http://www.omgblog.com/2009/08/omg_hes_naked_victor_mature.php
- Esther Williams had an affair with him and gives a full description in her autobiography Million Dollar Mermaid.
Jeff Chandler
- Big balls, too.
- Saw it many years ago.
- Isn''t that photoshopped?
- Who cares, he''s fug and yes it is photoshopped. The original shows a much smaller prick.
- r5, you''re in the photo?\
\
Let''s see the original pic. I''ll wait.
- Uncut?
- No, I don''t believe it''s photoshopped. I saw the same picture in an issue of Playgirl many years ago (late 80s). It was an issue with nudes of "Old Hollywood" (Victor, Yul Brenner, and a few others).
- Figures he''d have some nudies floating around. I think he serviced all the queens back then. He didn''t get anywhere on his thespian skills.
- I saw that too, r8, and it looked to me at the time that all of the photos had been altered.
- .
- He was rather well huing and uncut, if you like all that, but he was also lumpy and had major bigass.
- Really ugly dick, imo.
- You say that like it's a bad thing, r12.
- Note the stupid comment from the neurosyphilitic Mrs. Patrick Campbell further down the page.
- I've always wondered what's the fascination on DL with long dead actors cocks?
It's kind of creepy when you really think about it.
I'd rather see nude pics of the actor who played Patricia Arquette's husband on her canceled TV show, I've forgotten the actors name. He's British but always plays Americans.
Someone once posted here on DL that they saw him completely nude in a play and that he was "huge". Of course, in typical DL fashion, there were no photos linked!
- So start you own thread, ass at R16.
- GREAT comeback R17! zzzzzzzzz
Still no answer as to WHY the fascination with a dead actor's cock.
- Your definiation of "fascination" requires further explanation R16.
A nude photo re-emerges of a well-hung actor famous for his hunky body. Somebody posts a link. A few people make comments. It is that simple.
Really you are quite bizarre.
- Looks like a gas bag.
- R16, some day your cock will be dead too. But if it's nice we might still look at it.
- Omg...it seems indeed big!
Hehehe
- I can't begin to tell you, how much you mean to me.
Michael%20
- r22, am just curious why you bumped this 1-1/2 year old thread? I mean, I could care less, unlike some of these psychos who suffer panic attacks at the very thought of old threads being bumped, but just curious as to why THIS thread.
- R24 i have a thing for Old Hollywood actors and actresses, that's why.
:P
http://filmsofthefifties.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Victor-and-Esther-375x507.jpg
- We haven't seen sizemeat of such magnitudia since Rock Hudson lifted her skirts at Tennessee Williams' geisha party.
Mrs%20Patrick%20Campbell%20
- So the rumors were true. Victor Mature was indeed gifted down there!
*giggles
http://www.flickr.com/photos/greenman2008/6436040993/in/pool-785280@N25/
- Samson and Delilah
Demetrius and the Gladiators
The Egyptian
Safari
The Robe
The Last Frontier
My Darling Clementine
These are the movies i have seen with Victor Mature and i must confess that i enjoyed them all. Pure luck? Maybe.
\t
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http://img2.bdbphotos.com/images/orig/1/w/1wtuqk3fem2yutky.jpg
- with Carole Landis...
http://img2.bdbphotos.com/images/orig/7/8/781jktrm1rumr1mt.jpg
- As you probably already know he had a tempestuous affair with Rita Hayworth
http://img1.bdbphotos.com/images/orig/6/9/69t2aq60vbxf06b2.jpg
- The two lovebirds together again
http://img1.bdbphotos.com/images/orig/6/9/69stkeflybvg6gsy.jpg
- In the bathtub and then...in bed.
http://img1.bdbphotos.com/images/orig/6/7/67n0i63xjvsa760v.jpg
- I saw that picture years ago. Didn't know who he was then and don't know or care who he is now.
- The OP has been looking for that photo since 1 Million B.C.
- Guys! Don't be mean.
http://www.dvdbeaver.com/film/DVDReviews19/a%20Henry%20Hathaway%20Kiss%20of%20Death%20DVD%20Review%20Victor%20Mature/a%20Henry%20Hathaway%20Kiss%20of%20Death%20DVD%20Review%20Victor%20Mature%20PDVD_005.jpg
- Guys! Come on...
http://content6.flixster.com/photo/94/66/99/9466992_gal.jpg
Lolz
- every time I used to look at Victor Mature smiling he looked like he was about to throw up.
- Was he the one that Groucho was talking about when he said he wouldn't go to any movie where the male lead had bigger tits than his female costar?
- Lol. Did really Groucho said that? Hilarious!
R37 I must admit that Victor Mature's face is not very likable, but he has a twisted charm of his own.
Probably a lot of women sense that because he had in his bed so many of them. I don't believe that they were with him because of his gigantic balls, that's not how most of women think, he probably had his way with females.
Sadly, i suspect that he was a cheater and that's indeed slimy! Ffs, he was married FIVE times! Not cool for a man. Anyway, his movies were entertaining.
- "I have met a few men in my time. Some have been afraid of heights, some have been afraid of water, some have been afraid of fire, some have been afraid of closed spaces. Some have even been afraid of open spaces -- or themselves. But in all my thirty-five years of picture-making experience, Mr Mature, I have not until now met a man who was 100 per cent yellow!"
Cecil B DeMille
- With Carole Landis in 'One Million B.C.'
Does anybody of you know if in reality they had a fling or something?
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/63/Carole_Landis%2C_Victor_Mature_-_One_Million_B.C..jpg
- All gay men want him inside them
- Bulge!
http://acertaincinema.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/mature-exercise.jpg
- Inside you guys!
http://acertaincinema.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/mature-rows.jpg
- Victor Mature has a cup of coffee with his wife Martha on the set of 'The Shanghai Gesture'
http://acertaincinema.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/victor-martha-coffee_opt.jpg
- Victor Mature and Meg Mandell during a Hollywood Star Theatre radio broadcast.
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/colvic.jpg
- Victor Mature gets a cup of java from crew member Tommy Blocker on the set of RKO's 'The Las Vegas Story'.
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/java1.jpg
- They're not nudies--they're ART photos!
Victor%20Mature
- "He's a man with a heart of gold," said Vic's valet, Jack Hibbert. More than once, he revealed, Mature has threatened to break his neck for disclosing charities done anonymously, such as the time the actor went 100 miles out of his way to see a bedridden youth who had written him a letter. On another occasion Mature befriended three aged down and out actors.
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/think2.jpg
- Lol R48! Victor!
"The only exercise I get," Mature said, "is putting my arm around a girl's waist." Hunk of man, Mature, at parties, prowls the room patting female guests affectionately on their derrieres.
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/kiss1pic.jpg
- Behind the scenes of 'Androcles and the Lion'
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/char1.jpg
- Vic and... Genius on the set of 'Wabash Avenue' in Genius' own dressing room.
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/genius1.jpg
- Vic and Lucy joke around on the set of their latest movie, Interference (Easy Living).
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/viclucy1.jpg
- His heavy lidded eyes, aquiline nose and pouting lips have dominated America's motion picture screens for over a quarter of a century.
He stretches, yawns, and faces an interviewer with the same languid charm that has been his hallmark for so many years. "My motto is this. Take it easy. If the time is ripe, it'll all break for you."
A very old friend tells this story about Mature: "When Vic first came out to the coast - oh, I guess that must have been around 1937 - he was something to see. He was around twenty then and absolutely the coolest, most good natured guy I had ever met. He had come from a fairly well-to-do family and had had a bit of money of his own at one time, but when he decided to become an actor he had given it all up. He had enrolled at The Pasadena Playhouse, and was living on next to nothing. He would sleep in a hallway one night, on a park bench another night. Nothing seemed to phase him.
By 1947, however, he had tired of the role of male beefcake champ, and was determined to change his image. "Sure, the body beautiful thing served a purpose," he said later. "It was great publicity when I needed it. I did silly things to attract attention. It worked. Now I want to forget it."
His opportunity came from veteran Hollywood director Henry Hathaway, who cast him in a serious role, the part of the reformed gangster in Kiss of Death. He turned in a performance of great depth and comparison. The critics were immediately forced to re-evaluate the extent of his talent.
Since Kiss of Death in 1947 Victor Mature has established himself as one of our most versatile and interesting actors. Through it all, he has maintained his down-to-earth quality, his sense of proportion, his charming insouciance.
The respect that Mature commands among his fellow Hollywood actors stems from this ability to keep everything in perspective. He once told an interviewer: "I check Victor Mature at the sound-stage door. I play the parts straight. I try to become the guy the script says I am. When the job is done though, then I relax. Life should be a ball, you know."
http://www.victormature.com/
- Vic romps with Nicky and Genius II.
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/genius2.jpg
- HAPPY VIC IN 1987
"Some of the movies I did weren't bad," he recalls. "Some of them I'm downright proud of. But a lot of them were awful. I would spend two hours on-camera battling lions barehanded."
"I'm not embarrassed by it. My career was largely based on my physique."
"In most of my roles, I was required to take off my shirt."
"I jokingly referred to myself as 'The Hunk', but I never took it seriously. I considered my career a big joke. I never wanted to be Clark Gable."
Victor says: "I accepted the roles they offered and put the money in the bank."
"After all, it wasn't brain surgery, and I never lost my sense of humor about what I was doing."
Fans treasure an anecdote about Vic's sense of humor.
Once, during location shooting, he clanked into a nearby bar -- in full Roman armor. Patrons and bartender stared, dumbfounded.
"What's the matter?" Vic roared. "Can't a soldier get a drink in here?"
He has come out of retirement about six times since 1962 -- once to appear in a TV remake of his classic Samson and Delilah, as Samson's father -- because the price was right.
But that's a rare event. "Hell, I'm a lucky guy," he says. "My wife and I are as happy as can be. Mature credits wife Lorey with his recent happiness. Our little girl was born when I was 60. I came into fatherhood late in life, and I love it."
"I play golf five hours a day and spend the rest of my time with my wife and daughter. I couldn't ask for a more satisfying life. Leaving Hollywood was my wisest decision."
http://www.victormature.net/vmature/graphics/golf1.jpg
- VICTOR -- BY ALYCE CANFIELD(Part One)
I want to tell you about one of the most wonderful guys I have ever known: a warm-hearted, honest and honorable person: a zany, unpredictable, changeable character--a friend of mine, Victor Mature.
I think this story has to be told by a friend. Vic would never let anyone but a friend get close enough to him to see beneath the surface. Compliments embarass him; appreciation makes him squirm. He brushes off thanks. To people who don't know him well Vic seems brash and colorful. This is the Vic that has been too often publicized, too much in the limelight. His friends see him differently.
Just who are Vic's friends? Well, they aren't fly-by-night people. They aren't friends Vic blesses with his companionship for a few weeks. Vic's friendships are long-lasting. Carl Schroeder and Jules Seltzer are closest to him. They've been his closest friends since Vic lived in a tent when he first came to Hollywood.
Now, after a number of years, people get to know the measure of a man. They know his faults and weaknesses; they know his high spots; and they know his low ones. One of the most revelatory facts about Vic is that these two buddies of his would fight and die for him. And, in turn, Vic does the biggest press agent job for them ever done on anyone around this town.
As a matter of fact, whenever Vic likes someone, he tells the world about it. His friend and house guest, the distinguished Dr. Donald McCannell, formerly of Mayo's, isn't just another specialist. To Vic, he's the best. Jules Seltzer, who doesn't publicize Vic, is "the smartest publicity man in town"; Carl Schroeder, who has seen Vic in only one picture is "the best editor and writer." Vic brushes them all with a certain wonderful, warm glamor. He's proud of them. It isn't a phony act. It's real and sincere. Whomever Vic loves, whatever he owns, has to be the best. His dog is the best dog in the world; his friends the most wonderful, the most clever. And, because he is by nature an extrovert, he doesn't keep these morale-building opinions to himself. He tells the world.
I love to watch Vic in a roomful of people. He is so completely natural. He likes to loosen his tie, kick off his shoes--relax. Of course, this is only with people he knows very well. It's wonderful to see the drama and color he brings into a gathering. His booming voice, his zest for life, his warm-hearted appreciation of the other fellow; all these things make Vic stand out in a crowd. I love to watch Vic tell a story. He acts everything out. If the character in the story breaks a lamp, watch out for your lamps. Vic does such a real job of almost breaking your lamp that you get a bit on the nervous side.
- VICTOR -- BY ALYCE CANFIELD (Part Two)
I love to watch Vic in a roomful of people. He is so completely natural. He likes to loosen his tie, kick off his shoes--relax. Of course, this is only with people he knows very well. It's wonderful to see the drama and color he brings into a gathering. His booming voice, his zest for life, his warm-hearted appreciation of the other fellow; all these things make Vic stand out in a crowd. I love to watch Vic tell a story. He acts everything out. If the character in the story breaks a lamp, watch out for your lamps. Vic does such a real job of almost breaking your lamp that you get a bit on the nervous side.
I like to see the effect Vic has on people who have never met him before. Maybe they have a preconceived opinion of him. Maybe they think he's conceited, or careless of other people's feelings, or a glamor boy with his mind on the next blonde. They soon change their minds for Vic knocks himself out to make you feel charming. He sends you into hysteria with his self-directed humor. His anecdotes, which point fun at himself, are like having a ringside table at the best show on earth. He's a brilliant, wonderful comedian. He will tell you that he doesn't have the flair for comedy in pictures, but you could fool me. I have spent hours with Vic laughing so hard at his zany, wonderful, mad descriptions of things that have happened to him that I was breathless.
Vic has a strange sensitivity. He is more sensitive to what you think and believe and feel than any person I have ever known. And, if he has a self-appointed task, it is to make other people happy. Maybe you think this sounds corny. Or unreal. Or dreamed-up. Then let me tell you what I mean. When Vic was in Las Vegas last year, he couldn't help noticing that the Hotel Last Frontier was jammed with unhappy divorcees. Now some of these gals were happy and light-hearted; some were beautiful; some wore mink coats and diamond bracelets. And all of them were on the rebound. Vic, being Vic--that is, being young, handsome, vibrant, male, a movie star, and famous--could have dated the most lovely of these. But what did he do? He started going out with the girls who looked rather lost and forlorn, the girls without the mink coats and the happy laughter and the beautiful faces. And he made these girls, who thought their worlds had crashed around them, feel like the most terrific glamor girls in the world. Vic is like that.
I've seen Vic drop in with friends for a casual evening and run into someone who was having trouble. Maybe it was a girl who had just broken up with her boyfriend; maybe it was a man who couldn't get back into the swing after being overseas. Now Vic may have had a bang-up evening planned with his current glamor date, but suddenly that girl would be just plain out of luck. And the prettier she was and the more popular and famous, the more she'd be apt to be stood up under such circumstances. Because it's impossible for Vic to walk into a situation and find unhappiness and not try to straighten things out before he leaves. This may be rather tough on his previous date, but Vic never stands anybody up unless he's helping someone else get their quirks straightened out.
Vic's sensitivity shows itself in the most unexpected ways. His dog, Genius, was ill for several months. Vic is almost as crazy about that dog as the dog is about him, so at first he visited Genius at the hospital. But Genius went mad with joy whenever Vic came around, broke his leg over again in the excitement, so, finally for the dog's own good, Vic had to stop seeing him until he was well. Meanwhile, the people next door wanted Vic to have their police dog. But would Vic let the police dog even come in the yard, much less the house, until Genius came home? If you know Vic, you know he didn't. Instead, he waited until Genius had been duly and happily welcomed back, and then he let Genius discover his friend, the police dog, next door. They started romping together, crossing the fence to play in Genius' yard, and now the two dogs live happily on Vic's domain.
- VICTOR -- BY ALYCE CANFIELD (Part Three)
Vic can't bear rudeness. The more insignificant the person, the more carefully Vic listens to what he has to say. If others interrupt carelessly, Vic is apt to be rude to them. The guy who some say just hasn't any manners, has the most beautifully courteous manners I have ever seen.
I like Vic's uncomplicated way of looking at life. Black is black and white is white to him, and there are no in-betweens. You can present a problem to Vic, and he will spot its solution with uncanny accuracy. Maybe you might have been twisting the thing around in your mind for days, wondering: "Should I do this, or would the other way be better?" But Vic's mind is uncluttered by frills and furbelows. He can get to the crux of the matter immediately. He has a keen, analytical common sense all too rare in this genius-afflicted town.
Vic is cagey. Sometimes he will try to fool you. He is intelligent and smart, with a razor-edged mind. Just the same, he sometimes pretends to ignorance to find out what you really think, or what you really think of him. He'll mispronounce words, to see if you will correct him, ignore him, or laugh at him. He doesn't like to read. He isn't the intellectual type. (Just a little webmaster's note: Vic was really well-read and obviously an extremely intelligent person and a brilliant businessman. :) Frankly, Vic prefers boogie to symphony; but he has an extremely keen mind. You may fool Vic once; you'll never fool him twice. Vic can read people like people read books.
Because of this, compliments embarrass him. He can know you have a warm feeling in your heart for him, that you think he is a wonderful, fine, grand guy without ever putting it into words. He just feels it, and he returns your regard with the same warmth. He may cover up his sentiment with wisecracks, but the real Vic stands in back of you, steady and sure. No friend of his ever has to ask for help when trouble strikes.
As a matter of fact, Vic isn't much different from Doc Holliday, the role he played with such smashing success in "My Darling Clementine." If you'll remember, in that picture the Doc covered up the fact that he was dying from a fatal disease by acting rough and tough. He didn't want his fiancee to discover his nobility. Well, that's our boy; that's Victor. You may go right on hearing how he waltzes through first one gal's life, then another. You may think, then, perhaps that he's fickle and reckless. But remember this: if Vic stopped to hang around after he got people back on the right track, then he wouldn't have so much time to do the same for the next guy.
- VICTOR -- BY ALYCE CANFIELD (Last Part)
I don't know how I can explain to you that most of Vic's charm comes from his unpredictability. He never knows what he will be doing from one moment to the next, so how can he advise anyone else? If you're a friend of his, you have to be more or less on call. You can't be offended at a one o'clock at night phone call. It only means that Vic just suddenly got bored at a party and decided he'd like to see you. Nor, by the same token, can you be offended if he walks out of your house at nine. You see, he's restless; he likes constant excitement. If things aren't zooming, and the walls of Jericho aren't tumbling down where he is, then he'll make a beeline for the next possibility.
I like to watch Vic when he's out in public. I like to see him at Billingsley's, for instance. Because then it's so very evident that he is himself at all times. He's the same guy when everyone is staring at him as he is when he's at home. He uses the same emphatic, colorful gestures; his voice is as booming and commanding. He is absolutely without self-consciousness. This is refreshing. So many Hollywood stars put on an act when they are out and quite another at home.
I like to watch Vic give someone he doesn't like the brush-off. Brother, it's royal. He's no hypocrite. Where others yell, "How are you, darling?" to your face and knife you in the back, Vic simply turns on his heel if he sees someone he can't stand. It isn't in his makeup to be phonily pleasant, even for five minutes, to anyone he dislikes.
He dislikes people for a number of reasons. He hates those who pretend to be what they are not. He hates a phony. He doesn't like affectation, pretense, pseudo-nicety. He hates cattiness, pettiness, the old knife-in-the-back routine. He doesn't like people who are two-faced; he doesn't like back-slapping, ingratiating people. He doesn't like people who want something out of him, who play him for a sucker. He doesn't like liars. Since Vic's temper is terrible and terrific, once he gets angry, he is unforgiving and unrelenting. Still, it takes an awful lot to make him angry; and it takes an awful lot to make him dislike a person.
I like to think of another Vic; the one who came from a wealthy family, whose mother, today, is--to put it crudely--a millionaire. You'll never hear this from Vic. To hear him tell it, you'd think he grew up playing on the streets of New York. He never talks family at you, although his is one to be proud of. I like to think also, of the Vic who lived in a tent when he first came to Hollywood because he wanted to save rent. He was broke, and he needed the dough. What most people don't know is that Vic need not have gone without a single meal. His dad had one of the biggest refrigeration businesses in the country. Only Vic wanted to make his way on his own. There is just something about the guy that you know doesn't fit into the category of a sponger.
There was the Victor Mature who was so in love with Rita Hayworth when he went off to help win the war that he could hardly sleep. There was a tender, sweet Vic; that was the Vic his friends know. I have a deep respect for the Victor Mature who came back after hell fires to find his girl had married someone else; for the Vic who has never let one word of criticism--even to his closest friends--pass his lips, of the girl who didn't wait.
Vic has a gallantry about him that is fading all too fast into the realm of fable and legend. People are getting soft. Too many of us are losing the courage of our convictions; we are afraid to do the things we want to do. We are afraid of what people will say. Not Vic. He's living his life honestly--and there's a grandeur to it, a kind of superb directness. Maybe other Hollywoodites squirm a bit when they come face to face with what they are; when, alone with themselves, the substance meets the shadow up there on the screen.
But when Vic looks into the mirror, he can look himself in the eye. And, although he'd be the last person in the world to admit it, of this much I'm certain: quite a wonderful guy looks right back at him.
- VICTOR AND BETTY GRABLE'S FRIENDSHIP--NOVEMBER 1942
Betty Grable, without a doubt, is the top feminine star on the 20th Century-Fox lot," Victor Mature remarked at a Hollywood party. Every one was discussing Hollywood's pet subject--Hollywood! "Betty's got everything! She's beautiful, she sings, dances, can act and she's a trouper!" Vic eulogized. "She'll be one of the biggest box-office stars!"
"Unless she lets herself get fat," fanged a well-known glamour queen, whose popularity has nose-dived in the last few months.
Manly Vic was bewildered, and annoyed, at this obvious cattiness.
"And Betty always speaks so well of you, when your name is mentioned," Vic responded gallantly. Which left Miss Glamour Queen speechless.
http://www.victormature.net/vmature/graphics/walk1.jpg
- APRIL 7, 1941 -- MORE ON VIC AND BETTY'S FRIENDSHIP
At a party given by Liz Whitney recently the talk turned to Hollywood, and there was considerable broad-handed merriment at the expense of screen actresses, among them Miss Betty Grable. Miss Grable has been the one serious romance in Mature's post-Louisville life, she being, he says, the only girl who has ever made him laugh. Mature listened for a while and then spoke his mind. "You," he said, addressing the room at large, "do you think anybody would ever have heard of you if your fathers didn't happen to have a lot of money and family stuff? Miss Grable has been wiggling her little fanny in public since she was 14 to support herself and four other people. She made more money already than all you people will make on your own all your lives." Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr., one of the guests, announced that he agreed wholeheartedly. Mature and young Roosevelt have been friendly ever since, and Mature has been invited to Hyde Park.
http://www.victormature.net/vmature/graphics/vicandbetty.jpg
- Then there was a SPLASH! Victor Mature and Betty Grable perched on the edge of the pool ready for a take-off for the swimming sequence for "Hot Spot," the mystery thriller from the novel, "I Wake Up Screaming." Carole Landis and Laird Cregar are in it too.
http://www.victormature.net/vmature/graphics/betty1.jpg
- Vic's as snug as a bug in a rug in his garage home. Here is Vic making his bed.
http://www.victormature.net/vmature/graphics/home1.jpg
- VICTOR'S START IN HOLLYWOOD (Taken from a fan magazine from 1942)
Victor spent six lean years in Hollywood before he got the nod from the producers. But he was never one to whine. Not with that cheerful disposition. He took a bus out to Pasadena, where he convinced Gilmor Brown that he should have a fellowship entitling him to free tuition in the Playhouse Drama School. By that time Victor, who only had $41 when he left Louisville, was down to exactly eleven cents. His mother and father were spending the summer in Michigan, and Victor was supposed to join them there. Dreadfully in need of a little cash Victor composed what he considered a very subtle wire: "Dear Dad, I find myself sidetracked in Hollywood with only eleven cents in my pocket. Love, Victor." And early the next day he received the following answer, "Dear Victor, Mother very disappointed you are not coming. Forty-four years ago I came to this country and had five cents in my pocket and could not speak a word of English. You have six cents more than I had and you can speak English. Love, Dad." May it be said that Victor never again did try to snare a loan from his father, or anyone else. He has always lived on what he made, and when he made nothing, he lived on nothing.
- Here is a memorable photo of handsome Vic with Jane that was used to promote their movie 'The Las Vegas Story'
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/janevic3.jpg
- Vic and Lana joke around.
To avoid jealousy over candid shots, Lana Turner and Vic Mature suggest this routine. Lana covers his face Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Vic covers hers Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/vilahide.jpg
- With Lana Turner again...
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/vlana.jpg
- Here is a memorable photo of handsome Vic with Lana from the movie Betrayed. This actual photograph once belonged to Lana Turner.
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/scarf3.jpg
- Woof woof...
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/dfloor.jpg
- Victor Mature takes dictation from Cleo Moore during shooting of Walk Softly, Stranger.
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/movie1.jpg
- So gradual-like things get more cozy, as the boy puts his lips to the girl's cheek, like Vic Mature and Ann Sheridan try it in "Stella."
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/sher1.jpg
- Of the lovely ladies in Mature's life, Betty Grable has closest hold on his affections. They were that way about each other at El Morocco.
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- He got 60,000 fan letters after his first film. Never wears a hat, hates to dance - though Betty Grable says he's an ace conga-er.
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/happyvb1.jpg
- 'Hannibal' stars Victor Mature in the title role of the Carthaginian hero who crossed the alps with an elephant army to battle half the world. Lovely Rita Gam supplies the love interest in the spectacular adventure drama filmed in color and SuperCinemascope.
http://www.victormature.net/victorjmature/graphics/hannn.jpg
- 'The Sharkfighters' (1956)
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/viccccc.jpg
- Who can forget 'Samson and Delilah'? What a pair he made with Hedy Lamarr. Hot, hot, hot!
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/sd3a.jpg
- Lovely...sexy couple of cinema
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/hug1.jpg
- With unforgettable Rita
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/galsal.jpg
- I can't get over the hotness of this cinematic couple
http://www.victormature.org/graphics/sdbw2.jpg
- Give me one more shot...
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- In addition to being a talented movie actor Victor also did many fantastic radio shows.
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- Husky, handsome Victor Mature basks in front of his studio dressing room.
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He recalled in his Courier-Journal interview about being presented to Queen Elizabeth in the mid-1950s alongside Marilyn Monroe, who wore a strapless gown so tight she had to be sewn into it.
Before the ceremony, Monroe had emerged from the car, fallen forward and stretched the top of her dress. As the queen approached, Mature glanced down and saw that Monroe's legendary bosom was slipping free.
He tried to hold up the back of Monroe's dress with one hand, while removing his gum from his mouth with his other hand, but he had to let go of the dress to shake hands. Despite the effects of gravity, Mature said that Monroe remained unperturbed as she chatted with the queen.
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- His beloved wife of 25 years, Lorey, and daughter Victoria, 24, both were at his side when he passed away peacefully at his home in Rancho Santa Fe, California.
They were both with him throughout his illness, holding his hand and kissing away the pain.
Mature was famous for his rippling muscles and sexy, hooded eyes. And his roles in films like 1949's Samson and Delilah and as Doc Holliday in the western My Darling Clementine exploited his masculine allure.
But by the 1960s Mature retired from show business and the glitz of Hollywood.
"Victor was a humble, modest guy," says a pal. "He made smart investments in real estate and retail stores and didn't have to work."
The retired star spent his time playing golf, and "his best friend was Jim Backus, better knows as Mr. Magoo," the friend reveals.
"They were inseparable. When Jim died in 1989, Victor was devastated. Fortunately, Lorey was there for him."
Although he made a brief return to acting to play Samson's father in a 1984 TV remake of the film classic, Mature often poked fun at his talent and success.
"I'm no actor," he joked, "and I've made 64 movies to prove it."
- Mature also said he "took acting five times as seriously as anyone else. I just couldn't show it. Some kind of complex, I guess."
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- VIC AND RITA 1943
[Rita] told [Vic] she remembered the first time she had met him--in the movie books--and had said aloud: "Hmmmm. Not bad. And not good." She told him she remembered their first date--dinner at Vic's bachelor apartment with Vic's cook as chaperone. She told him she remembered the mad things they had done, driving along the surf at Santa Monica at four in the morning, listening in the dark to radio mystery dramas...
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- Leave to finish 'Seven Days Leave'. Between takes, Vic, temporarily a Pfc for his film role, gets a visit Rita on the set.
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- Victor with one of his canine friends
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- Genius II was a witness to the first meeting of Vic and his future wife, Dorothy, at Laguna.
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- Vic with another canine friend.
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- I would imagine that if they had taken the trouble to photoshop in that beercan cock they would have photoshopped out the big old gut too.
- R92 it's not photoshopped i assure you. This is Victor Mature and he had indeed a big big penis.
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- Rita jilted Victor Mature while he was in the Coast Guard and married Orson Welles.
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- Plus he had the Monkees as dandruff.