Wallace Reid: The Life and Death of a Hollywood Idol

Front Cover
McFarland, Nov 8, 2013 - Performing Arts - 312 pages

For a decade Wallace Reid was the most recognized face in Hollywood, the most universally beloved actor in silent film. Today all that is widely remembered of "Wally" Reid is that he died in a padded sanitarium cell, the victim of a fatal morphine addiction. Of all the actors who have enjoyed great fame only to vanish from the public eye, Reid perhaps fell the fastest and the hardest.

This first full biography recounts Reid's complicated childhood, his disrupted family history and his rise to film stardom despite these restricting factors. It documents his myriad talents and accomplishments, most notably his gift for brilliant onscreen acting. The text explores in depth how the modern studio, however unconsciously, turned the popular star, a well-adjusted man with a loving family, into a drug-dependent mental patient within three years. His death rocked the foundations of Hollywood, and the huge new industry that he helped build nearly died with "Dashing Wally Reid."

 

Contents

Preface
1
1 Family and Youth
3
2 Finding the Movies
22
3 Dorothy and the Davenports
35
4 Santa Barbara and Marriage
47
5 The Birth of a Star
64
6 Laskys Diamond
78
7 Stardom
90
11 GoodTime Wally Faces the Abyss
152
12 Barely Hanging On
167
13 The Industry Teeters and Wally Falls
192
14 The Curtain Falls on a Tragedy
210
15 Human Wreckage
226
Filmography
241
Chapter Notes
261
Selected Bibliography
281

8 War and Work
102
9 Wheres Wally?
118
10 Accident and Addiction
134

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2013)

The late E.J. Fleming researched Hollywood for decades and penned biographies of Carole Landis and Wallace Reid, among other books. He lived in the country in Connecticut.

Bibliographic information