Cecil B. DeMille Movies
An actor and general manager with his mother's theatrical troupe since the mid-1900s,
Cecil B. DeMille formed a filmmaking partnership in 1913 with vaudeville artist
Jesse L. Lasky and businessman
Samuel Goldfish (soon to be known as
Samuel Goldwyn). Their first venture was
The Squaw Man (1914), which
DeMille co-directed, co-wrote and co-produced with
Oscar Apfel. This successful and elaborate six-reeler launched
DeMille on a lifelong career in films. His first solo effort was the Western
The Virginian (1914), which he also co-scripted. He edited and wrote (or co-wrote) almost all his successful films, with the notable exception of the popular melodrama
The Cheat (1915). Writer
Jeanie Macpherson began working for
DeMille in 1914 with
The Captive (1915), and wrote most of his later silent films: hits that included witty romantic farces (
Don't Change Your Husband); epic morality tales that combined modern dramas with visions of history (Joan the Woman [1916]) or the Bible (The Ten Commandments [1923]); and perhaps
DeMille's greatest artistic success, the handsome and moving life of Christ,
The King of Kings (1927).
Macpherson also wrote the director's first three talkies, ending their collaboration in 1930 with the bizarre comedy
Madam Satan (1930).
DeMille continued to score hits in the '30s with epics (
Sign of the Cross [1932],
Cleopatra [1934]) and Westerns (
The Plainsman [1937],
Union Pacific [1939]). His output became more sporadic during the '40s, but he still pleased the public with his rugged action films
Northwest Mounted Police (1940) and
Reap the Wild Wind (1942).
DeMille's last three films --
Samson and Delilah (1950),
The Greatest Show on Earth (1952), and The Ten Commandments (1956), a remake of his 1923 movie of the same name -- were the most successful releases of their respective years.
DeMille's final directorial effort, The Ten Commandments was also the decade's box-office champ. He died in 1959 at the age of 77; his memoir, The Autobiography of Cecil B. DeMille, was published posthumously later that year. ~ All Movie Guide