
July 6, 1923: “Human Wreckage” opens in Los Angeles.

Photo: Mrs. Wallace Reid, left, and Bessie love in “Human Wreckage.” Credit: The Bioscope.
Note: This is an encore post from 2011.
There are many lost silent films desired by film historians because of their casts, history, and story, and the film “Human Wreckage” is one of the most eagerly sought after. The first film to seriously deal with the issue of addiction, “Human Wreckage” was created by actress/writer/director Dorothy Davenport Reid as a tribute to her late husband Wallace Reid’s struggle with the disease. Like Betty Ford over 50 years later, Davenport wanted to show how universal the problem was and the steps to be taken in overcoming it. She intended to show that addiction was an illness, not a mental defect.
Dorothy Davenport, the daughter of actor Harry Davenport (Dr. Meade in “Gone With the Wind”), had acted in films since around 1910. She met young Wallace Reid in 1912 on the set of a Universal film, and they married in 1913. Both worked together until Reid was hired by Famous Players-Lasky in 1915, and Davenport retired to raise a family. Soon they had two children, a son, and a daughter they adopted.
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