So much in love with movies


Legendary Actor Charlton Heston Dies


charlton-heston.jpgThere has been plenty of untimely deaths so far this year, but last night saw the death of one of Hollywood’s biggest actors, Charlton Heston. He had spent his later years battling with Alzheimer’s Disease.

After enlisting in the US Air Force, Heston started his career on the stage, appearing in Broadway plays as well as getting several TV roles. His transition to cinema came directly through theatre, starring as Marc Antony in the 1950 version of Julius Caesar. He returned to the same role 20 years later when directing Antony and Cleopatra.

Heston is mostly known for playing larger-than-life historical and Biblical figures. The most important role of his early career was as Moses in the Cecil B Demille epic The Ten Commandments. The image of Moses parting the Red Sea will always be associated with Heston’s face. In 1960 Heston starred in another period epic, this time in Ben-Hur, which earned a Best Actor Oscar, as well as numerous others for the film.

Heston was also known for appearing in gritt, noir-ish thrillers. The best of which was Orson Welles’s astounding Touch of Evil. Heston played Vargas, a Mexican police officer on the US border, battling hoods and dirty cops, his idealism getting him and his wife into trouble. It is this role in which I will always remember the actor.

After his Oscar, Heston continued to play historical characters, from El Cid to John the Baptist, to Michaelangelo. But in 1967 Heston started a new phase of his career, and gained a new type of audience. Planet of the Apes became an instant classic, and everyone recognises the “you filthy apes” and “damn you all to hell” snarls of the film (Heston went on to parody them in Tim Burton’s 2001 remake of the film). Heston went on to star in The Omega Man (recently remade into I am Legend), and Soylent Green, a film which proposed that the government solved overpopulation by serving people as food.

While Heston’s later career failed to make much of an impact (films like Earthquake are not really remembered now), he did appear in the popular soap Dynasty, as was considered good enough to star in a spin-off series called The Colbys, which ran for almost 50 episodes.

Heston made brief appearence in films during the 90’s, but his career was overshadowed by his political views, which were known to be very conservative (despite being for civil rights long before “it became popular”). He was upset at the notion of Ben Hur being potentially homosexual after writer Gore Vidal revealed it. He was President of the National Rifle Association, a role that caused much negative attention, especially Michael Moore’s popular documentary Bowling for Columbine. The film depits Heston is a negative light, to say the least, as an insensitive man.

Regardless of his dubious political beliefs, Heston will be an actor remembered for his passion and presence on screen, and as the man said himself: “If you need a ceiling painted, a chariot race run, a city besieged, or the Red Sea parted, you think of me.”



10 Responses to “Legendary Actor Charlton Heston Dies”

  1.  Kenna McHugh Says:

    “El Cid” is a wonderful film, that shows Heston’s ability to command 100’s of extras in a panarama scene, which is nothing to discount.

    Yes, he did voice his views, which takes a great man to do.

    May you rest in piece Heston.

  2.  eoin ofaolain Says:

    I’ve never seen El Cid. Hopefully there’ll be a retrospective screening so I can catch it. I may not have agreed with his beliefs, but there is no doubt he could make an impact on the screen.

  3.  Wes Says:

    Being a child of the 60/70’s, Chuck was also a true “action hero” of our generation. My brothers and I would long for any opportunity to watch him, and we’d pretend to duplicate his bad-ass persona. He was truly a man to command the screen. We are honored to experience his legendary career. Thanks Chuck, you will be missed, and you will always be remembered.

  4.  Kenna McHugh Says:

    Wes, well said. He definitely could command a performance. I even thought he was quite good in “Coby’s” television series. Very professional.

  5.  Kenna McHugh Says:

    eoin,

    Everyone has a point of view. I understand that part of it.

    But, “El Cid” recently came out remastered by Miramax’s new subsidy called Miriam Remasters (or something like that) I got a review copy and wrote about it briefly here. Anthony Mann directed the piece — very well done, a true epic with Sophia Loren.

  6.  Mary Sarver Says:

    Charleston Heston was the last of his kind. I grew up with his movies and like John Wayne, there will never be another one like him. He had the true star quality that actors do not have today. He will be sadly missed.

  7.  oakling Says:

    Wow, this is a classy crowd. Not one joke about how you can have his gun when you pry it out of his cold dead hands or ANYthing. Kudos!

  8.  Kenna McHugh Says:

    Anyone who has had a career as long as Heston means he was gifted and had great talent.

  9.  Around the Net Today : DigitalBattle Says:

    [...] Legendary Actor Charlton Heston Dies [...]

  10.  Paul Says:

    from my cold dead hands

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