<a href="http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer">Flash Required</a>
Flash Required










































Photo of Sir Charles Dodds' stained glass window at the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries of London. Note the woman is holding an open book with the chemical structure for DES; this symbolizes how DES was unpatented and used in women’s medicine. This coat-of-arms is the first in history to include a chemical structure. Permission to post this picture on the WONDER DRUG website was granted by the Apothecaries Society: http://www.apothecaries.org/. Photo courtesy of Caitlin McCarthy.
Screenwriter Caitlin McCarthy standing beside the stained glass window for Sir Charles Dodds (creator of DES) at the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries of London: http://www.apothecaries.org/. Photo credit: Andrew Wallington Smith.
Sir Charles Dodds (creator of DES) is in the back row, 3rd from the right, standing beside famed scientist Adolph Butenandt (4th from the right). Picture was taken at the First International Conference on the Standardization of Sex Hormones in London, England, 1932. Photo courtesy of Sir Ralph Dodds.
Sir Ralph and Lady Marion Dodds. Sir Ralph, son of Sir Charles Dodds (creator of DES), served as script consultant on WONDER DRUG. Photo credit: Caitlin McCarthy.
Sir Charles Dodds, creator of DES. Photo credit: Godfrey Argent.
Caitlin McCarthy dedicating WONDER DRUG's "Most Likely To Be Produced" screenplay award to her mother in the audience at the 2010 Action on Film International Film Festival's Writers' Awards ceremony.