobiography," 1995; and "Charlton Heston's Hollywood: 50 Years of American Filmmaking," 1998. Besides Fraser, the Hestons had a daughter, Holly Ann, born Aug. 2, 1961 The couple celebrated their golden wedding anniversary in 1994 at a party with Hollywood and political friends. They had been married 64 years when he died. |
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