(1920) While filming on location in California for
The Valley of the Giants (1919), Wallace Reid was injured in a train wreck. As a remedy for this injury's pain, 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. It was developed and marketed with expert assistance from members of the Los Angeles Anti-Narcotics League. Davenport took
Human Wreckage on a roadshow engagement with personal appearances, followed up with another "social conscience" picture about excessive mother-love called
Broken Laws in 1924, again billed as "Mrs. Wallace Reid". Davenport then produced
The Red Kimono (1925) about prostitution. Both
Human Wreckage and
The Red Kimono were banned in the
United Kingdom by the
British Board of Film Censors in 1926.
Kimono is based on a real case of prostitution that took place in New Orleans in 1917. Billing it as a true story, Davenport used the real name of the woman played by Priscilla Bonner, who as a consequence sued Davenport and won a landmark privacy case. She later continued in the social-consciousness line with films
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 is the co-author of the screenplay for
Footsteps in the Fog (1955), and as dialogue director for
The First Traveling Saleslady (1956) with
Ginger Rogers. In the 1970s, near the end of her life, Dorothy still had a print of her husband's 1921 feature
Forever. She gave the print to an organization planning a museum. The museum plans fell through, and Dorothy's last remaining print of Wally's favorite movie was
lost. On October 12, 1977, Davenport died at the
Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital in
Woodland Hills, California, aged 82. She is interred with her husband at
Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale. == Select filmography ==