Known for Acting

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Lew Cody (February 22, 1884 – May 31, 1934) was an American stage and film actor whose career spanned the silent film and early sound film age. He gained notoriety in the late 1910s for playing "male vamps" in films such as Don't Change Your Husband. Early life and career Cody was born Louis Joseph Côté to Joseph Côté and Elizabeth Côté, née Gifford. His father was French Canadian and his mother was a native of Maine. Cody and his younger brothers and sisters were born in Waterville, Maine. The family later moved to Berlin, New Hampshire where Cody's father owned a drug store. In his youth, Cody worked at his father's drug store as a soda jerk. He later enrolled at McGill University in Montreal where he intended to study medicine but abandoned the idea of setting up in practice and joined a theatre stock company in North Carolina. He made his debut on the stage in New York in Pierre of the Plains. Cody later moved to Los Angeles and began a film career with Thomas Ince. Cody had at least 99 film credits during a twenty-year period between 1914 and 1934. Personal life Cody was married three times. His first two marriages were to actress Dorothy Dalton. They first married in 1910 and divorced in 1911. They remarried in 1913 and were divorced a second time in 1914. Cody married Mabel Normand in 1926. They remained married until Normand's death from tuberculosis in February 1930. Death On May 31, 1934, Cody died of heart attack in his sleep at his home in Beverly Hills, California. He is buried in St. Peter's Cemetery, Lewiston, Maine in the family plot.
1928
as Lew Cody (uncredited)
1942
as Self (archive footage)
1931
as Dick Carmedon
1964
as Tip Scanlon in 'The Sporting Venus' (arch. footage) (uncredited)
1924
as Edmund Lamont
1923
as Roy Tappan
1932
as Slip Buchanan
1931
as Ace Beaudry
1933
as Labels Castell
1932
as Joe Lehman
1931
as Colonel Kovrin
1934
as Axel Hanratty
1927
1930
as Victor
1919
as Schuyler Van Sutphen
1931
as Tip Scanlon
1925
as Nicholas Wentworth
1928
as Jim Lambert
1925
as Self
1923
as Owen Scudder