Agnes Ayres
Born: 1892-04-04 in Carbondale, Illinois, USA
Died: 1940-12-25
Known For: Acting
Biography
From Wikipedia Agnes Ayres (April 4, 1892 – December 25, 1940) was an American actress who rose to fame during the silent film era. She was known for her role as Lady Diana Mayo in The Sheik and The Son of the Sheik opposite Rudolph Valentino. She was born Agnes Eyre Henkel in Carbondale, Illinois to Solon and Emma Slack Henkel on April 4, 1898. She had an older brother named Solon William Henkel born in 1888. Ayres began her career in 1914 when she was noticed by an Essanay Studios staff director and cast as an extra in a crowd scene. After moving to New York City with her mother to pursue a career in acting, Ayres was spotted by actress Alice Joyce. Joyce noticed the physical resemblance the two shared, which eventually led to Ayres being cast in Richard the Brazen (1917) as Joyce's character's sister. Ayres' career began to gain momentum when Paramount Pictures founder Jesse Lasky began to take an interest in her. Lasky gave her a starring role in the Civil War drama Held by the Enemy (1920), and also lobbied for parts for her in several Cecil B. DeMille productions. It was during this time that Ayres married, and quickly divorced, Captain Frank P. Schuker, an army officer whom she had wed during World War I. She also began a romance with Lasky. In 1921, Ayres shot to stardom when she was cast as Lady Diana Mayo, an English heiress opposite "Latin lover" Rudolph Valentino in The Sheik. Ayres later reprised her role as Lady Diana in the 1926 sequel Son of the Sheik. Following the release of The Sheik, she went on to have major roles in many other films including The Affairs of Anatol (1921) starring Wallace Reid, Forbidden Fruit (1921), and Cecil B. DeMille's epic The Ten Commandments (1923). By 1923, Ayres' career began to wane following the end of her relationship with Jesse Lasky. She married Mexican diplomat S. Manuel Reachi in 1924. The couple had a daughter before divorcing in 1927. In 1929, Ayres lost her fortune and real estate holdings in the Crash of '29. That same year, she also appeared in her last major role in The Donovan Affair, starring Jack Holt. To earn money, she left acting and played the vaudeville circuit. She returned to acting in 1936, confident that she could make a comeback. Unable to secure starring roles and somewhat overweight, Ayres appeared in mostly uncredited bit parts, and finally retired from acting for good in 1937. After her retirement, Ayres became despondent and was eventually committed to a sanatorium. She also lost custody of her daughter to Reachi, in 1939. She died from a cerebral hemorrhage on December 25, 1940 at her home at the age of 42. She is interred in the Hollywood Forever Cemetery. For her contribution to motion pictures, Agnes Ayres has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6504 Hollywood Boulevard.
Filmography
1961
- The Legend of Rudolph Valentino as Self (archive footage)
1942
- Screen Snapshots (Series 22, No. 10) as Self (archive footage)
1937
- Midnight Taxi as Society Woman
- Maid of Salem as Townswoman (Uncredited)
1936
- Small Town Girl as Catherine (uncredited)
1929
- The Donovan Affair as Lydia Rankin
1928
- Into the Night as Billie Mardon
1927
- Life in Hollywood No. 7 as Herself
- Eve's Love Letters as The wife
1926
- The Son of the Sheik as Diana - Wife of the Sheik
1925
- Her Market Value as Nancy Dumont
- Tomorrow's Love as Judith Stanley
- Morals for Men as Bessie Hayes
- The Awful Truth as Lucy Satterlee
1924
- Detained
- Bluff as Betty Hallowell
- The Story Without a Name as Mary Walsworth
- Don't Call It Love as Alice Meldrum
- When a Girl Loves as Sasha Boroff
- Worldly Goods as Eleanor Lawson
- The Guilty One as Irene Short
1923
- The Ten Commandments as The Outcast
- Hollywood as Agnes Ayres
- Racing Hearts as Virginia Kent
- The Marriage Maker as Alexandra Vancy
- The Heart Raider as Muriel Gray (a speed girl)
1922
- The Ordeal as Sybil Bruce
- Clarence as Violet Pinney
- The Lane That Had No Turning as Madelinette
- Bought and Paid For as Virginia Blaine
- Screen Snapshots, Series 3, No. 12 as Self
- A Daughter of Luxury as Mary Fenton
1921
- The Sheik as Lady Diana Mayo
- Forbidden Fruit as Mary Maddock
- The Affairs of Anatol as Annie Elliott
- Cappy Ricks as Florrie Ricks
- Too Much Speed as Virginia MacMurran
- A Modern Salome as Helen Torrence
- The Love Special as Laura Gage
1920
- Go and Get It as Helen Allen
- The Furnace as Folly Valance
- The Inner Voice as Barbara
- Held by the Enemy as Rachel Hayne
1919
- The Gamblers as Isabel Emerson
- The Girl Problem as Helen Reeves
- Sacred Silence as Madge Summers
- In Honor's Web as Irene Carson
- A Stitch in Time as Lela Trevor
1918
- Mammon and the Archer as Helen Lantry
- A Little Ouija Work
1917
- The Dazzling Miss Davison as Lillian - Miss Davison's Sister
- Mrs. Balfame as Alys Crumley
- The Debt as The Girl
- Motherhood as The Mother
- The Venturers as Mary Marsden
- Richard the Brazen as Imogene
- The Bottom of the Well as Alice Buckingham