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Robert Ames (actor)

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Occupation
  
Actor

Years active
  
1920–1931


Name
  
Robert Ames

Role
  
Film actor

Robert Ames (actor) immortalephemeracomwpcontentuploads201005r

Full Name
  
Robert Downing Ames

Born
  
March 23, 1889 (
1889-03-23
)
Hartford, Connecticut, United States

Died
  
November 27, 1931, New York City, New York, United States

Spouse
  
Muriel Oakes (m. 1927–1930)

Children
  
Jane Ames, Robert Ames Jr.

Parents
  
Mary Elma Ames, Louis Mason Ames

Movies
  
Behind Office Doors, The Trespasser, A Lady to Love, Smart Woman, Millie

Similar People
  
Vivienne Segal, Frances Goodrich, Edmund Goulding, Gregory La Cava, Joseph W Farnham

Robert Downing Ames (March 23, 1889 – November 27, 1931) was an American stage and film actor whose career was cut short by his death at age 42.

Contents

Birth

Robert Ames was born in Hartford, Connecticut, where his father, Louis Mason Ames, was employed as an accountant for an insurance company and his mother, Mary Elma (née Downing) Ames, worked as a voice coach.

Stage career

Ames's first big acting break came when a friend brought him to the attention of the actor Henry Miller, which led to a role in Miller's production of The Great Divide by William Vaughn Moody. Ames would spend eleven seasons with Miller's company before moving on to Jessie Bonstelle's stock company for eight seasons and the Municipal Stock Company for three. His first Broadway success came in 1916 playing Charles Daingerfield (alias Brindlebury) opposite Ruth Chatterton in Come Out of the Kitchen by A.E. Thomas. Ames played leading roles in The Hero (1921) by Gilbert Emery, Lights Out (1922) by Paul Dickey and Mann Page, Icebound (1923) by Owen Davis, We've Got to Have Money (1923) by Edward Laska, and The Desert Flower (1924) by Don Mullally.

Film career

After a brief stint in vaudeville, Ames moved to Hollywood in the mid 1920s to concentrate on film work, though on occasion he would return to perform on the New York stage. He co-starred in several early talkies, including The Trespasser (1929) with Gloria Swanson, A Lady to Love (1930) with Vilma Bánky and Edward G. Robinson, and the 1930 version of Holiday, opposite Ann Harding in the role later taken by Cary Grant in the better-remembered 1938 remake.

Marriages

Robert Ames married four times. His first marriage, to Alice Gerry, occurred around 1907 and produced a daughter and son before their divorce nine years later. His second wife was actress/writer Frances Goodrich. This union ended in 1923 after six years of marriage. Later that same year Ames married actress/singer Vivienne Segal and divorced her three years later. His last marriage, to socialite Muriel Oakes, also lasted three years before she filed for divorce in 1930. The day after his marriage to Oakes, Ames was slapped with a $200,000 breach-of-promise lawsuit by nightclub entertainer Helen Lambert, who claimed he had promised to marry her after his divorce from Segal. Over the last months of his life, Ames was linked romantically in the press with stage and film actress Ina Claire.

Death

On November 27, 1931, Robert Downing Ames was found dead in his room at the Hotel Delmonico in New York City. Ames had traveled to New York from Hollywood to spend time with his family over the Thanksgiving holiday and to begin work on a film for Paramount Pictures. At the time of his death, Ames was taking a non-narcotic medication for alcohol withdrawal delirium. A later autopsy could find no trace of alcohol or other medications in his system, only that he was in the early stages of developing heart disease. The official cause of death was attributed to delirium tremens most likely brought on by his sudden abstinence from alcohol.

Robert Ames was survived by his children, Jane and Robert Jr.; his father, Louis; and his brother, Harold F. Ames. His mother had preceded him in death some two years earlier.

Filmography

Actor
1932
Tomorrow and Tomorrow as
Gail Redman
1931
Rich Man's Folly as
Joe Warren
1931
Smart Woman as
Donald 'Don' / 'Donnie' Gibson
1931
Rebound as
Bill Truesdale
1931
Three Who Loved as
Philip 'Phil' Wilson
1931
The Stolen Jools (Short) as
Robert Ames (uncredited)
1931
Behind Office Doors as
James Duneen
1931
Millie as
Tommy Rock
1930
Madonna of the Streets as
Morton
1930
War Nurse as
Robin
1930
Holiday as
Johnny Case
1930
Not Damaged as
Charlie Jones
1930
Double Cross Roads as
David Harvey
1930
A Lady to Love as
Buck
1929
Marianne as
Soapy
1929
Rich People as
Noel Nevins
1929
Nix on Dames as
Bert Wills
1929
The Trespasser as
Jack Merrick
1929
The Voice of the City as
Bobby Doyle
1929
Black Waters as
Darcy
1929
Confession (Short) as
1st Soldier
1926
The Crown of Lies as
John Knight
1926
Three Faces East as
Frank Bennett
1925
The Wedding Song as
Hayes Hallan
1925
Without Mercy as
John Orme, M.P.
1920
What Women Want as
William Holliday Jr.
1919
The Stormy Petrel (Short)
Soundtrack
1931
Millie (performer: "It's Nice to Be a Geranium" - uncredited)
1930
War Nurse (performer: "When I Saw Sweet Nelly Home" (1859), "El Choclo" - uncredited)
1929
The Trespasser (performer: "I Love You Truly" - uncredited)

References

Robert Ames (actor) Wikipedia