From Wikipedia
Dorothy Davenport (March 13, 1895 – October 12, 1977) was an
American actress, screenwriter, film director, and producer who appeared in
silent film for Biograph Studios under the direction of D.W. Griffith.
While filming on location in Oregon for The Valley of the
Giants (1919), Wallace Reid was injured in a train wreck. As a remedy for the
pain from this injury, studio doctors administered large doses of morphine to
Reid to which he became addicted. Reid's health slowly grew worse over the next
few years, and he died of the addiction in 1923. After Reid's death, Davenport
and Thomas Ince co-produced the film Human Wreckage (1923) with James Kirkwood,
Sr., Bessie Love and Lucille Ricksen, a film that dealt with the dangers of
narcotics addiction.
Davenport took Human Wreckage on a roadshow engagement,
followed up with another "social conscience" picture about excessive
mother-love called Broken Laws in 1924, again billed as "Mrs. Wallace
Reid" to capitalize on her husband's notorious death. She then produced
The Red Kimona (1925) about white slavery. On screen she opens the film in
'silent' narration or prologue. The details of the latter film were so
realistic that Davenport was successfully sued.
She would later direct Linda (1929), Sucker Money (1933),
Road to Ruin (1934), and The Woman Condemned (1934) and worked as a producer,
writer, and dialogue director. Among her last credits are co-author of the
screenplay for Footsteps in the Fog (1955), and as dialogue director for The
First Traveling Saleslady (1956) with Ginger Rogers.
She and husband Wallace Reid had two children. She was
married to him until his death on January 18, 1923. She never remarried.
Dorothy Davenport died at the Motion Picture &
Television Country House and Hospital in 1977 in Woodland Hills, California.
She is interred with her husband in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale.