On July 4, 1924 the engagement of Ava Astor and Prince
Serge Obolensky, a recently divorced
Russian aristocrat over ten years her senior, was publicly announced. This was a surprise for many, as Jack Astor had been opposed to international marriages and Ava had previously been rumored to be engaged to several different men, including Lord Dalmeny, son of the
Earl of Rosebery, and the
Marquis of Blandford, eldest son of the Duchess of Marlborough. The pair were married in London on July 24, 1924 in three ceremonies: one was a private civil ceremony, one privately took place at
Savoy Chapel, and one was a public ceremony at
St. Philip's Church. The marriage was considered the event of the season in England that year. The couple had two children together: Prince
Ivan Sergeyevich Obolensky, born in 1925, and Princess
Sylvia Sergeyevna Obolensky, born in 1931. Throughout their marriage, the pair were rumored to be unhappy. In December 1932, Ava moved to
Reno,
Nevada and filed for divorce. On January 21, 1933, she remarried to
Raimund von Hofmannsthal, a member of the noble
Hofmannsthal family and son of
Hugo von Hofmannsthal and his wife, Gertrud Schlesinger. The couple was married in the city court of
Newark, New Jersey. The couple had a daughter: Romana von Hofmannsthal, but Raimund was also rumored to be the father of Sylvia, her daughter from her first marriage. Ava and Raimund eventually divorced in 1939, and he later married to Lady Elizabeth Paget. On March 27, 1940, she married Philip John Ryves Harding, a journalist, in
Faversham, England. At the time of their wedding, Harding, a cousin of
Maxwell Eley, was serving with an
anti-aircraft battery in the
British Army. Pleydell-Bouverie was an architect who studied at
Charterhouse School in England. They divorced in 1952. Ava named it "Marienruh" and retained it throughout her life. ==Death==