Hollywood's
World War II films often featured many ethnic American enlisted men, and Martin first played Rafferty as a contemporary air crewman in
Bombardier. He soon repeated the role in the western
Nevada opposite
Robert Mitchum. He appeared opposite a few other stars in RKO westerns.
Post-WWII After the war, Martin left RKO and essayed the main role in the last
Universal Pictures film serial
The Mysterious Mr. M, as well as the title role in the
1947 Cinecolor western
The Adventures of Don Coyote. When Tim Holt, back from the war, was hired by producer
Herman Schlom to star in a western series, the two pondered whom they could get for a sidekick, and Schlom recalled Martin's Rafferty character from
Nevada. Martin returned to RKO in the same year in his first appearance alongside Holt in
Under the Tonto Rim, the first of 29 films they did together that were initially based on stories by
Zane Grey. As B westerns and exclusive studio contracts gradually ended in the 1950s, Martin found himself out of work and unable to find any due to his ethnic characterisation. He became an insurance salesman, coming back for one last western,
Four Fast Guns, in 1960.
Chito Rafferty Martin originated the Mexican-Irish character of Chito Rafferty, whose full name was "Chito Jose Gonzales Bustamonte Rafferty", in 1943's
war film Bombardier. The character went on to appear in a further 34 films, all of them westerns: 1944's
Nevada and 1945's
West of the Pecos, both of which starred
Robert Mitchum; 1945's
Wanderer of the Wasteland, which starred James Warren; 1946's
Sunset Pass and 1947's
Code of the West, in which the role was not played by Martin but by John Laurenz; then a further 29 films, all of which featured Chito Rafferty as the sidekick to a different hero, always played by Tim Holt:
Thunder Mountain,
Under the Tonto Rim and
Wild Horse Mesa in 1947,
Western Heritage,
The Arizona Ranger,
Guns of Hate,
Indian Agent and
Gun Smugglers in 1948,
Brothers in the Saddle,
Riders of the Range,
Rustlers,
Stagecoach Kid,
The Mysterious Desperado and
Masked Raiders in 1949,
Storm Over Wyoming,
Rider from Tucson,
Dynamite Pass,
Border Treasure,
Rio Grande Patrol and
Law of the Badlands in 1950,
Saddle Legion,
Gunplay,
Pistol Harvest,
Hot Lead and
Overland Telegraph in 1951, and
Trail Guide,
Road Agent,
Target and
Desert Passage in 1952. The character, particularly in the films with Tim Holt's character, was presented as a loyal sidekick and ladies' man who was afraid to commit to long term relationships with the women to whom he was attracted. Typical plot lines showed Chito flirting with either the female lead character, or supporting character, at the beginning of the film, only to run away from a romantic commitment at the end. ==Personal life==