Volume III: Biographies
Thanhouser Career Synopsis: Wayne Arey appeared in Thanhouser films during the 1915-1917 era.
Biographical Notes: Wayne Arey was born on April 12, 1880 in Rock Falls, Illinois, and received his education there. He had a long stage career, playing with stock companies in many American cities. In New York City he appeared in productions under the management of Liebler, David Belasco, Charles Frohman, and others.
The New Rochelle Pioneer, September 2, 1916, carried this item: "Wayne Arey was cast for the role of Cole Younger in a lurid melodrama some years ago. He had but a short time to get up in his lines, and the manager knew he was shaky in them. Just before the curtain went up the manager handed the actor four six-shooters. 'Put two in your holsters and two in your boots,' he said. 'Why so many?' asked the actor. 'Whenever you forget your lines shoot a gun. The audience will like it better, anyway.' Mr. Arey's memory proved so bad that all the horses in the stable underneath the opera house became panic stricken and broke loose."
Toward the end of his stage career, he was leading man in the Princess playlets at the Princess Theatre. When that series ended, he decided to go into films. Wayne Arey's screen career began at Thanhouser, where he was by 1915, and where he appeared in many productions. In the summer of 1917 he was one of the few remaining members of the Thanhouser stock company.
An article in The Moving Picture World, October 7, 1916, told of his career: "Mr. Arey's first theatrical experience was a small repertoire company, and he still remembers with some pride that he thrilled some of the largest town halls in the Middle West with his virile impersonation of Cole Younger in The Younger Brothers Bank Robbers. Early in his theatrical life Mr. Arey gave up his part as a bandit and went into stock. His stock career was a long and honorable one and he played in companies in Minneapolis, Brooklyn, Atlanta, Toronto, and Lawrence, Massachusetts.
"He attacked Broadway and was immediately successful, playing important parts in productions of David Belasco and Charles Frohman. He was the leading man, and when Princess playlets came to an end he went into motion pictures. Mr. Arey had his first motion picture experience with the Thanhouser Company and, particularly adapted to the work, his rise was rapid. After his successful portrayals of the judge with Gladys Hulette in The Shine Girl, and of Dr. Deane, supporting Florence LaBadie in Saint, Devil and Woman, Mr. Arey was made a co-star with Doris Grey, the Boston beauty, who has shown such talent under the tutelage of Edwin Thanhouser. Mr. Arey will appear with Doris Grey in Her Beloved Enemy, directed by Ernest Warde, which will be released through the Pathé Exchange."
Arey was 6' tall, weighed 185 pounds, and had brown hair and blue eyes. In 1916 he lived at 48 Bay Street, New Rochelle. In 1917 and 1918 his address was 37 North Avenue, New Rochelle. He died on July 1, 1937 in New York City.
Note: His surname was often misspelled in publicity, with such errors including "Aery," "Eyrie," "Avery," etc.
Thanhouser Filmography:
1915: The Silent Co-Ed (Falstaff 7-2-1915), A Maker of Guns (7-6-1915), Mercy on a Crutch (7-13-1915), P. Henry Jenkins and Mars (Falstaff 7-23-1915), Outcasts of Society (7-27-1915), The Mystery of Eagle's Cliff (10-3-1915), The Has Been (10-10-1915), The Long Arm of the Secret Service (10-16-1915), Tillie, the Terrible Typist (Falstaff 10-25-1915), The Conscience of Juror No. 10 (10-26-1915), The Mistake of Mammy Lou (11-7-1915), An Innocent Traitor (12-14-1915), The Necklace of Pearls (12-19-1915)
1916: Outwitted (2-16-1916), The Flight of the Duchess (3-11-1916), The Whispered Word (3-15-1916), The Fifth Ace (3-22-1916), The Romance of the Hollow Tree (4-11-1916), The Shine Girl (8-27-1916), Saint, Devil and Woman (9-25-1916), The World and the Woman (11-19-1916), King Lear (12-17-1916)
1917: Her Beloved Enemy (3-4-1917), Pots and Pans Peggie (3-18-1917), The Woman and the Beast (Graphic Features 4-17-1917), Hinton's Double (5-6-1917), The Woman in White (7-1-1917), It Happened to Adele (7-15-1917), War and the Woman (9-9-1917)
# # #
Copyright © 1995 Q. David Bowers. All Rights Reserved.