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查爾頓.希斯頓

查爾頓.希斯頓

Born John Charles Carter in Evanston, IL to parents Lilla and Russell Whitford Carter, Heston's family moved to the extremely rural town of St. Helen, MI when he was still an infant. As an only child, he spent long hours exploring the forests near his childhood home, often acting out characters from the copious books he enjoyed reading. When he was 10 years old, his parents divorced. His mother soon remarried to Chester Heston, and the new family relocated to the suburb of Wilmette, just north of Chicago. Adopting his stepfather's surname, Heston went on to attend New Trier High School, enrolling in the school's dramatic arts program. He later attended Northwestern University on a drama scholarship and it was during this time that he appeared in the amateur 16mm production of "Peer Gynt" (1941), written and directed by fellow student and future film historian David Bradley. For his credit on the film, Heston took the stage name of "Charlton" - his mother's maiden name - for the first time. In 1944, he enlisted in the armed services, and was stationed as a radio operator and gunner at an Alaskan air base for most of the war. Post-World War II, Heston and his young wife Lydia Clarke moved to New York's Hell's Kitchen neighborhood, making ends meet as artists' models for a time, before moving to Asheville, NC where they ran a small theater company.Before long, Heston and his wife returned to New York where he gained notice with a supporting role in legendary stage actress Katharine Cornell's Broadway production of "Antony and Cleopatra" (1947). He went on to portray Antony in the independently produced film "Julius Caesar" (1949), once again directed by David Bradley. Heston also began to make an impression on early television, especially in a flurry of dashing romantic leads - including Heathcliff, Rochester and Petruchio - on the famous drama anthology "Studio One" (CBS, 1948-1958). By the time he made the move to Hollywood to appear in William Dieterle's moody film noir "Dark City" (1950), Heston was clearly a rising star, listed in the credits ahead of the more established Lizabeth Scott. He secured his top-billing status with his role as the ill-tempered circus manager in his second studio film, Cecil B. DeMille's "The Greatest Show on Earth" (1952). His take on Buffalo Bill Cody in "The Pony Express" (1953), combined with a portrayal of Andrew Jackson in "The President's Lady" (1953), would mark the beginning of a legendary list of credits in which he would unforgettably embody historical - and soon, biblical - characters. With DeMille's breathtaking second version of "The Ten Commandments" (1956), Heston proved himself to be a true force of nature in the role of Moses (and as the voice of God), placing him squarely at the very top of the Hollywood heap.In "The Buccaneer" (1958) Heston once again essayed Andrew Jackson, and in an incredibly unconventional move, portrayed Mexican narcotics officer Ramon Miguel "Mike" Vargas in the Orson Welles potboiler "Touch of Evil" (1958). Co-starring Janet Leigh and Welles as the corpulent and corrupt Police Captain Hank Quinlan, the film went on to be regarded as one of Welles' very best, surpassed only by "Citizen Kane" (1941). Next, Heston ably transformed fiction into fact when his Oscar-winning performance in "Ben-Hur" (1959) elevated the story of a Jewish charioteer transfixed by the sight of Christ into the stuff of legend. As French critic Michel Mourlet infamously rhapsodized, "Charlton Heston is an axiom of the cinema." More larger-than-life roles followed, including memorable turns as the Spanish hero "El Cid" (1961), John the Baptist in "The Greatest Story Ever Told" (1964), Michelangelo in "The Agony and the Ecstasy" (1965), a indomitable cavalry officer in "Major Dundee" (1965), and as the doomed General Charles "Chinese" Gordon in "Khartoum" (1966). With his first foray into the realm of science fiction, Heston took on what would unexpectedly become one of his most famous, oft-quoted roles - that of Taylor, an astronaut of the future inexplicably stranded on the "Planet of the Apes" (1968). That same year he returned to the Western milieu; this time as the aging, reflective cowpoke "Will Penny" (1968), regarded by the actor as one of his favorite film performances.Although the 1970s brought about a changing of the guard in Hollywood, Heston remained a major star, busier than ever in both leading and prominent supporting roles. He briefly reprised the role of Taylor for the apocalyptic climax of the sequel "Beneath the Planet of the Apes" (1970), and stayed with the genre for "The Omega Man" (1971), a loose adaptation of Richard Matheson's novella I Am Legend. He made his directorial debut with a work he was quite familiar with - "Antony and Cleopatra" (1972), co-starring Hildegard Neil as the Egyptian Queen. Heston brought out his sinister best with his portrayal of the evil Cardinal Richelieu in "The Three Musketeers" (1973), followed by his role as a cop from the near future who uncovers a sickening conspiracy in "Soylent Green" (1973), alongside Edward G. Robinson in his final performance. Heston joined the disaster epic fad of the mid-1970s, first with "Earthquake" (1974), and then the cleverly titled "Airport 1975" (1975). He reprised Richelieu for "The Four Musketeers" (1975), played a navy pilot in the WWII naval battle spectacular "Midway" (1976), and reteamed with "Musketeers" director Richard Fleischer to essay Henry VIII in "Crossed Swords" (1978). Next, Heston performed double duty again, directing and starring in "Mother Lode" (1982), an adventure tale written and produced by his son, Fraser.After a 15-year absence, the actor returned to the small screen as the star of the police drama miniseries "Chiefs" (CBS, 1983), and later became a series regular on the primetime soap "The Colbys" (ABC, 1985-87), before settling into a succession of starring roles in telefilms. He directed and starred in a remake of "A Man for All Seasons" (TNT, 1988), reprising his stage role as Sir Thomas More. Heston went on to essay iconic fictional characters Long John Silver and Sherlock Holmes in two made-for-TV movies adapted and produced by his son - "Treasure Island" (TNT, 1990) and "The Crucifer of Blood" (TNT, 1991). He played superspy Arnold Schwarzenegger's boss in James Cameron's adrenaline-fueled "True Lies" (1994), followed by a cameo in John Carpenter's ode to H.P. Lovecraft, "In the Mouth of Madness" (1995). Although the years altered his impressive physique, Heston's resonant voice remained as strong as ever, lending itself perfectly to dramatic narration work on films like the Disney animated feature "Hercules" (1997) and the Bruce Willis/Ben Affleck explosive action adventure, "Armageddon" (1998). As the dying father of Tim Roth's angry ape character, Heston made a brief return to the "Planet of the Apes" (2001), director Tim Burton's pointless remake of the 1968 sci-fi classic.Shortly after his performance in the "Apes" remake, it was announced that Heston had been diagnosed with the early stages of Alzheimer's disease. Also that year, he appeared in Michael Moore's Oscar-winning documentary, "Bowling for Columbine" (2002), a look at America's gun culture and the recent history of gun-related violence within the country's schools. Heston - who was the president and spokesman for the National Rifle Association at the time - attempted to field a series of potentially embarrassing questions, aggressively asked by Moore before becoming flustered and excusing himself from the room. After the film's release, many critics - even fans of the documentary - castigated Moore for what was viewed as an ambush on an elderly man suffering from a debilitating medical condition. However, when announcing his retirement as NRA president in 2003, an unwavering Heston raised a rifle over his head and repeated the infamous line he had shouted from a convention podium three years earlier, exclaiming that his Second Amendment rights would have be taken from "My cold, dead hands!" Post-"Columbine," Heston was little seen in the years that followed. His final film appearance was in the role of the sinister Nazi scientist, Dr. Joseph Mengele in the drama "Papa Rua Alguem 5555" (2003). That same year, he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom at the White House from then-President George W. Bush. Afterwards, Heston remained mostly out of sight, residing in his Beverly Hills home, as reports of his rapidly declining condition surfaced periodically. On April 5, 2008, Heston died in his home with Lydia, his wife of 64 years, by his side. The cause of death was listed as "natural causes" in a statement issued by the family. Charlton Heston was 84.
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