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My
name is Alan Landers. I live in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, and
I was born in 1940. I am a professional actor, model,
and acting teacher. My career began with the pilot film "Aloha
from Hawaii". Over the years I appeared in various television
shows and motion pictures, including "Annie Hall", "Stacey",
"The Tree", "The Web, "Hurricane", "Ellery Queen", "The Dupont
Show", "Deadly Rivals", "Cop and 1/2", "South Beach", "America's
Most Wanted", "Superboy", "Model of the Year", "Petrocelli",
and "Kate McShane". I also appeared as a model and actor in
numerous advertising campaigns, including Binaca, United Airlines,
Lander Wine, Brylcreme, M.J.B. Coffee, BelAir Cigarettes (South
America), Sony, and Vicks 44.
I owned the Alan Landers Acting Studio in Hollywood, California.
Some of the people who attended the Studio and were coached
by me include JoAnne Woodward, Jerry Hall, Ali McGraw, Joe
Penny, George Lazinbee, Sara Purcell, Frankie Cocker, Lynn
Moody, Lydia Conress, Susan Blakely, Merite Van Kamp, Vinviano
Vincenzoni, Shel Silverstein, Lindsey Bloom, and Joe Lewis.
During the height of my acting and modeling career, I was
courted by R.J. Reynolds to appear as the "Winston Man". I
did the majority of the print ads for the R.J. Reynolds tobacco
company in the late 1960's and early 1970's.
I
appeared on billboards and in magazine advertisments holding
a Winston cigarette urging others, young and old, to smoke.
I was expected to portray smoking as stylish, pleasurable,
and attractive. I was required to smoke on the set, constant
smoking was required to achieve the correct appearance of
the cigarette, ash and butt length. During this time frame
I also promoted Tiparillo small cigars. In television advertisements,
my character, dressed in a trench coat utters the rhetorical
line, "Should a Gentleman offer a Tiparillo to a lady?"
Despite the fact that I worked closely with cigarette company
personnel during the shooting, at no time was I ever told
that cigarettes could be dangerous to my health. I knew some
people believed them to be unhealthy, but the cigarette manufacturers
denied that their product is harmful.

Looking
back on my career, I am ashamed that I helped promote such
a lethal and addictive product to the children and adults
of this country. Had I understood then what I now understand
- that cigarettes are an addictive poison that kills almost
50% of their users - I would never have participated in their
mass marketing.

In
1987, the hazard of cigarettes became tragically apparent
as I was diagnosed with lung cancer. Although 95% of lung
cancer victims do not survive five years from diagnosis, I
was determined to beat the odds. In a painful and dangerous
surgical procedure, my doctors removed a large section of
lung, hopefully to remove the cancer from my body. After the
surgery, I lived from examination to examination, hoping the
cancer would not reoccur.
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