Dorothy Davenport

Dorothy Davenport
Davenport in 1923
Born(1895-03-13)March 13, 1895
DiedOctober 12, 1977(1977-10-12) (aged 82)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale
Years active1910–1956
Spouse
(m. 1913; died 1923)
Children2, including Wallace Reid Jr.
Parents
RelativesEdward Loomis Davenport (grandfather)
Fanny Vining Davenport (grandmother)
Phyllis Rankin (step-mother)
Arthur Rankin (step-brother)

Fannie Dorothy Davenport (March 13, 1895 – October 12, 1977) was an American actress, screenwriter, film director, and producer.

Born into a family of film performers, Davenport had her own independent career before her marriage to the film actor and director Wallace Reid in 1913. Reid's star rose steadily, making feature films at a pace of one every seven weeks,[1] until 1919 when a dose of morphine administered for an injury on location grew into an addiction.[2] Reid died in January 1923 at age 31. Davenport took her own story as source material and co-produced Human Wreckage (1923), in which she was billed as "Mrs. Wallace Reid" and played the role of a drug addict's wife. She advertised the film in terms of a moral crusade.

Davenport followed its success with other social-conscience films on other topics, Broken Laws (1924) and The Red Kimono (1925), with expensive litigation connected with the latter. While Davenport's own production company dissolved in the late 1920s, she continued to take on smaller writing and directing roles. In 1929 Davenport directed Linda, a film about a woman who gives up her happiness for the sake of men and social expectations. Davenport directed her last film in 1934; however, she continued in the film industry in other roles until her last known credit in 1956 as dialogue supervisor of The First Traveling Saleslady.

  1. ^ Jackson, Robert (January 1, 2017). Fade In, Crossroads: A History of the Southern Cinema. Oxford University Press. p. 67. ISBN 9780190660185. Retrieved February 8, 2019.
  2. ^ "Motion picture news: DOROTHY DAVENPORT". The Billboard (Archive: 1894–1960). October 7, 1911.