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Charlton Heston
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Radio commercials: Bud Light (1998).

TV commercial: Bud Lite (1995).

TV commercial: Charlton Heston Presents the Bible (1999).

Voluntarily staged a one-man Q & A show in Bristol to help a fan with his theatre career.

Stage work in UK includes:

Stage: Starred in "A Man For All Seasons", England, 1987.

Stage: Starred in "Love Letters", 1999 (with wife Lydia Clarke) at Theatre Royal, Haymarket, London, England.

Biography: "Charlton Heston's Hollywood: 50 Years in American Film" (1998) by Charlton Heston & Jean-Pierre Isbouts.

Political essays: "The Courage To Be Free" (2000).

TV commercial: Camel cigarettes (1950s).

Antony and Cleopatra (1947). Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Incidental music by Paul Nordoff. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Martin Beck Theatre: 26 Nov 1947- 13 Mar 1948 (126 performances). Cast: Ralph Clanton, Katharine Cornell (as "Cleopatra, Queen of Egypt"), Ivan Simpson, Kent Smith (as "Enobarbus, friend to Antony"), Godfrey Tearle (as "Antony, triumvir"), Lenore Ulric (as "Charmian, attendant on Cleopatra"), Peter Barno, Barnett Biro, Robert Carricart, Oliver Cliff, Robert Duke, Drummond Erskine, Bruce Gordon, James Grudier, Charlton Heston (as "Proculeius, a soldier of Caesar") [Broadway debut], Joseph Holland, Charles Holt, Milfred Hull, Martin Kingsley, Betty Low, Dayton Lummis, Theodore Marcuse, Charles Nolte, David Orrick, Lawrence Perron, Anthony Randall, Gilbert Reade, Orrin Redfield, Ernest Rowan, Marc Russo, Alan Shayne, Maureen Stapleton (as "Iras, attendant on Cleopatra"), David J. Stewart, Eli Wallach (as "Diomedes, a soothsayer"), Douglass Watson, R. Justice Watson, Joseph Wiseman. Produced by Katharine Cornell.

Stage: Appeared as Kell in Benn W. Levy's "The Tumbler", directed by Laurence Olivier, at the Helen Hayes Theatre, New York City. The show opened on Feb 24, 1960, and closed Feb 27th after five performances. It was his fourth, and last, appearance on the Broadway stage.

Radio: He co-starred in the "Lux Radio Theatre" productions of "Viva Zapata!" (3/2/52); "Captain Carey, USA" (2/2/53); "The President's Lady" (9/28/53); "The Naked Jungle" (6/7/54) and "Secret of the Incas" (12/14/54).

Appeared on NBC's discussion program "The Irv Kupcinet Show" (1953) on August 21, 1971, with other guests: actor Robert Conrad and actress Ilka Chase, Washington columnist Carl Rowan, anthropologist Ashley Montagu, authors Frank Keegan ("Blacktown USA"), Max Wilk ("The Wit and Wisdom of Hollywood") and Paul Rubenstein ("Groupsex Tapes"). [90-min. program]

TV commercial: U.S. National Arbor Day, urging viewers to become aware and involved by planting trees (1996).

Wrote the foreword for the book "Planet of the Apes Revisited" by Joe Russo and Larry Landsman.

Letter to the Editor, "The Lightning-Rod Amendment," Published in The New York Times, 16 May 2002.

Letter to the Editor, "A Wish for Eminem," Published in The New York Times, 4 March 2001.

Letter to the Editor, "Reagan Writes," Published in The New York Times, 21 January 2001.

Letter to the Editor, "Arming America," Published in The New York Times, 1 October 2000.

Letter to the Editor, "Big Bills on Broadway," Published in The New York Times, 16 April 1999.

Letter to the Editor, "Right to Bear Arms," Published in The New York Times, 12 May 1998.

Letter to the Editor, "An Exhibit Denied," Published in The New York Times, 7 December 1997.

Letter to the Editor, "Gun Locks May Help, but Education Is Key," Published in The New York Times, 17 October 1997.

Letter to the Editor, "Uttering the R-Word," Published in The New York Times, 13 October 1996.

Letter to the Editor, "TV Remedy For a TV Malady," Published in The New York Times, 29 September 1996.

Design for a Stained Glass Window (1950). Drama. Written by William Berney and Howard Richardson. Directed by Ella Gerber. Mansfield Theatre: 23 Jan 1950- 28 Jan 1950 (8 performances). Cast: Azore (a "A Dog"), Donald Barton, Ralph Clanton, James Dobson, Joseph Fallon, Neil Fitzgerald, Charlton Heston (as "John Clitherow"), A. Winfield Hoeny, Carroll McComas (as "Anne Tesh"), John McKee, Harry Mehaffey, Charles Nolte, Kathleen Roland, Donald Rose, David Rosen, Winston Ross (as "Second Guard"), Martha Scott, Thomas Walsh. Produced by Jack Segasture. Produced in association with OBS Productions.

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