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Victor Mature

Personal Profile

Victor Mature
  • Birth Name:
    Vittore Maturi
  • Nickname:
    Beautiful Hunk of Man
    The Hunk
  • Date of Birth:
    January 29, 1913
  • Zodiac Sign:
    Aquarius
  • Place of Birth:
    Louisville, Kentucky, USA
  • Place of Death:
    Rancho Santa Fe, California, USA
  • Date of Death:
    August 4, 1999
  • Cause of Death:
    Leukemia
  • Height:
    6' 2½"
  • Sex:
    Male
  • Nationality:
    American

Family

Victor Mature
  • Spouse:
    Frances Charles - Annulled
    Martha Stephenson Kemp - Divorced
    Dorothy Stanford Berry - Divorced
    Adrienne Joy Urwick - Divorced
    Loretta G. Sebena -

Career

Victor Mature

Trivia

Victor Mature
  • He was a petty officer in the Coast Guard during World War II.
  • He served on the troop transport ship Admiral Mayo.
  • His service carried him to the North Atlantic, including Normandy, the Mediterranean, Caribbean and many islands in the South Pacific.
  • He was on Okinawa when the A-bomb was dropped on Japan.
  • Applying for membership in the swank Los Angeles Country Club at the height of his fame, Mature was turned down and told that the golfing facility did not accept actors as members.
  • His response: "I'm not an actor - and I've got 64 films to prove it!".
  • He attributed his success in Biblical spectacles to his ability to "make with the holy look."
  • Although several sources suggest that Mature's family name was originally Maturi, United States and Austrian birth, immigration, census and other records, as well as Victor Mature himself, are quite clear that as of 1877, the family name was Mature.
  • In her autobiography, Esther Williams details a passionate affair she had with Mature during the filming of Million Dollar Mermaid (1952).
  • According to Williams, her marriage was on the rocks, she needed love and Mature provided all she wanted.

Quotes

Victor Mature
  • "When asked if it bothered him playing Samson's father in a TV remake of his own "Samson and Delilah" (Samson and Delilah (1984) (TV)): If the money's right I'd play his mother!"
  • "Actually, I am a golfer. That is my real occupation. I never was an actor. Ask anybody, particularly the critics."
  • "If you're so concerned about fucking privacy, don't become a fucking actor!"
  • "I'm no actor, and I've got 64 pictures to prove it."
View all Quotes: Victor Mature

Biography

Victor Mature
Last Updated: Thursday, August 27, 2009

American leading man. Born Victor John Mature (to knife sharpener Marcellus George Mature, born Marcello Gelindo Maturi in Pinzolo, Trentino, and a Swiss-American mother, Clara Ackley) in Louisville, Kentucky, Victor Mature worked as a teenager with his father as a salesman for butcher supplies. Hoping to become an actor, he studied at the Pasadena Playhouse in California. He auditioned for Gone with the Wind (1939) for the role ultimately played by his fellow Playhouse student, George Reeves.

After achieving some acclaim in his first few films, he served in the Coast Guard in World War II. Mature became one of Hollywood's busiest and most popular actors after the war, though rarely was he given the critical respect he often deserved. His roles in John Ford's My Darling Clementine (1946) and in Henry Hathaway's Kiss of Death (1947) were among his finest work, though he moved more and more frequently into more exotic roles in films like Samson and Delilah (1949) and The Egyptian (1954). Never an energetic actor nor one of great artistic pretensions, he nevertheless continued as a Hollywood stalwart both in programme and in more prominent films like The Robe (1953).

More interested in golf than acting, his appearances diminished through the 1960s, but he made a stunning comeback of sorts in a hilarious romp as a very Victor Mature-like actor in Neil Simon's Caccia alla volpe (1966). Golf eventually took over his activities and, after a cameo as Samson's father in a TV remake of his own "Samson and Delilah" (Samson and Delilah (1984) (TV)), he retired for good. Rumors occasionally surfaced of another comeback, most notably in a never-realized remake of Red River (1948) with Sylvester Stallone, but none came to fruition. He died of cancer at his Rancho Santa Fe, California, home in 1999.

Filmography

Victor Mature

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