Wallace Reid Height, Weight, Age, Facts, Biography

Wallace Reid Height, Weight, Age, Facts, Biography

Wallace Reid Height, Weight, Age, Facts, Biography

    Wallace Reid Quick InfoHeight 6 ft 1 in Weight 72 kg Date of Birth April 15, 1891 Zodiac Sign Aries Date of Death January 18, 1923

    Wallace Reid was an American actor, singer, director, writer, and race car driver who is described as “the screen’s most perfect lover”. One of the actors of the silent film era, he also had a brief career as a racing driver and he made an unsuccessful attempt to qualify for the 1922 Indianapolis 500. He worked in a number of films including The Birth of a NationThe Lost HouseThe Golden ChanceCarmenThe Chorus LadyDown the Hill to CreditvilleA Mother’s InfluenceThe Joke on YellentownTo Have and to HoldThe House with the Golden WindowsMaria RosaThe Yellow PawnThe Selfish WomanThe Golden FetterThe Prison Without WallsThe Woman God ForgotNan of Music Mountain, Hawthorne of the U.S.A.The DubThe Valley of the GiantsYou’re FiredThe Love BurglarNight Life in HollywoodThe World’s Champion, ClarenceRent FreeA Trip to ParamountownThe Ghost BreakerThirty DaysThe Affairs of AnatolToo Much Speed, and Believe Me, Xantippe.

    Born Name

    William Wallace Halleck Reid

    Nick Name

    Wally

    Wallace Reid in 1920 (Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research / / Public Domain)

    Age

    He was born on April 15, 1891.

    Died

    On January 18, 1923, Wallace Reid died at 31 due to complications from morphine addiction in Los Angeles, California, United States.

    Sun Sign

    Aries

    Born Place

    St. Louis, Missouri, United States

    Nationality

    American

     

    Education

    Wallace Reid studied at Freehold Military School in Freehold Township, New Jersey. Afterward, he enrolled at Perkiomen Seminary in Pennsburg, Pennsylvania, and graduated in 1909.

    Occupation

    Actor, Singer, Director, Writer, Race Car Driver

    Family

    • Father – James Halleck “Hal” Reid (Playwright, Stage and Screen Actor, Director)
    • Mother – Bertha Westbrook (Actor)
    • Siblings – Hazel Withers Reid (Paternal Half-Sister), James Hillock Reid (Paternal Half-Brother)
    • Others – Hugh McMillan Reid (Paternal Grandfather), America Elizabeth Reid (Paternal Grandmother), Harry Davenport (Father-In-Law) (Actor, Director), Alice Davenport (Mother-In-Law) (Actor)

    Genre

    Soundtrack

    Instruments

    Vocals, Piano, Banjo, Drums, Violin

    Build

    Slim

    Height

    6 ft 1 in or 185.5 cm

    Weight

    72 kg or 158.5 lbs

    Girlfriend / Spouse

    Wallace Reid had dated –

    1. Dorothy Davenport (1913-1923) – He met actor Dorothy Davenport in 1913 while at Universal Pictures and the duo married the same year. Their son named William Wallace Reid Jr. was born on June 18, 1917. In 1922, the couple adopted their daughter Betty Mummert when she was 3-year old. Betty Mummert was Reid’s child from an affair. Wallace Reid and Dorothy Davenport remained together until his death in 1923 and she never remarried.

    Race / Ethnicity

    White

    Wallace Reid as seen in Picture-Play Magazine in January 1919 (Picture-Play Magazine / / Public Domain)

    Sexual Orientation

    Straight

    Distinctive Features

    • Charming appearance
    • Often played a clean-cut, well-groomed American go-getter

    Wallace Reid Facts

    1. He came from a family active in show business.
    2. Wallace Reid played Jeff, the blacksmith in the 1915 silent epic drama film The Birth of a Nation. The film was directed by and starred .
    3. He was injured in a train wreck near Arcata, California while en route to a location in Oregon during the filming of the silent romantic drama film The Valley of the Giants (1919). In the aftermath, Reid required 6 stitches to close a 3-inch (8 cm) scalp wound and was prescribed morphine for relief from his pain in order to continue filming.
    4. He soon became addicted to morphine and continued working at a frantic pace on projects that were growing more physically demanding. As the drug rehabilitation programs were non-existent at the time, his morphine addiction worsened. He entered a sanitarium to cure his addiction and eventually died there.
    5. Before entering the sanitarium, Wallace Reid said to director Cecil B. DeMille, “Either I’ll come out cured, or I won’t come out.”
    6. He was interred in the Azalea Terrace of the Great Mausoleum at Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California.

    Featured Image by Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research / / Public Domain

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