Sonia Darrin


Sonia Darrin was an American film actress, best known for her role as Agnes Lowzier in The Big Sleep.

Early years

Darrin was born to Louis and Rose Paskowitz, the New York-born off-spring of Jewish emigrants from Russia, who lived in Galveston, Texas. She had two brothers, Adrian and Dorian. Her father operated a clothing store in Galveston. Around 1940, the family moved to Los Angeles, California.

Career

The family lived in San Diego for a period, during which her dancing teacher was Adolph Bolm. When Bolm was asked to choreograph The Corsican Brothers, he used the entire class. This led Darrin to be interviewed by LeRoy Prinz, the dancing director at Warner Brothers, leading to a small role in The Hard Way. She also danced in the film Lady in the Dark.
Darrin's best known role was that of femme fatale Agnes Lowzier in Howard Hawks's film The Big Sleep, in which she plays a paramour of minor Los Angeles gangster Joe Brody. Notwithstanding several scenes in which Agnes trades quips with Humphrey Bogart's character, Darrin received no onscreen credit for her work in The Big Sleep; this despite the fact that she had already been credited by The New York Times in a captioned promotional photo published five days before the film's opening, and had been the guest of honor at a promotional event held on August 14 at the Pelham Heath Inn in the Bronx,. Darrin learned years later that this snub had resulted from a heated dispute between Pine and studio chief Jack Warner. On October 18, less than 2 months after the film's premiere, the New York Daily News reported that Darrin and Pine had collaborated on an unofficial Big Sleep tie-in song, which was set to premiere the following day on a live broadcast on WOR. Pine's best efforts notwithstanding, neither this broadcast nor the August 14 dinner appears to have had any appreciable effect on Darrin's lack of recognition.
Several years later, Darrin did finally receive an onscreen credit for her signature performance, when she recreated the role of Agnes in a television adaptation which aired on September 25, 1950, on Robert Montgomery Presents. She also worked with Ed Wynn and Alan Young on their early television programs.

Personal life

All three of Darrin's marriages ended via either annulment or divorce: the first, to dentist Sidney Sircus, lasted 19 months. She later wed plastic surgeon Jacob Aronoff—the father of her three eldest children —and theatrical designer/marketing services company president William "Bill" Reese, with whom she parented the former child actor Mason Reese. Darrin's final two public appearances were on The Mike Douglas Show in the 1970s, and in a documentary film about her brother, Dorian, in 2007.
She resided on the Upper West Side of Manhattan for over 50 years. Darrin died of natural causes in New York City on July 19, 2020, at the age of 96. She was the last surviving cast member of The Big Sleep.

Filmography

YearTitleRoleNotes
1941It Started with EveNightclub PatronUncredited
1941The Corsican BrothersOpera SpectatorUncredited
1942My Gal SalChorus GirlUncredited
1943The Hard WayChorus GirlUncredited
1943Frankenstein Meets the Wolf ManVillager at FestivalUncredited
1943The North StarDancing PeasantUncredited
1944Lady in the DarkOffice GirlUncredited
1946The Big SleepAgnes LowzierUncredited
1947Bury Me DeadHelen Lawrence
1948I, Jane DoeNurseUncredited
1949CaughtMiss ChambersUncredited
1950Federal Agent at LargeMildred

Articles

  • Daily News staff. . Galveston Daily News.
  • Albelli, Alfred. . New York Daily News.
  • Bernstein, Paula. . New York Daily News.
  • Howard, Pamela. "Mason Reese: King of TV's Tiny Dynamos". The Newark Advocate., .
  • Smith, Thom. "Mason Reese—Just a Kid". Palm Beach Post., .
  • Power, Trish; Fernandez, Frank. . The Miami Herald.

Books

  • Library of Congress. Catalog of Copyright Entries: Third Series. Copyright Office.
  • Paskowitz, Izzy. Scratching the Horizon. New York: St. Martin's Press. ..
  • Twomey, Bill. East Bronx, East of the Bronx River. .