Jon Ponder
Wallace Reid
Wallace Reid

In the early 1920s, two major stars bought properties in Hacienda Park. They were Wallace Reid, one of the most popular leading men of the day, and William S. Hart, a classically trained theatrical actor who’d become the first great motion-picture cowboy star. Both stars were under contract with Famous Players-Lasky, the precursor to Paramount Pictures and the biggest and most successful studio in the world in that era.

But the fact that they’d bought the neighboring lots on De Longpre Avenue at around the same time was strictly a coincidence. The two men had little or nothing in common and were not friends. Wally Reid was 29 years old, married, liked to party and was known as a “Good Time Wally” in certain circles. Bill Hart was 56, unmarried and a bit of prig.

"Picture postcard view of the back of silent-film star Wallace Reid's home at De Longpre and Sweetzer avenues in Hacienda Park -- as seen from tourist buses on Sunset
“Picture postcard view of the back of silent-film star Wallace Reid’s home at De Longpre and Sweetzer avenues in Hacienda Park — as seen from tourist buses on Sunset

At the end of 1919 the developers of Hacienda Park scored a major coup. As a capper after 14 successful years selling lots in their new high-end neighborhood along Sunset Boulevard in what is today West Hollywood, they could finally announce that two of the biggest stars in Hollywood had purchased prime lots side-by-side in the neighborhood.

Wally was known professionally as a quintessential all-American who could play action roles as well as romantic leads. Because of his success at the box office the press had dubbed him the “King of Paramount.” His wife, Dorothy Davenport, was a former juvenile star who’d retired from acting full time when they married.

Left, Wally’s injury on the set of “The Valley of the Giants” set his drug addiction in motion; right: Wallace Reid
Left, Wally’s injury on the set of “The Valley of the Giants” set his drug addiction in motion; right: Wallace Reid

The couple had shared similar upbringings. Both were raised in well-known theatrical families and had spent much of their childhood years on tour. In his youth Wally worked with Buffalo Bill Cody. Dorothy got her start in film acting for D.W. Griffith. After a stint in military school during his teen years, Wally returned to the stage with his parents. He developed an interest in writing and directing, which he came to prefer over acting. He made his first film in Chicago in 1910 and then soon moved to Hollywood.

Dorothy was a 17 year-old starlet at Universal when she met Wally, by then a 22 year-old assistant director who also worked as an actor. They were married on October 13, 1913. They soon had a son named Billy and adopted a daughter named Betty.

Wally’s career went into overdrive in 1915 after he was cast in D.W. Griffith’s “The Birth of a Nation,” a scandalously positive depiction of the rise of the Ku Klux Klan and one of the first box-office megahits. Although he had appeared in 120 films, mostly one-reelers, by then, it was a small role in this big hit — he played a blacksmith shown at work at his forge, shirtless and glistening — that made him a star. Wally soon became Paramount’s top player, earning $156,000 a year, which is about $4 million today.

After a long career in the late 1800s as a journeyman actor, Bill Hart had appeared in dozens of films, usually in the lead role, by the time he signed with Famous Players-Lasky in 1917. He often appeared with his horse Fritz, establishing the model for popular cowboy-and-horse duos to come: Tom Mix and Tony, the Lone Ranger and Silver and Roy Rogers and Trigger.

The houses on DeLongpre occupied by the two stars were as different from each other as their owners were. Hart’s house was one of three similarly designed, classic New England-style shingle-sided homes in a row on the street, likely built on spec by the developers.

The Reids’ house took up two lots at the corner of De Longpre and Sweetzer. It was a custom build designed by architect Frank L. Meline in a Mediterranean revival style. It was a romantic, beautifully exotic villa with a red tile roof, a swimming pool and stunning views across the Basin. (Meline also designed the 190-room Garden Court Apartments in Hollywood, built in 1913 and demolished in 1984, and the Ruskin Art Club, built in 1923, now a private residence on South Plymouth Avenue that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.)

Picture postcard of the back of William S. Hart's as seen from Sunset Boulevard
Picture postcard of the back of William S. Hart’s as seen from Sunset Boulevard

The siting of the houses into the slope above De Longpre and below grade on Sunset Boulevard left the backyards visible from the busy street above, making the intersection of Sweetzer Avenue and Sunset a popular stop on tours of movie stars’ homes. Rear views of each home were featured on “picture postcards” of the movie stars home that were popular souvenirs of trips to Hollywood.

Seeds of Destruction

Wallace Reid couldn’t have known it at the time, but by the time he and his family moved into their new home in 1920 the seeds of his destruction had been sewn. Just a year and a half earlier he had suffered a head injury while filming “The Valley of the Giants” in Oregon. A physician on the set administered morphine so that he could keep filming. The treatment continued for a while when he returned to Hollywood, but when his access to drugs was cut off, Wally found a ready supply from drug dealers in the lucrative black market that serviced actors and other studio employees.

Wally also began drinking heavily and hosted wild, all-night parties at his new house in Hacienda Park. At first, he hid his addiction from Dorothy, but she found out in 1921. By then he was in the throes of full-blown addiction. She watched helplessly as the abuse took its toll, first on his career and then on his health.

In the fall of 1922 Wally and Dorothy left the children with her mother and went to a retreat in the mountains. Removed from the temptations of drugs and whisky, Wally spent time hiking and exercising. Eventually his cravings subsided, and the couple returned home confident that he’d beaten his addiction.

Within a week after leaving the mountain retreat, however, Wally became ill. His condition deteriorated over the next few weeks, and he was admitted to a hospital, where he was diagnosed with influenza – an especially deadly disease then. Just four years earlier 50 million people worldwide had died in the Spanish flu pandemic.

On Dec. 12, he was moved to the Banksia Sanitarium in Hollywood where he was treated for flu and nervous exhaustion. His condition never really stabilized. On Dec. 16, Dorothy decided to go public. She and her mother gave an exclusive interview to the Los Angeles Times at the Reids’ home.

The Times broke the news on December, 16, 1922. “Wallace Reid, international screen idol and hero of scores of film plays,” the paper reported, “has voluntarily given up the use of narcotics and is now playing out the most heroic role of his life in a Hollywood sanitarium.”

“Wallace always drank to some extent,” Dorothy said — a significant admission then, in the days of Prohibition, “and about two years ago began to use drugs. He was very ill at the time, and had suffered an injury to his head prior, but there was a great deal of work at his studio and he felt that he must keep up somehow. It was then that he began to resort to [drugs] which brought about his present illness.”

Dorothy’s mother, Alice Davenport, had been on hand throughout the ordeal, caring for the children while Dorothy sat with Wally at the sanitarium. (An actress in her own right, Alice had appeared in over 100 films by 1922, and continued to work for several more years.)

“Wally’s troubles all date from the time of that unfortunate accident,” Alice said. “This house was not a home, it was a roadhouse. My son-in-law’s friends were here at all times of the day and night. Drinking was going on all the time. Many persons came here uninvited and remained for hours. They stayed until all the liquor was gone. Some of them stole whisky by the full quart and uninvited guests time after time walked out of the house with liquor hidden under overcoats or capes or in pockets.”

Dorothy Reid summed up the status of Wally’s condition. “My husband is a sick, sick boy. I don’t know if he will recover, but he has broken his habit and won his fight. He made this fight of his own free will and has won it by the strength of his own mind and will. I know that he will come back.”

But he did not come back, unfortunately. He was dead within weeks.

In those days drug addiction was viewed not as a medical issue but as a moral failure. Families affected by it usually kept it secret. While millions of Wally’s fans were saddened and concerned during the weeks before he died, as often happens when tragedies affect famous people, because his death spiral was drug-related, it was viewed as a scandal among the nation’s self-appointed moral arbiters.

”The cinema industry is either infested with an immoral element that threatens the industry, good morals and decency in our city and nation, and this city’s good name,” leaders of the Methodist Preachers Association of Southern California wrote in an open letter to local officials, “or else it has been and is now being maligned and slandered in an unthinkable manner.”

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Scandal figures, from left: Olive Thomas, Roscoe Arbuckle, William Desmond Taylor

Scandal

As his studio’s biggest earner, the scandal around Wallace Reid’s addiction was a huge problem for his bosses – but it wasn’t the first. Starting in 1920 a series of scandals had embroiled some of the biggest names in the business, all of whom worked for Famous Players-Lasky.

In September 1920 Olive Thomas, one of the screen beauties of the era, died in Paris after ingesting a mixture of water and mercury bichloride, a highly toxic substance used as a bathroom cleaner. Although not a major star, Olive was still considered Hollywood royalty due to her marriage to Jack Pickford, a dashing young actor whose sister, Mary Pickford, was “America’s Sweetheart,” and the reigning queen of Hollywood.

The cause of death was acute nephritis. But there was speculation then – as there still is – that Olive had committed suicide, or that she’d taken the wrong draught because she was drunk and high on cocaine and other drugs.

Almost exactly a year later, in September 1921, Roscoe “Fatty” Arbuckle, one of the most popular comedy stars of the day, was charged with manslaughter in the death of a young actress, Virginia Rappe, who died after falling ill at a party Arbuckle hosted at San Francisco. The cause of death was a ruptured bladder and peritonitis. Nonetheless, a completely baseless rumor spread that Arbuckle punctured Rappe’s bladder with a champagne bottle – a myth that persists to this day.

In what may have been the first-ever circus-like celebrity murder trial, the Arbuckle case was tried three separate times. The juries hung in the first two, but on April 13, 1922, the third panel returned with a twelve-zero verdict for acquittal. That jury even issued an apology that began, “Acquittal is not enough for Roscoe Arbuckle.” And it wasn’t enough. The scandal killed Arbuckle’s acting career.

Scandal struck again less than six months later, in February 1922, when film director William Desmond Taylor was shot dead in his home on Alvarado Street in the then-fashionable Westlake Park district. Among the suspects were teen star Mary Miles Minter — who’d had an unreciprocated crush on Taylor, 20 years her senior — Minter’s mother, Charlotte Selby, and actress Mabel Normand, who’d made a series of hit pictures with Roscoe Arbuckle. The case was unsolved for more than 90 years – until 2015 when in his book,“Tinseltown,” author William Mann identified the likely killer as a member of an extortion ring that had been targeting Taylor, a man with many secrets, including the facts that his real name was William Deane-Tanner, that decades earlier he had abandoned his wife and children and disappeared from their lives – and that he was gay.

And then just 10 months after Taylor’s murder, Dorothy Reid went public with the truth about Wally’s condition. On January 18, 1923, she was holding him in her arms at the sanitarium when he took his final breath.

“Through no fault of my own,” Dorothy wrote in a letter to the Times a week later, “through circumstances that are tragic enough, God knows, I have been placed in a position to carry the banner in the drug war. It has been flung to me, as Wally’s wife, and for his sake and for the sake of the thousands like him who are suffering from this hideous disease, I cannot — I dare not lay it down.”

Dorothy vowed to keep Wally’s memory alive by using his experience as an object lesson about the dangers of addiction, which she did primarily by producing a series of anti-drug feature films. For the rest of her life she continued to use his name in public, always introducing herself as “Mrs. Wallace Reid.”

Dorothy and the children continued to live in the house in Hacienda Park for six years after Wally died. After they moved out, Dorothy put the house up for lease. On Feb. 1, 1930 she bought Casa de Contenta, a luxury apartment building at 1534 N. Hayworth Ave., five blocks east of her former home. It featured a lounge, a tea garden, putting green, 16 by 50 foot swimming pool, gymnasium and cafe. One famous tenant was Roscoe Arbuckle, who was by then working occasionally as a film director.

Meanwhile, Dorothy was duped into leasing the Hacienda Park house to a Sunset Strip gambler named Homer “Slim” Gordon — his wife had arranged the lease, claiming to be the wife of an Oklahoma oilman. The Gordons converted the house into a casino, with roulette wheels, dice and card tables.

Local police ignored complaints from neighbors, but on Oct. 29, 1929 – coincidentally the day of a dramatic stock market crash that triggered the Great Depression – officers from the district-attorney’s office raided the house. More than a dozen elegantly dressed patrons fled the scene, and Slim Gordon and three others were arrested.

Dorothy later lost Casa de Contenta when she was forced to settle a lawsuit brought by a woman about whom she’d made a movie, titled “Red Kimono,” without first securing the rights to her story. (Renamed Hayworth Gardens, Casa de Contenta is a condominium complex today.)

In 1961, the Reids’ former home was demolished and replaced by the Strip’s first “motor hotel,” the Thunderbird Inn, which is now the Standard Hotel. Dorothy Davenport – Mrs. Wallace Reid – died in 1977. She was 82.

In 1927 the two houses west of Bill Hart’s home on De Longpre were demolished to make way for the Sunset Tower Apartments. Hart began spending most of his time at his ranch in Santa Clarita. In 1944 he donated the De Longpre property to city of Los Angeles – he may have been unaware that the lot was in county territory. He died two years later, at age 81. Today his former home is a park operated by the city of West Hollywood.

Wallace Reid and Dorothy Davenport in happier times

Mrs. Wallace Reid

Both Bill Hart and Wally Reid are mostly forgotten today. If Wally is remembered at all it’s for his drug-related death and its place in the cluster of silent-era scandals.

Wally’s could be said to have presaged the drug-related deaths of two other popular actors. Both occurred decades later but each one died on the Sunset Strip, not far from the site of the Reids’ home in Hacienda Park. John Belushi OD’ed in a bungalow behind the Chateau Marmont in March 1982, and River Phoenix died from an overdose at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center after collapsing on a sidewalk outside the Viper Room, on Halloween night 1993.

The Reids’ story may have inspired a moment in both the 1937 and 1954 versions of “A Star Is Born.” In the movie Norman Maine is a big star whose alcoholism destroys his career at the same time that his ingénue wife, Vickie Lester, is on the path to stardom. Despair eventually gets the better of Norman and he commits suicide.

At the end of the film the screenwriters invoke Dorothy Davenport’s steadfast loyalty to her husband when, in a dramatic moment, Vickie introduces herself to a broadcast audience, saying, “This is Mrs. Norman Maine”– just as Dorothy proudly called herself “Mrs. Wallace Reid” for 51 years after Wally had died in her arms.

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