Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Charlton Heston Dies at 84

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Charlton Heston Dies at 84

    Oscar winner Charlton Heston died Saturday night at his home in Beverly Hills. He was 84 years old.

    He died with Lydia, his wife of 64 years, at his side, the Heston family said in a statement.

    No cause of death was released. In 2002, in a moving videotaped announcement, the star confirmed he had been diagnosed with symptoms similar to those of Alzheimer's disease.




  • #2
    Legendary actor Charlton Heston dies at 84

    Oscar-winning actor Charlton Heston, whose chiseled features and commanding presence won him epic roles from Moses to Michelangelo, died on Saturday night at the age of 84, his family said.

    Heston, a former president of the influential National Rifle Association lobbying group, died at his home in Beverly Hills with his wife Lydia at his side, the family said in a statement.

    The actor, who won the 1959 best actor Oscar for the title role in "Ben Hur" in which he did many of his own chariot race stunts, had announced in 2002 that he was suffering symptoms of Alzheimer's disease.

    "To his loving friends, colleagues and fans, we appreciate your heartfelt prayers and support. Charlton Heston was seen by the world as larger than life," the family said.

    "No one could ask for a fuller life than his. No man could have given more to his family, to his profession, and to his country. In his own words, 'I have lived such a wonderful life! I've lived enough for two people'," the statement added.

    The family said a private memorial service would be held.

    In his heyday, Heston's rugged features and conservative lifestyle seemed to belong to another age. As director Anthony Mann said: "Put a toga on him and he looks perfect." Frank Sinatra once joked: "That guy Heston has to watch it. If he's not careful, he'll get actors a good name."

    Between super-spectacles ("The 10 Commandments,' "Ben Hur"), science fiction movies ("Planet of the Apes," 'Soylent Green') and disaster epics ('Earthquake"), Heston pushed for screen versions of Shakespearean plays, directing one, "Anthony and Cleopatra."

    GUN-RIGHTS LOBBY

    Heston's most controversial role was not in a movie but as leader of the National Rifle Association, the gun-rights lobby group, from 1998 to 2003. He often stood at the podium at conventions, holding an antique flintlock rifle above his head and telling gun-control advocates they would not get his gun unless they could pry it "from my cold, dead hands."

    "They don't make them like that any more," Steven Gaydos, executive editor of Variety Magazine, told BBC television after his death. "People in Hollywood, even if they didn't agree with his politics, respected the guy," he added.

    Born John Charlton Carter (Heston was his stepfather's name) on October 4, 1923, in Evanston, Illinois, he made his theatrical debut as Santa Claus in a school play at age 5 and studied acting at Northwestern University.

    After a World War Two stint as a gunner in the Army Air Corps, Heston headed to Broadway, where he briefly supported himself with nude modeling between acting jobs.

    In 1944, he had married fellow Northwestern drama student Lydia Clarke and their marriage lasted 64 years until his death. They had two children, Fraser Clarke and Holly Ann, and three grandchildren Jack Alexander, Ridley and Charlie.

    Heston gained attention in 1947 in "Anthony and Cleopatra," which landed him a job in the "Studio One" television series that re-enacted famous plays.

    The television work led to movies and Cecil B. DeMille put him in "The Greatest Show on Earth" (1952), portraying a circus manager determined that the show must go on.

    In 1956, DeMille cast Heston as Moses for "The 10 Commandments," saying the actor reminded him of Michelangelo's statue. The $7.5 million epic was the most expensive film up to that time and became the second-biggest money maker of the time, behind "Gone With the Wind."

    In addition to playing Moses, Heston did the voice of God in the film. His 3-month-old son, Fraser, played the baby Moses floating down the Nile in a basket.

    WESTERNS AND SCIENCE FICTION

    He took some roles in Westerns, with a break in 1957 for Orson Welles' "Touch of Evil," followed by more epics.

    Less successful were his portrayal of John the Baptist in "The Greatest Story Ever Told" about the life of Jesus and that of Michelangelo in "The Agony and the Ecstasy," a 1965 commercial flop.

    Heston was a besieged astronaut in 1968's "The Planet of the Apes" but made sure his character was killed off in 1970's "Beneath the Planet of the Apes" so he would not be sought for further sequels.

    The "Ape" pictures opened the science fiction door to him and hits like "The Omega Man" (1971) and "Soylent Green" (1973). He was also a leading figure in disaster epics, among them "Skyjacked" (1972) and "Airport 1975" (1974).

    In 1984, Heston returned to television in two CBS mini-series and the following year he played patriarch Jason Colby in the TV soap opera "Dynasty II: The Colbys of California."

    In the 1960s Heston was involved in the civil rights movement. He served six terms as president of the Screen Actors Guild and in 1987, 16 years after leaving the SAG job, locked horns with SAG President Ed Asner over the guild's left-leaning stance.

    He once campaigned for Democrats -- Adlai Stevenson against Dwight Eisenhower and John Kennedy against Richard Nixon. But he switched to Republican Nixon in 1972 and backed old friend Ronald Reagan in the ex-actor's quest for the presidency. Thereafter, he was identified with conservative politics and causes.

    He was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President George W. Bush in 2003.

    Comment


    • #3
      چارلتون هستون هنرپیشه مشهور آمریکایی درگذشت


      چارلتون هستون، برای بازی در فیلم بن هور، برنده جایزه اسکار شد
      چارلتون هستون، هنرپیشه مشهور آمریکایی در 84 سالگی در بورلی هیلز در کالیفرنیا درگذشته است.
      چارلتون هستون که نام اصلی اش جان چارلز کارتر، بود، قبل از ورود به جهان سینما سه سال در نیروی هوایی آمریکا خدمت کرد.

      در سال 1952 پس از مدتی کار در تئاترهای برادوی در نیویورک، در فیلم "بزرگترین نمایش روی کره زمین" بازی کرد.

      چهار سال بعد او در نقش حضرت موسی در فیلم "ده فرمان" ظاهر شد.

      بیشتر شهرت چارلتون هستون به خاطر بازی در فیلم های تاریخی و ایفای نقش شخصیت های داستان های تورات است.

      یکی از به یاد ماندنی ترین بازی های او، ایفای نقش بن هور است. مسابقه عرابه سواری او در این فیلم از صحنه های فراموش نشدنی است.

      چارلتون هستون همچنین در نقش حضرت موسی، ال سید و میکل آنژ ظاهر شده است.

      پس از بازی در فیلم علمی- تخیلی "سیاره میمون ها" در اواخر دهه 1960 که بسیار موفقیت آمیز بود، چارلز هستون دوباره به تئاتر روی آورد.


      چارلتون هستون با وجود حمایت از آرمان های سنتی محافظه کارانه از طرفداران مارتین لوتر کینگ بود

      اگرچه چارلز هستون برای سالیان دراز از آرمان هایی که به طور سنتی محافظه کارانه بود حمایت می کرد، او یکی از طرفداران مارتین لوتر کینگ و جنبش "حقوق مدنی" در دهه 1960 بود.

      وی همچنین رئیس "اتحادیه هنرپبشگان سینما" و انستیتوی فیلم آمریکایی بود.

      چارلتون هستون رئیس تشریفاتی لابی اسلحه در آمریکا بود و برای سال ها عنوان رئیس"انجمن ملی تفنگ" آمریکا را داشت.

      در سال 2003 وی به علت بیماری از این سمت استعفا داد.

      یک سال قبل از این کناره گیری، چارلتون هستون فاش کرده بود که به بیماری آلزایمر ( فراموشی) مبتلا شده است.


      Comment

      Working...
      X