The Briefing Room

General Category => Sports/Entertainment/MSM/Social Media => Topic started by: Machiavelli on August 28, 2017, 06:03:22 pm

Title: 'Charlton Heston' is a voluminous, possibly definitive, study of a Hollywood paragon of masculinity
Post by: Machiavelli on August 28, 2017, 06:03:22 pm
Colin Fleming
Barnes & Noble via The Christian Science Monitor
August 28, 2017

Quote
Dense biographies about high-wattage Hollywood stars with limited acting chops can be tricky business for a writer and a reader alike. The former has to instill in the latter a belief in why we should care beyond yet another exegesis of celebrity, while readers, ideally, find a way to open themselves to seeing old works anew.

Marc Eliot has this kind of challenge in hand with Charlton Heston: Hollywood’s Last Icon – a voluminous, and possibly definitive, study one of the big screen’s paragons of brawn and masculinity. Its subject looms large in our cultural memory while remaining a limited thespian whose go-to move was leaning forward, iron jaw extended, as if forever contemplating where to get a good steak.

But if Heston lacked range, he didn’t lack self-consciousness. He was an ardent diarist, and those writings are counted on to provide new vantage points, Heston’s prose teaming up with Eliot’s, as it were, in a joint mission to tell us why we should care more than we already do about this Tinsel Town icon.

More (https://www.csmonitor.com/Books/Book-Reviews/2017/0828/Charlton-Heston-is-a-voluminous-possibly-definitive-study-of-a-Hollywood-paragon-of-masculinity)