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  • Film & TV Moderators: ghostfreak

Actor Charlton Heston dead at 84

Mazey

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LOS ANGELES - Charlton Heston, who won the 1959 best actor Oscar as the chariot-racing "Ben-Hur" and portrayed Moses, Michelangelo, El Cid and other heroic figures in movie epics of the '50s and '60s, has died. He was 84.

The actor died Saturday night at his home in Beverly Hills with his wife Lydia at his side, family spokesman Bill Powers said.

Powers declined to comment on the cause of death or provide further details.

Heston revealed in 2002 that he had symptoms consistent with Alzheimer's disease, saying, "I must reconcile courage and surrender in equal measure."

Face for 'another century'
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.

The actor assumed the role of leader offscreen as well. He served as president of the Screen Actors Guild and chairman of the American Film Institute and marched in the civil rights movement of the 1950s. With age, he grew more conservative and campaigned for conservative candidates.

In June 1998, Heston was elected president of the National Rifle Association, for which he had posed for ads holding a rifle. He delivered a jab at then-President Bill Clinton, saying, "America doesn't trust you with our 21-year-old daughters, and we sure, Lord, don't trust you with our guns."

Heston stepped down as NRA president in April 2003, telling members his five years in office were "quite a ride. ... I loved every minute of it."

Later that year, Heston was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor. "The largeness of character that comes across the screen has also been seen throughout his life," President George W. Bush said at the time.

Feuding with Ed Asner
He engaged in a lengthy feud with liberal Ed Asner during the latter's tenure as president of the Screen Actors Guild. His latter-day activism almost overshadowed his achievements as an actor, which were considerable.

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). Heston's other hits include: "The Ten Commandments," "El Cid," "55 Days at Peking," "Planet of the Apes" and "Earthquake."

He liked the cite the number of historical figures he had portrayed:

Andrew Jackson ("The President's Lady," "The Buccaneer"), Moses ("The Ten Commandments"), title role of "El Cid," John the Baptist ("The Greatest Story Ever Told"), Michelangelo ("The Agony and the Ecstasy"), General Gordon ("Khartoum"), Marc Antony ("Julius Caesar," "Antony and Cleopatra"), Cardinal Richelieu ("The Three Musketeers"), Henry VIII ("The Prince and the Pauper").

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.

Film producer Hal B. Wallis ("Casablanca") spotted Heston in a 1950 television production of "Wuthering Heights" and offered him a contract. When his wife reminded him that they had decided to pursue theater and television, he replied, "Well, maybe just for one film to see what it's like."

Heston earned star billing from his first Hollywood movie, "Dark City," a 1950 film noir. Cecil B. DeMille next cast him as the circus manager in the all-star "The Greatest Show On Earth," named by the Motion Picture Academy as the best picture of 1952.
 
The coming week will be full of jokes on the late night circuit about guns and cold, dead hands.
 
ego_loss said:
The coming week will be full of jokes on the late night circuit about guns and cold, dead hands.


QFT (and hilarity).


Call me cold, but I have no sympathy for this man. He was a righteous prick, and a pawn for the arms dealers, preying on the impressionable gun loving rednecks of the nation.

This is of course my own personal politics, I believe guns have no place in our society at the moment (now if we could go a year without an incident with a shootout in a public school or an unprovoked drunken gun riot, maybe we could earn that constitutional right back). Bowling for Columbine did a great job I think. (Compare our statistics as far as death by gunfire to those of Canada and you'll know what I mean, and the figures on numbers of gun owning households is at least the same, if not more than here).
 
Seriously. Do you think he'll be buried with a gun just as a matter of principle?
 
Jesus. That puts a horrific new spin on that scene in Bowling for Columbine where Michael Moore cons his way into the aged actors house.

Definitely.

I loved TV Nation, but that was classless.
 
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Jesus. That puts a horrific new spin on that scene in Bowling for Columbine where Michael Moore cons his way into the aged actors house.
I agree. Heston actually announced his condition two or three months before Bowling For Columbine was released, so was probably in relatively good health and in control of his faculties. However, I remember watching it for the first time and feeling distinctly uncomfortable with Moore's ambush-style approach with a man who had just announced he was suffering from Alzheimer's. Chances are, at the time of interview, Moore was as unaware as the rest of us... but being cordially invited into someone's home and then humiliating them seemed low at the time - irrespective of the man's health. In hindsight, it just looks crappy.
 
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Damn dirty apes!!!!

I am a gun owning American citizen who was also not a fan of his politics OR his movies, but you can't take joy in the death of another person without being a piece of shit yourself.
 
tambourine-man said:
I agree. Heston actually announced his condition two or three months before Bowling For Columbine was released, so was probably in relatively good health and in control of his faculties. However, I remember watching it for the first time and feeling distinctly uncomfortable with Moore's ambush-style approach with a man who had just announced he was suffering from Alzheimer's. Chances are, at the time of interview, Moore was as unaware as the rest of us... but being cordially invited into someone's home and then humiliating them seemed low at the time - irrespective of the man's health. In hindsight, it just looks crappy.


I agree wholeheartedly with this. Moore has quite a few insensitive practices that I disagree with (although his cause is just, his methods aren't always in accord with tact and good manners).


I did however find it grossly disrespectful to the families of those killed/involved in the Columbine high school tragedy that Heston didn't call off their NRA meeting in the area at the time. That, to me, is morally reprehensible and inexcusable, and I felt so bad for those poor people.
 
2c-buoyant said:
I did however find it grossly disrespectful to the families of those killed/involved in the Columbine high school tragedy that Heston didn't call off their NRA meeting in the area at the time. That, to me, is morally reprehensible and inexcusable, and I felt so bad for those poor people.

Way to fall into Moores trap of misinformation and film tricks.

TruthAboutBowling said:
Fact: The Denver event was not a demonstration relating to Columbine, but an annual meeting (see links below), whose place and date had been fixed years in advance.


Fact: At Denver, the NRA cancelled all events (normally several days of committee meetings, sporting events, dinners, and rallies) save the annual members' voting meeting -- that could not be cancelled because the state law governing nonprofits required that it be held. [No way to change location, since under NY law you have to give 10 days' advance notice of that to the members, there were upwards of 4,000,000 members -- and Columbine happened 11 days before the scheduled meeting.] As a newspaper reported:

In a letter to NRA members Wednesday, President Charlton Heston and the group's executive vice president, Wayne LaPierre, said all seminars, workshops, luncheons, exhibits by gun makers and other vendors, and festivities are canceled.

All that's left is a members' reception with Rep. J.C. Watts, R-Okla., and the annual meeting, set for 10 a.m. May 1 in the Colorado Convention Center.

Under its bylaws and New York state law, the NRA must hold an annual meeting.

The NRA convention April 30-May 2 was expected to draw 22,000 members and give the city a $17.9 million economic boost.

"But the tragedy in Littleton last Tuesday calls upon us to take steps, along with dozens of other planned public events, to modify our schedule to show our profound sympathy and respect for the families and communities in the Denver area in their time of great loss," Heston and LaPierre wrote.
 
I fell into no trap. In my own personal accounts, I found it lacking in tact and good manners on behalf of him and his association to behave in such a way directly after such a sensless and psychotic tragedy. Call it off, for fuck sake. When your business is religious gun worship, your obligated to turn an empathic leaf towards situations as sensitive as this. Particularly when your hobbies include an obsession with intricate and frighteningly advanced weapons of at least regional destruction.

I like guns, guns are fine, assuming you use them in the same fasion as you would your belt sander or your garden shovel. These people are seriously hellbent on horrifyingly dangerous and intricate "kill machines." That's why guns were invented, I do believe most historians would be inclined to agree. We live in such a civilized state of life (theoretically so) that if we could focus and live on a constant implied agreement on peace between each other and society (as well as nature, god willing) the technology these freaks spend their weekends with hardon's jacking off to each others fucking phallic killing machine would be obsolute.

Of course, then they'd be shit out of luck and have to find another hobby, maybe learn how to cope with shaving off a bit of that insane ego they've been harboring over the years, perhaps finding a better way to spend one's time than by hiding in the bushes like a coward and suckerpunching (with a high powered rifle) insert random mammall here. I'm pretty sure the once plentiful and still beautiful and unique natural wildlife of the american plains, mountains, deserts, and so forth would be pleased.

A man can dream.
 
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2c-buoyant said:
I fell into no trap. I, just in my own personal accounts, found it lacking in tact and good manners on him and his associations.

And here you've fallen into the trap of not reading what I posted, or at least glossing over it and not actually paying attention before going on to reply with some emotional hyperbole that has nothing to do with anything that I said.

Call it all off

They called off as much as they could, several days worth of events. But BY LAW the charter meeting had to be held. Period. Let's see that once more, a little bigger for those with a tendency to not pay attention

THE MEETING WAS A LEGAL OBLIGATION AS PART OF THE NRA'S NON-PROFIT CHARTER. IT **HAS** TO BE HELD EVERY YEAR AND COULD NOT BE CANCELED ON 11 DAYS NOTICE.
 
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