After the latter Mature officially "retired" but he reappeared to endearingly parody his old screen image in Vittorio DeSica's After The Fox (1966), written by Neil Simon and starring Peter Sellers. Lyon, who specialised in directing low-budget westerns featuring fading stars.Italy was proving a viable source of income for former Hollywood names, and Mature starred there in two historical adventures, Annibale (1960), in which he played the title role of the Carthaginian general, and I Tartari (1961), co-starring Orson Welles. He returned to the United States to work with the veteran director Frank Borzage on China Doll (1958), a bizarre flop about a man who accidentally buys an Oriental wife, then ominously starred in Escort West (1959) for Francis D. Much of his work after this was done in Europe, but they were mainly mediocre action films, including Safari (1956), Zarack (1957), The Long Haul (1957) and No Time To Die (1958). Then he was cast as Demetrius, the slave whose violent nature is tamed by conversion to Christianity, in The Robe (1953), the first film released in CinemaScope. The following year he starred in a sequel, Demetrius and the Gladiators, then played two villainous roles, as the soldier who becomes Pharaoh in The Egyptian (1954), and a Second World War traitor in Betrayed (1954).After the thriller Violent Saturday (1955) he left Fox to freelance. When you fight him, I'd like you to put your head in his mouth.
Now don't worry - Jackie has no teeth." I said, "Mr DeMille, I don't even want to be gummed!" I did not do the stunt.Despite the film's success, subsequent roles for Mature were not distinguished - they included the Grable musical Wabash Avenue (1950), a thriller The Las Vegas Story (1952) with Jane Russell, a dull transcription of Shaw's Androcles and the Lion (1953) with Jean Simmons, and a romantic comedy with Simmons, Affair With A Stranger (1953). Mature later described his co-star Hedy Lamarr as "not exactly a ball of fire - she just seemed to be loping along". The film was an enormous hit though critically dismissed, Groucho Marx famously quipping, "I don't like any movie where the leading man's chest is bigger than the leading lady's." Mature had one major disagreement with his director:DeMille came up to me and said, "Victor my boy, we're ready to do the scene where you fight the lion We have a real lion, but he's very tame, a sweet old lion His name is Jackie. Time magazine said, "Mature apparently needed nothing all this time but the right kind of role." Robert Siodmak's Cry of the City (1948) was another fine thriller in which Mature was a cop who has to hunt down his former childhood friend.The following year Mature had his best remembered role in Cecil B DeMille's spectacular Samson and Delilah (1949).
Mr Mature's face is a basilisk, his eyes look inward; in detail of manner and appearance he successfully suggests the desperate remittance-man.Henry Hathaway's Kiss Of Death (1947) starred Mature as a thief who collaborates with the police in order to get out of prison. The critic Richard Griffith wrote,Mature is hardly an obvious choice for the role of a tubercular gunman concealing under silken menace his despair at the loss of a Boston medical career But the performance comes off amazingly. He returned to the screen as the tubercular "Doc" Holliday in John Ford's great western My Darling Clementine (1946) and received some of the best reviews of his career. "I told them, `Hell, I'm no actor and I've got 28 pictures and a scrapbook of reviews to prove it.' "With America's entry into the Second World War, Mature served 14 months of active duty prior to being cast in the service revue Tars and Spars. I picked this racket and I love it." Later he would delight in telling of his attempt to join a country club that did not permit actors. "Directors and actors who make films with one eye cocked on the Academy Award dismiss me as ham, uncured and uncurable," he once said, "and scripters find it hard to resist the temptation to take a poke at me by writing cute little scenes in which I am supposed to cavort as a strong boy of sorts But don't get me wrong.
(In both this film and Song of the Islands Mature's singing voice was dubbed.)In all four films, he played cocky, self-confident heroes, but the actor displayed throughout his career an engaging degree of self-deprecating humour. He then made four musicals, all released in 1942: Song of the Islands and Footlight Serenade, both with Grable, Seven Days Leave, with Lucille Ball, and My Gal Sal, with Rita Hayworth. He was described in the show as "the most beautiful hunk of man you ever saw in your life", and his performance brought him a contract with 20th Century-Fox.After playing opposite Betty Grable in Bruce Humberstone's entertaining mystery I Wake Up Screaming (1941), he was loaned to United Artists to portray the Arab lover of a gambling den-owner, Madame Gin Sling, in Joseph von Sternberg's heavily sanitised version of the stage drama The Shanghai Gesture (1941). After two more films, Mature took a role on Broadway as one of the men in the life of a fashion magazine editor (Gertrude Lawrence) in the hit musical Lady in the Dark (1941).
