In 1991, film critic Danny Peary characterized Jones as having been "even more typecast than the typical black actor," relegated to roles in "jungle pictures."[1] Jones's portrayal of Carrefour in I Walked with a Zombie has received praise and analysis, and has been described as iconic.[1][5][6]
Early life
A native of Los Angeles, Jones broke the Los Angeles high jump record in 1929 at 6 feet 2.3125 inches (1.887538 m) while at Polytechnic High School.[7]
In 1940, Jones played a yokel named Stringbeans Johnson in the film Broken Strings. In one scene, he dances to swing music at a nightclub, executing four midair splits among other dance moves.[13] The following year, Jones appeared in Virginia as Joseph, a loyal servant on a plantation.[11] In 1942, Jones appeared in Tarzan's New York Adventure in an uncredited role as a Swahili chief,[14] and in White Cargo in a credited role as an obedient houseboy named Darby.[11]
I Walked with a Zombie
In 1943, Jones appeared as the zombie-like Carrefour in horror filmI Walked with a Zombie,[4][15][16] directed by Jacques Tourneur and produced by Val Lewton. It is one of Jones's best-known roles, described as recognizable to fans of horror films.[1] Historian and author Alexander Nemerov referred to Jones's portrayal of Carrefour as being a "monumental [...] dominant screen presence" in the film,[17] which takes place on a Caribbean island called Saint Sebastian, home to a sugar plantation, a small white community, and descendants of African slaves, some of whom practice voodoo. Nemerov calls Carrefour a "disturbing figure—a sign of slavery past and present and of threats in the future."[18] He characterizes Carrefour's image as "conjur[ing] the lynching of a black man",[19] and writes that the character "suggests the violent subjugation and the emergent power of blacks" during World War II.[20] As such, Nemerov called Jones "a minor actor granted extraordinary importance in a Lewton film".[20] In 2019, Jim Vorel of Paste referred to Carrefour's "bug-eyed zombie visage" as "iconic [...] the kind of image that must have haunted the dreams of patrons for years to come".[6]
The same year that I Walked with a Zombie was released, Jones appeared in two uncredited roles: a bellhop in Passport to Suez,[11] and a cannibal in Sleepy Lagoon.[21]
In 1991, film critic Danny Peary described Jones as having been "even more typecast than the typical black actor," writing that his roles were "limited to jungle pictures."[1]
^ abLentz III, Harris M. (2000). Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film and Television Credits (Second ed.). McFarland & Company. p. 1695. ISBN978-0786409518.