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for never taking him seriously as an actor.
In fact, I’ve seldom bothered to watch any of his work, except for things like "Ben Hur" and "The Ten Commandments", which I saw when I was a child.
I've just been reading a book about Laurence Olivier, which talks about the respect the two actors had for each other. In 1960, Oliver was asked to direct a play in New York, "The Tumbler", by Benn W. Levy. It was a play in verse, and was going to be very difficult to pull off, but Olivier chose Charlton Heston for the lead role of Kell. His reasons?
"I chose Chuck Heston because he was one of the few American actors who was constantly going back to the stage in between films. He wasn't interested in being a movie star. He only wanted to be the best actor he could be, and I knew that he was an actor who took his work seriously, and was seriously good."
And Heston? When asked years later by the author why he chose to do such a diffficult and obviously non-commercial play, rather than the film he'd been offered with Marilyn Monroe, he replied, "I was desperate to work with Olivier".
In the event, the play was taken off after only four performances, but it was no discredit to Heston or to Olivier as director. Olivier said of Heston's performance "He didn't care about whether he look good, just so long as he gave you what you wanted. He has exceptional depth for an actor who had made his name in films, and he was a good Shakespearean actor too. Better than Orson Welles, in my opinion".
In my eyes Olivier is next to God, so if he said that, it must be true. I apologise unreservedly to the spirit of Mr Heston, wherever he is now, for judging him without ever really watching his work.
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