Charlton Heston Dead at 84

by Sean Hackbarth

The Ten Commandments movie poster

Sadly, another conservative idol has passed away. Charlton Heston has died:

Charlton Heston, the Oscar-winning actor who achieved stardom playing larger-than-life figures including Moses, Michelangelo and Andrew Jackson in historical epics and went on to become a best-selling author, a contentious Hollywood labor leader, an unapologetic gun advocate and darling of conservative causes, has died. He was 84.

Heston died Saturday at his Beverly Hills home, his family said in a statement. In 2002 he had been diagnosed with symptoms similar to those of Alzheimer’s disease.

The latter part of his life was defending the Second Amendment, but who can ever forget his roles in Ben Hur, Planet of the Apes, and, yes, The Ten Commandments.

Charlton Heston Dies at 84″

[picture via TJBNYC76]

UPDATE: Here are some video highlights of Heston’s life:

From the 2000 NRA Annual Meeting:

Parts 1-3 of a speech given to the NRA Annual Meeting in 1989:

Heston on his role as Moses:

Ben-Hur trailer:

The Ten Commandments trailer:

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6 Responses to “Charlton Heston Dead at 84”

1

[…] More: All American Blogger, The American Mind, Blogs For Victory. […]

2

Sad news indeed, and Alzheimer’s/dementia is especially tough to go through.

3

[…] The American Mind: Charlton Heston Dead at 84 […]

4

[…] UPDATE: Others, via Memeorandum. Power Line, Scared Monkeys, THE ASTUTE BLOGGERS, Anti-Idiotarian Rottweiler, Outside The Beltway, The Other McCain, Gateway Pundit, The American Mind,  […]

5

Given the fact that he was from a broken home and given the temptations tha come with stardom it is extraordinary and a tribute to the him and his wife that they were married for 64 years.

6

1. Mark McIntire Says: Your comment is awaiting moderation.
April 10th, 2008 at 1:01 pm

- Remembering Charlton Heston: The Man In The Arena
by Mark McIntire

April 9, 2008 11:42 AM

Charlton Heston kept his promises. He was good to his friends. He believed in a merciful God, and he loved his country. As though that was not enough to separate him from today’s Hollywood elite, he was married, too, and lived with the same woman for over 60 years.

Chuck well may be the last iconic gentleman of his era about whom all of the preceding statements were true.

Many will recall Chuck’s epic stage, movie and TV triumphs, and think he actually was Moses or Ben Hur or Will Penny or Mark Antony. That would amuse as much as bemuse him. “My dad pretends to be other people for a living,” his only son, Fraser Heston, would tell his classmates.

Chuck was an actor’s actor whose only complaint was: “I never got it right. I always thought I could have done that role better.”
Some will recall meeting Chuck at a premiere, posh party, political convention, or just on the street. They’d be struck to find he had the same commanding presence and honest grit, and the same gentlemanly manners, on screen and off.
He was a gentleman’s gentleman. “Daddy lives by his principles, not by the costumes he wears in movies,” his only daughter, Holly, would tell all who asked what he was really like as a person.

Once a liberal Democrat who campaigned with Martin Luther King Jr. and John F. Kennedy, Chuck later became identified with the conservatism of his friend Ronald Reagan. “I didn’t change . . . my party did,” he’d explain to those who asked about his transformation.

Of all the things that will be written and said of Chuck now that he is dead, a most important key to his character will be overlooked. Charlton Heston derived his moral and political values from ethical principles that did not change over the course of his spectacular life. His detractors argued this only proves he was a fool. But when we look at what his detractors have accomplished in their lives by comparison, we are left with the suspicion that Chuck was no fool. He was a centered man, comfortable in his own skin.

At their 50th wedding anniversary dinner, some upstart (that would be me) had the impertinence to ask his beloved wife, Lydia: “How did you manage to stay married to that man for so many years?” In her typical serenity and graciousness, she replied: “Through Chuck, I learned to keep a center of my being to myself . . . else there would be no one there for him to love.”

The Holy Bible and the complete works of William Shakespeare were never far from Chuck’s fingertips in his study. It’s hard to think of my friend Chuck now without remembering these lines from “Romeo and Juliet,” Act 3, Scene 2:
“And when he shall die, take him and cut him out in little stars. And he shall make the face of heaven so fine, that all the world will be in love with night and pay no worship to the garish sun.”

Mark McIntire, a Santa Barbara resident, knew
Charlton Heston for 27 years.
http://markmcintire.com

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