Early Hollywood had its share of scandals, one of which was the unsolved murder of director William Desmond Taylor in 1920, which had a major effect on the careers of two of the era's brightest stars: Mabel Normand and Mary Miles Minter, both of whom were suspects in the public's eye but neither was seriously considered by police. The Tylor murder led to Normand's frequent drug use becoming known and her career went into decline until her death from tuberculosis a decade later.
Minter (1902-1984), born Juliet Shelby, began her stage career at age 5; to avoid child labor laws while appearing in a play in Chicago in 1912, her mother obtained a birth certificate for her deceased niece from Louisiana, and Juliet became Mary Miles Minter. Mary made her film debut in 1912 and starred in her first feature-length film, The Fairy and the Waif, in 1915 -- reviews of that film were positive: "Mary Miles Minter is the greatest child actress to be seen either on stage or before the camera. She is exquisitely fascinating, sympathetically charming, and delightfully childlike and human," Her career took off and she soon rivaled Mary Pickford in the public perception. Taylor first directed her in Anne of Green Gables (1919), and directed her in another three films before his murder in February of 1920. Mary had fallen hopelessly in love with the director and claimed that she and the man who was thirty years her senior had a relation; for the rest of her life, she declared Taylor to be her "mate." The reality of the relationship is in doubt, and Taylor's friends claimed that he tried to put her off, being all too aware of their age difference, and Taylor was supposedly deeply in love with Actress Mabel Normand. Nonetheless, romantic letters from Mary were found among Taylor's effects, which led the press to suspect a sexual relationship; perhaps the press were influenced by Mary's "marriage without benefit of clergy" at age fifteen to James Kirkwood, Sr., a film director who was twenty-six years her senior and already married -- that "marriage" ended when Mary became pregnant and her mother arraigned for an abortion. Following Taylor's death Mary made only four more films, before the studio refused to renew her contract. Despite offers from other studios, Mary retired. In her career, Mary made 53 films, most of which are now lost to the sands of time.
So who really killed William Desmond Taylor? The betting money is on Mary's mother, charlotte /Shelby, who has been describe as a manipulative and greedy "stage mother." Her initial statements to the police were elusive and "obviously filled with lies." In= addition, she owned a rare pistol and ammunition similar to that used to kill Taylor; following the murder, she reportedly threw the pistol into a Louisiana bayou. Police never acquired enough evidence to charge anyone with the murder.
The Ghost of Rosy Taylor is a comedy-drama based on a short story by Josephine Daskam Bacon. The film was written by Elizabeth Mahoney, who wrote from 1917 to 1920 -- nothing else is known about her from that date. It was directed by Edward Sloman, who directed over a hundred films between 1917 and 1938 -- perhaps the best known of these was A Dog of Flanders (1935). Also featured ion the film were Allan Forrest, George Periolat, Helen Howard, Emma Kluge, Kate Price, and Anne Schaefer.
Minter plays Rhoda Eldridge Sayers, a penniless orphan who travels to New York to be a nursemaid. when that position disappears, she finds herself in a boarding house with only seventeen dollars to her name. After two weeks, she is down to just one dime when she finds a letter in the park addressed to Rosy Tyler; the letter contains two dollars and instructions to clean a New York mansion of Mrs. Du Vivier every week. Rhonda tries to return the later and discovers that Rosy had died. She decides to take Rosy's place and accept the job. Things were going fine until Mrs. Du Vivier's brother sees Rhonda/Rosy cleaning the silver and thinks she is trying to steal it, and she is sent to a reform school. complications ensue.
Critical reaction to the film was mixed, but film historian Paul O'Dell said, "The picture has quite unbelievable charm, and Mary Miles Minter makes us forgive her lack of acting talent, by the sheer beauty of her face."
See for yourself.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQIlJa1BY20