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Home > Listing Index > Actors > Audrey Munson

Actors - Audrey Munson


Audrey Munson (June 8, 1891 – February 20, 1996) was an American model and actress, known variously as "Miss Manhattan," "the Exposition Girl," and "American Venus."

Biography

She was born in Rochester, New York. Her parents divorced when she was young and she and her mother moved to New York City. In 1906, when Audrey was fifteen years old, she was spotted in the street by photographer Ralph Draper, who in turn introduced her to his friend, sculptor Isador Konti. Konti persuaded the young woman to model for him and her career was off, along with all of her clothes. For the next decade Munson became the model of choice for a host of sculptors and painters in New York City. By 1915 she was so well established that she was chosen by Alexander Stirling Calder as the model of choice for the Panama-Pacific International Exposition (1915) . She posed for three quarters of the sculpture at that event as well as for numerous paintings and murals.

In 1916, probably as a result of her exposure in California at the PPIE, Munson moved to California and entered the movies. In all Munson starred in four silent films. The first of these, Inspiration, the story of a sculptor’s model, featured the first time that a woman took off all her clothes on film. Recreating scenes from classic paintings, the censors were reluctant to ban the film fearing they would also have to ban Renaissance art. The films were a box office success, with audiences eager to expand their new found interest in art. The reviews, however, were very polarized. Unfortunately, only a single print of one film, Purity has survived.

1919 found Munson back in NYC, living with her mother in a boarding house owned by Dr. Walter Wilkins. Wilkins fell in love with Audrey and in an attempt to make himself eligible for her, murdered his wife, Julia. Although Audrey and her mother had left NYC prior to the murder the police still wished to question them and this resulted in a nationwide personhunt for them. They finally were questioned in Toronto, Canada, where they testified that they had moved out because Mrs. Wilkins had requested it. This satisfied the police, but the negative publicity generated by the case effectively ended Munson’s career as a model and actress. Dr. Wilkins was tried and found guilty. Although sentenced to the electric chair he hanged himself in his prison cell before the sentenced could be carried out.

By 1920 Munson, unable to find work anywhere, returned with her mother to Syracuse, New York. Thereafter Munson began showing signs of possible mental unbalance and paranoia and in 1931 a judge ordered the 39-year-old Munson into a psychiatric facility for treatment. She was to remain there for the next 65 years, until her death in 1996 at the age of 104.

Sculpture for which Audrey Munson posed

Herbert Adams
  • Priestess of Culture now in Fine art Museum of SF 1914
Robert Ingersoll Aitken
  • Earth 1915
  • PPIE medal 1915
  • Figure on doors of the Greenhut & John W Gates Mausoleums
Karl Bitter
  • Pomona or Abundance, Pulitzer-Plaza Hotel Fountain, NYC 1915
  • The latter finished by Konti after Bitter’s untimely death
  • Venus de Milo (Venus with arms) for Queen Whilhelmina of the Netherlands
Alexander Stirling Calder
  • Star Maiden now in Oakland Museum 1915
  • Eastern Hemisphere - Fountain of Energy 1915
Daniel Chester French
  • Melvin Brothers Memorial, Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord MA 1908
  • Commerce and Jurisprudence, Federal Building, Cleveland Ohio, 1910
  • Genius of Creation and Eve plaster now at Chesterwood, MA 1915
  • Brooklyn and Manhattan, Brooklyn Museum of Art, NYC
  • Memory, Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC
  • Mourning Victory, Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC
  • Spirit of Life - Indiana Museum of Art, Indianapolis, IN, 1914 - Newark Art Museum, Newark NJ
  • Evangeline, Longfellow Memorial, Cambridge MA 1912
  • Trask Memorial, Sarasota Springs, NY 1915
  • Wisconsin, figure on top of Capitol dome 1912
Sherry Fry
  • Torch Bearer 1915
  • Muse and Pan 1915
  • Maidenhood Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC, Brookgreen Gardens, SC
  • Frick Collection Building. Two pediments, NYC
Albert Jaegers
  • Rain 1915
  • Harvest 1915
Carl Heber
  • Figures on tablet outside the Little Theatre
  • Spirit of Commerce, Manhattan Bridge, NYC
Isidore Konti
  • Mother and Child- private collection of Richard & Lydia Kaeyer
  • Three Muses, - Hudson River Museum
  • Three Graces – lobby of the Hotel Astor, NYC
  • Pomona – Konti finished the work after Karl Bitter was killed
  • Figure within the Column of Progress 1915
  • Widowhood
  • Genius of Immortality Hudson River Museum 1911

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Audrey Munson ]



Some related entries: Jade Marcela | Hendrik Borgmann | Frank Kelly | Colm Feore | Ramon d'Salva | Megan Fox | Ricky Nelson | Savithri | Afterglow | Pamela Stein | Ian Marter

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Audrey Munson; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

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