Tag: Oprah Winfrey

  • The Obamas would (almost) blend in among Oak Bluffs’ black elite

    If Barack Obama and his family decide to summer in Oak Bluffs, as the Boston Globe reports they are considering, they would enjoy not just pristine beaches, but a social scene that includes some of the nation’s most successful black artists, thinkers and entrepreneurs.

    Obama’s longtime mentor, Harvard law professor Charles Ogletree, has a home in Oak Bluffs. So, too, do Washington power broker Vernon Jordan (the great uncle of Obama friend and adviser Valerie Jarrett), filmmaker Spike Lee and former HHS Secretary Dr. Louis Sullivan.

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    Located seven miles off the Cape Cod coastline, on the northeastern tip of Martha’s Vineyard, the town of Oak Bluffs has drawn African-Americans since the Civil War, first as domestic help for wealthy white families, and later, as second-home owners.

    Once a Methodist revival camp, it became known in the early 20th century as the only town on the Vineyard that welcomed black tourists. As a result, well-to-do African Americans from New York and Boston flocked there in search of a summer retreat by the ocean.

    Early homeowners included the late New York Congressman Adam Clayton Powell Jr., Harlem Renaissance writer Dorothy West and U.S. Sen. Edward W. Brooke of Massachusetts, the first black senator elected in the post-Reconstruction era.

    Among the town’s most prominent residences was Overton Mansion on Narragansett Avenue, a large Victorian house that became a salon of sorts, hosting actor Paul Robeson, singer Ethel Waters and civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.

    ”I can still see Martin Luther King sitting on the porch and writing,” a neighbor, Mildred Henderson, told the New York Times six years ago.

    In more recent years, the community has become the summer home of journalist Charleyne Hunter Galt, scholar Henry Louis Gates and Harvard law professor Lani Guinier. Oprah Winfrey and Diana Ross are said to visit.

    “There was a time when the Vineyard was the only spot for successful black people,” Jordan reminisced to journalist and neighbor Jill Nelson, for her history of the community, Finding Martha’s Vineyard: African Americans at Home on an Island.

    While the White House has declined to confirm any vacation plans by the First Family, the Obamas’ friends say they stand ready to welcome them.

    Ogletree, who has owned a place in Oak Bluffs for 15 years, told the Globe he first hosted Obama there in August 2004, after the then-Illinois senator gave a rousing speech at the Democratic National Convention in Boston.

    “I asked him to just drop by [the Vineyard] and say hi and then, when he showed up there were all these really excited people there to meet him,” he recalled.

    Obama’s last visit, in August, 2007, was to attend a fund-raiser at the home of Ronald R. Davenport Sr., chairman of Sheridan Broadcasting Corporation, one of the nation’s largest African-American-owned communications companies.

    Not surprisingly, he drew a big crowd then, too.

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    • Fannie Mae chief Herb Allison in line to oversee TARP

      April 14, 2009 at 2:29pm

      Word is that Herb Allison, a longtime Wall Street executive with ties to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, will be tapped to head the government’s $700-billion financial rescue program.

    • Emmy judges love 30 Rock, Mad Men; viewers not so much (Muckety)

      They’re far from the most-watched shows on television, but 30 Rock and Mad Men were the big winners at last night’s 60th Emmy Awards ceremony.

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      30 Rock took home the award for outstanding comedy series, with leading actor awards going to its stars Tina Fey and Alec Baldwin. Fey, 30 Rock’s producer and creator, also won for outstanding writing for a comedy series.

      As she accepted her Emmys, Fey took the opportunity to plug 30 Rock, which despite its critical acclaim, has not excelled in the ratings.

      After 30 Rock took the Emmy for best comedy series last year, Fey thanked her “dozens” of viewers. This year, she reminded the audience that her show could be “viewed on NBC.com, Hulu, iTunes, United Airlines and occasionally on actual television.”

      30 Rock currently averages about 5 million viewers per episode, ranking it far below the popular Two and a Half Men, which has won Emmys only in technical categories and averages 15 million viewers per episode.

      The winner for best drama series could also use the Emmy publicity to increase viewership.

      The award for outstanding drama series went to AMC’s Mad Men, making it the first basic cable show to win in the drama category. The show, which averaged a mere 915,000 viewers in its first season, scored an additional five Emmys, including outstanding writing for a drama series.

      New episodes of 30 Rock restart October 30th on NBC, with guest stars Jennifer Aniston and Oprah Winfrey slated to appear in the third season.

      AMC is in the midst of airing the second season of Mad Men, on Sundays at 10 p.m.

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    • Oprah Winfrey + Barack Obama = 1 million votes (Muckety)

      What’s the value of a celebrity endorsement in a political campaign?

      In the case of Oprah Winfrey and Barack Obama, about a million votes.

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      That’s the conclusion of two University of Maryland economists who correlated vote totals with data such as subscriptions to O magazine and purchases of books endorsed by Oprah’s Book Club. They found a close relation in many polling precincts between O subscribers and Obama backers.

      Oprah Winfrey
      Oprah Winfrey

      “We think people take political information from all sorts of sources in their daily life,” Moore told The New York Times. “And for some people Oprah is clearly one of them.”

      Economists Craig Garthwaite and Timothy Moore tracked celebrity endorsements back to the 1920 presidential campaign and concluded that Winfrey was “a celebrity of nearly unparalleled influence.”

      Although she has not confirmed any plans to attend the Democratic National Convention in Denver, Winfrey has reportedly rented a Colorado home for $50,000 per week.

      Other celebrities expected to participate in the convention include Gwyneth Paltrow, Madonna, Spike Lee, Warren Beatty, Susan Sarandon, Forrest Whitaker, Scarlett Johansson and Kanye West.

      Stevie Wonder, Melissa Etheridge, Sheryl Crow and the Black Eyed Peas are scheduled to perform at convention- related events.

      Obama already owes much to the stars – and not only to Oprah. Gwyneth Paltrow produced a video backing the campaign and Hollywood fundraisers have contributed more than $4 million to his campaign.

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    • Chicago’s black business leaders play major role in Obama’s rise

      Oprah Winfrey lives here. Michael Jordan keeps a penthouse on the lake. Jesse Jackson Jr. and Sr. are both here. And of course, there’s Barack Obama.

      To a degree unlike any other city in America, Chicago is identified with its black elite. Locals joke that you can find more black millionaires per square foot at the Chicago Urban League’s annual dinner than you can anywhere in the world.

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      The windy city is home not just to Jackson’s Rainbow/PUSH Coalition and Chess Records, where Muddy Waters, Chuck Berry and Howlin’ Wolf recorded hits, but also to Winfrey’s wildly successful Harpo Productions, and to “Ebony” and “Jet,” the flagships of Johnson Publishing Company, the world’s largest African-American-owned firm.

      The city has its share of black poverty, to be sure. But it is also headquarters to Seaway National Bank, the Midwest’s largest black-owned bank, and a slew of flourishing African-American-owned financial and consulting firms, including John W. Rogers Jr.’s Ariel Capital, manager of some of the nation’s largest pension funds; Loop Capital, a fast-growing investment banking firm co-founded by James Reynold Jr.; and Burrell Communications Group, where founder Tom Burrell snagged accounts with Pepsi Cola and McDonald’s and revolutionized the portrayal of blacks in advertising.

      It is no coincidence that Chicago has also spawned three of the four black presidential candidates in U.S. history – Jesse Jackson Sr., Carol Moseley Braun and now Barack Obama. Politics, after all, requires money – lots of it.

      Obama’s ties to Chicago’s black elite go back to his earliest days in Hyde Park, an integrated neighborhood that is home to the University of Chicago, the Chicago Theological Seminary and affluent as well as struggling residents.

      Only two years after his crushing 2000 defeat to Bobby Rush, a charismatic South Side congressman who had once led the Illinois Black Panthers, Obama asked his friend and neighbor, Martin Nesbitt, to invite a group of African-American professionals to his home for brunch.

      Nesbitt, a vice president of the Pritzker Realty Group and president of a parking management company, was a true believer in his friend’s political future. Yet even he was stunned when Obama told the group he wanted to mount a run for U.S. Senate, according to David Mandell’s account in “Obama: From Promise to Power.”

      “I literally fell off the couch,” Nesbitt said. “And we all started laughing – and he said, ‘No, really, I am gonna run for the U.S. Senate.”

      Robert Blackwell Jr., owner of an IT consulting company, told the Washington Post it would have been natural to hesitate. “But Barack has almost devout followers who are people of action, and they rallied behind him,” he said.

      “Barack has almost devout followers who are people of action, and
      they rallied behind him.”

      ~ Robert Blackwell Jr.

      Blackwell already had strong business, as well as personal connections to Obama. From early 2001 to April, 2002, according to the Los Angeles Times, he had paid Obama an $8,000-a-month retainer to give advice to his firm, Electronic Knowledge Interchange. A few months after receiving his final payment from EKI, Obama sent a letter on state Senate letterhead urging Illinois officials to provide a $50,000 tourism promotion grant to another Blackwell company, Killerspin.

      Another early participant was Valerie Jarrett, a veteran of Chicago politics and former chair of the Chicago Stock Exchange and the Chicago Transit authority. “You saw his resilience,” she told US News. “He has the intestinal fortitude to take a punch – and losing to Congressman Rush was a very hard punch.” Jarrett would become the finance chair of the 2004 campaign.

      It is a measure of Obama’s self-confidence – and the trust placed in him by members of his inner circle – that he convinced them to open their wallets again. That group provided the political seed money for his successful 2004 race that enabled him to launch a campaign which built broader financial and political support later on.

      Rogers of Ariel Capital gave $11,000. Quintin E. Primo III, who made a fortune financing commercial real-estate deals, gave $18,000. Louis A. Holland, a founding partner of Holland Capital, his wife and two of his partners, gave $35,000. Jordan, the basketball superstar (who was not at that brunch) gave $10,000.

      And those same individuals would step up again when Obama declared his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for president.

      Black Chicagoans like to point out that their city has always led the nation in black political leaders.

      The city’s first settler was a fur trader of African and French descent – Jean Baptiste Pointe du Sable who established a trading post at the mouth of the Chicago river in the 1770s and who was called “Black Chief” by the Potawatomi Indians.

      Fugitive slaves and freedmen established the city’s first black community in the 1840s. But it wasn’t until the Great Migration that began around the time of World War I, when hundreds of thousands of blacks from Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas and Tennessee rode up on the Illinois Central Railroad that African-Americans began transforming Chicago politically, economically and culturally.

      Ironically, most of the new arrivals who were seeking escape from the Jim Crow laws were confined to a narrow “Black Belt” of overcrowded apartment buildings on the South Side. But in the 1930s and 1940s, the area – dubbed Bronzeville or the Black Metropolis by community boosters – became a cultural and economic magnet.

      The late John H. Johnson, who came from Arkansas in 1933, said that to southern blacks like him, Chicago was “what Mecca was to the Moslems and what Jerusalem was to the Jews: a place of magic and mirrors and dreams.”

      In the early 1940s, Johnson began publishing “The Negro Digest,” the prototype for “Ebony,” and would go on to become the first African-American to appear on the Forbes 400 list.

      In those same years, an African-American founded the first black insurance company in the North; Robert S. Abbott’s Chicago Defender became the nation’s most widely read black newspaper; William L. Dawson became America’s most powerful black politician and writers like Richard Wright, Gwendolyn Brooks and William Attaway rivaled those of the Harlem Renaissance.

      Still, it would take African Americans several generations to begin to leverage their political muscle in a city largely controlled by white ethnics.

      Edward McClelland wrote in Salon that Chicago became the political capital of black America precisely because the city was so segregated for so long. He quoted a saying once popular among blacks: “In the South, the white man doesn’t care how close you get, as long as you don’t get too high; in the North, he doesn’t care how high you get, as long as you don’t get too close.”

      The impact of Harold Washington’s 1983 election as mayor, by a coalition of black, Hispanic and good-government types, was seismic. In his memoir, Dreams From My Father,” Obama recounted finding the mayor’s picture on the wall of a barber shop shortly after moving to the city. “Before Harold,” he quotes him, “seemed like we’d always be second-class citizens.”

      Washington’s example fueled the political aspirations of others, including Jesse Jackson Sr. and Jr., Carol Moseley Braun, James Meeks and Bobby Rush on the national level, and a host of others at the state and local level. Washington had received help from the black businessmen of his time, among them, John Johnson and Edward G. Gardner, the founder of Soft Sheen Products.

      More than 30 years after his death, Chicago is home to more black-owned businesses than any other city, according to the Chicago Urban League. And increasingly, its most affluent leaders are contributing to a slew of civic causes, including political campaigns.

      “It’s taken a long time for black business people to accumulate enough wealth to be able to give it away,” Jarrett told Chicago Business.

      Obama’s campaign for the Democratic nomination has drawn support from almost every demographic in the city. But his original backers among black business leaders are still pumping too: Rogers, Blackwell and Frank Clark, president of Commonwealth Edison, have each raised more than $200,000, according to campaign finance records.

      Also among the rainmakers is Desiree Rogers, the president of Peoples Gas and North Shore Gas, who hosted a $1,000-a-person fundraiser in her Gold Coast home last January, and Mellody Hobson, president of Ariel Capital and a frequent financial commentator on ABC’s Good Morning America, who has raised at least $50,000, according to campaign reports.

      But by far the largest fund-raising prowess by a black entrepreneur from Chicago took place not in that city, but in Montecito, Calif., where talk-show doyenne Winfrey threw a celebrity-studded gala which netted more than $3 million. The Chicago Tribune reported that as stars like Whoopi Goldberg and Chris Rock rubbed elbows at her estate with members of the Chicago crowd, Winfrey told her guests: “When you have been called, no one can stand in the way of destiny.”

    • Ousted Sierra leaders tie suspension to Clorox criticism

      At the very least, the timing raises questions: The biggest environmental group in the U.S. expelled 27 leaders of its Florida chapter shortly after the state committee accused the Sierra Club’s national directors of betraying their principles to endorse a “green” cleaning line by the Clorox Company.

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      Sierra Club spokesman David Willett denied the suspensions had anything to do with disagreements over the group’s partnership with the Oakland-based Clorox. He said the four-year expulsion, which took effect last week, was the last in a series of steps taken to end bitter infighting that had undermined the Florida group’s work.

      Willett noted another state chapter, Massachusetts, had also criticized the Sierra Club’s decision to endorse the new biodegradable cleaning line, “and no action has been taken against them, and there won’t be. That’s not how the Sierra Club works.”

      First announced in January, the unprecedented partnership between the Sierra Club and Clorox has been hailed by supporters as a way to promote a green marketplace, and denounced by critics as a sell-out to a company most closely associated with Clorox Bleach. Under the deal, the Sierra Club gets an undisclosed percentage of profits from the sale of the new line, marketed under the name Green Works, in exchange for the use of its logo.

      At least some ousted activists don’t buy the assertion that their suspension is unrelated to their criticism. Joy Towles Ezell, former chairwoman of the Florida chapter, told the Guardian that the same weekend in January that the chapter passed a measure condemning the deal, they were told of their impending removal.

      She said that the new Clorox products should be named “Money Works” or “Toxic Works.”

      “Clorox is the bad guy to me,” Ezell said. “. . .You sell your soul when you get involved with something like that.”

      Sierra Club Executive Director Carl Pope admits he was skeptical when first approached by Clorox. But after reviewing the ingredients of the cleaners, most of which are plant products, and contemplating Clorox’s market reach, he decided to take the gamble.

      “One of the reasons green home cleaning products haven’t achieved much market penetration is if they came from an environmental brand, people had the sense they won’t work … And if it came from someone with a cleaning reputation the reaction was: They can’t be green.”

      Green Works may be an even bigger gamble for Clorox’s new CEO Donald Knauss, who came from Cola Cola in 2006, and who has pushed the company to launch its first new product line in 20 years. Knauss has identified sustainability as one of three core consumer trends with which he wanted to align Clorox products, and hired “green” consultants, who led him to the Sierra Club.

      Green consultant Joel Makower, who worked on the project, calls the launch a watershed:

      It’s an intriguing moment. Green Works enters the marketplace with a near perfect storm of market conditions: growing mainstream consumer demand for green products that don’t require compromise or sacrifice; significant interest from Wal-Mart and other big retailers in pushing greener products to the masses; a product that seems competitive with the leading green brands; and endorsement from Big Green.

      Naysayers, however, predict the endorsement will undermine the credibility of the environmental group, noting that a month before the deal was signed, Clorox was fined $95,000 by the Environmental Protection Agency for donating a mislabeled Chinese version of Clorox bleach to a Los Angeles charity.

      “The Sierra Club has become little more than another corporate front group,”
      said Tim Hermach of Native Forest Council in Eugene, Oregon in a piece in Corporate Crime Reporter.

      Hermach had special animus for the group’s executive director: “Carl Pope has sold out the Sierra Club’s mission of saving nature and now seems proud of his role as an obsequious and professional Uriah Heep. As a result, Sierra Club is getting lots of corporate appreciation, cash and favors.”

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    • Will MTV audience care who rocked the cradle?

      MTV’s Rock the Cradle has kicked off its debut season, but does the average MTV reality show fan even care about these celebuspawn?

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      The nine contestants are the children of musicians of the ’70s, ’80s and ’90s. Specifically, they are the offspring of band members from Twisted Sister, The Eagles, The Doobie Brothers and the artists MC Hammer, Kenny Loggins, Al. B Sure!, Eddie Money, Bobby Brown and Olivia Newton-John.

      MTV’s website describes the premise of the show, “Yeah, we’re searching for the next superstar, but this isn’t your average, every day singing competition. We’re shining the spotlight on children of rock stars to see who has what it takes to step out of the parental shadow and fulfill their DNA destiny. ‘Cause, really, isn’t everything better when celebrities are involved?”

      But really, how many typical MTV viewers even know the music that made the parents of these contestants famous? Aside from seeing episodes of Being Bobby Brown on Bravo and reruns of the movie Grease on cable, it’s likely that “Hammer time,” would be nothing more than a legend for today’s teens, MTV’s target audience.

      The contestants of Rock the Cradle sing each week, and the one with the highest score from the judges is safe from elimination. The rest have to depend on viewer support to keep them from being kicked off the show.

      The show is judged by Britney Spears’ former manager Larry Rudolph, choreographer Jamie King, and celebrity stylist June Ambrose.

      After the first episode, which aired last week, Lucy Walsh, daughter of The Eagles’ Joe Walsh, received the highest score, which isn’t too surprising. She’s the only contestant who already has a record deal, with Island Records.

      Rock the Cradle may get some success if the contestants can hold audience attention without relying on famous parents. It’s pretty certain that the fans of Kenny Loggins, The Doobie Brothers and Olivia Newton-John aren’t tuning in to MTV regularly.

      Rock the Cradle airs on MTV on Thursday at 10 p.m.

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    • Cayne, Macklowe keep their condos at The Plaza

      Another way the rich are different: They don’t have to pay mortgages.

      A case in point: Days before Bear Stearns chairman James Cayne suffered a dizzying $900-million loss in wealth as a result of the fire sale of Bear Stearns, he purchased two apartments in the storied Plaza for a cool $28 million.

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      But not to worry: Cayne, a onetime scrap-iron salesman and recently retired Bear Stearns chief, bought the adjacent apartments overlooking Central Park with cash, according to city records.

      The 1907 landmark, famous as the home of children’s book heroine Eloise, recently reopened as a mix of luxury condos and hotel units. The development boasts a Who’s Who of corporate chieftains, including New England Patriots boss Robert K. Kraft, Staples Chief Executive Ronald Sargent, Italian racing mogul Flavio Briatore and Dave Barger, chief executive of JetBlue.

      Like Cayne, several have been socked by recent gyrations in the real estate and financial markets. Real-estate mogul Harry Macklowe, who spent $60 million last year to buy up a string of adjacent apartments, is facing a mountain of debt himself as a result of a $7 billion, seven-building buy last year. To stave off cash-hungry creditors, he has been trying to unload the iconic General Motors building, and the office tower at 1301 Avenue of the Americas. So far, though, he’s shown no sign of giving up his dream of a palace on the park.

      Italian businessman Luigi Zunino, meanwhile, is trying to flip the third-floor apartment which he is in contract to buy, according to the Wall Street Journal. Zunino is the CEO of a Milan-based real estate company that lost three-quarters of its value in the last year. While most condos in The Plaza have been selling for between $4,000 and $6,000 per square foot, Zunino is valuing his apartment at $10,000 per square foot.

      If he gets his $100-million asking price, it would set a record for residential real estate in Manhattan. If not, maybe he can start a support group for onetime Masters of the Universe in the Oak Room.

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    • Geoffrey Garin fills Penn’s post in Clinton campaign

      Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton replaced one pollster and a strategist with another Sunday, letting Mark Penn go and filling his place with Geoffrey Garin.

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      In elevating Garin, Clinton gives prominence to a Washington insider who is well connected and seems to carry little of the baggage Penn brought to his role.

      The adjective “well-respected” seems glued to Garin’s name in press accounts. The adjectives “controversial,” “abrasive,” “gruff” and “rumpled” were always pasted on Penn.

      Penn had been serving as Clinton’s chief political strategist until he stepped down Sunday. He is also the chief executive of the Burson-Marsteller, a public relations firm.

      Reportedly, Clinton had been angered that Penn and Burson-Marsteller were working to help the government of Colombia obtain a trade agreement with the United States.

      Clinton opposes the alliance. Penn’s connection to Colombia could have hurt her with voters in the April 22 Pennsylvania primary.

      “The important thing is just to win,” Garin told The Washington Post after he took over for Penn. “My view is the campaign has to focus on the work of April and May and the early part of June and do well at all of that. So on one level, first things first.”

      Garin, 54, who joined the Clinton campaign last month as a pollster, has been president of Peter D. Hart Research Associates since 1984. He joined the company in 1978 as a senior analyst and vice president.

      While at the company, he has worked as a pollster and strategist for several Democratic senatorial candidates. They include Charles Schumer of New York, Dianne Feinstein of California and Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia.

      He has also worked with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Pew Charitable Trusts, the AFL-CIO and the American Federation of Teachers.

      Garin’s connections to unions could help Clinton in Pennsylvania with some of the voters she needs to win the state and slow the momentum of Sen. Barack Obama.

      Evan Miller of The New Argument blog notes that Garin gave some unsolicited advice to the Clinton campaign in February, advice the campaign ignored.

      “If I were Hillary Clinton, the last thing I’d be doing is talking about super delegates, because the voters don’t want to hear that,” Garin said. “She really needs to make the case about why she’s the better candidate to lead the country.”

      In other comments, Garin has emphasized the importance of speaking to the economic issues that are on people’s minds.

      But at this moment in the Clinton campaign, personnel issues may be as important as policy issues.

      Penn was in the middle of months of internal fighting. He seemed to have alienated everyone but Clinton and her husband, Bill Clinton.

      Wolfson and Garin don’t have this history of contention, The Washington Post reported.

      “People like Howard and Geoff,” one campaign aide said. “I presume there will be less strife.”

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      2 Comments

      • #1.   Perry Washburn 04.10.2008

        Found Muckety by accident. Has the TU come back to life?

      • #2.   Carol Eisenberg 04.10.2008

        Hey Perry. No corporate overseer in this iteration.

      Leave a Comment


    • Heston’s journey from left to right

      He played Moses and Michelangelo, but Americans under 40 are more likely to know Charlton Heston as the conservative activist who walked out on filmmaker Michael Moore.

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      Heston, who died Saturday night at the age of 84, was once the best-paid actor in Hollywood thanks to his iconic roles in films such as Ben-Hur and The Ten Commandments. After making Planet of the Apes in 1968 and The Omega Man in 1971, however, his acting career went into decline even as he gained prominence on the political stage.

      Those who recall him as president of the National Rifle Association may be surprised that Heston started out as a liberal Democrat. He campaigned for Adlai Stevenson in 1956 and John F. Kennedy in 1960. He opposed Hollywood censors’ attempts to prettify the language in Ben-Hur. He supported a gun control law, passed under President Lyndon Johnson, that forbade addicts and federal convicts from owning guns, and regulated interstate commerce in firearms

      He was also a leading advocate of civil rights, raising money for the cause and joining Martin Luther King Jr.’s March on Washington in 1963 along with Harry Belafonte, Jackie Robinson, Paul Newman, Josephine Baker and Bob Dylan—none of whom can be imagined as a conservative. Two years earlier, he had picketed a segregated theater in Oklahoma that was showing one of his movies.

      “We certainly disagree with his position as NRA head and also his firm, firm, unwavering support of the unlimited right to bear arms,” said Earl Ofari Hutchinson, president of the Los Angeles Urban Policy Round Table, a civil rights group. “Charlton Heston was a complex individual. He lived a long time, and certainly, there were many phases. The phases we prefer to remember were certainly his contributions to Dr. King and civil rights.”

      As he got older, however, Heston’s politics swung rightward. He seemed to follow the lead of Ronald Reagan, who had preceded him as president of the Screen Actors Guild (”Ronald Reagan was my president before he was yours,” Heston once wrote) and also as a liberal Democrat. Heston campaigned for Reagan and for both Bushes when they ran for president.

      In a 1997 speech, he deplored a culture war being waged against “the God fearing, law-abiding, Caucasian, middle-class Protestant–or even worse, evangelical Christian, Midwestern or Southern—or even worse, rural, apparently straight–or even worse, admitted heterosexuals, gun-owning-or even worse, NRA-card-carrying, average working stiff–or even worse, male working stiff–because, not only don’t you count, you are a downright obstacle to social progress.”

      He resigned from Actors Equity, calling the union’s refusal to allow a white actor to play the part of a Eurasian in “Miss Saigon” “obscenely racist.” By then, he also opposed affirmative action and criticized CNN’s coverage of the Gulf War as sympathetic to the Iraqis.

      A staunch defender of the Second Amendment, Heston was elected president of the N.R.A. in 1998. “Those wise old dead white guys that invented this country knew what they were talking about,” he said.

      Perhaps his most famous moment at the organization came at its 2000 convention where, paraphrasing an N.R.A. bumper sticker (”I’ll give you my gun when you take it from my cold, dead hands”), he waved a replica of a colonial flintlock above his head and shouted, “From my cold, dead hands!”

      Michael Moore visited Heston to talk to him for the 2002 anti-gun documentary, Bowling for Columbine, But Heston appeared angry and flustered by Moore’s questions and walked out on the interview. Moore, who was criticized by some for “ambushing” Heston, posted a picture of the actor on his web site after he died.

      In 2002, Heston was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease. “If you see a little less spring in my step, if your name fails to leap to my lips, you’ll know why,” he said in announcing his condition. “And if I tell you a funny story for the second time, please laugh anyway.” He withdrew from public life, resigning from the NRA in 2003, although he accepted a Medal of Freedom later that year from President George W. Bush.

      “The largeness of character that comes across the screen has also been seen throughout his life,” Bush said.

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