Lucy Cotton (August 29, 1895 – 12 December 1948) was an American actress who appeared in 12 films from 1910 to 1921.
Cotton was born in Houston, Texas and died in Miami Beach, Florida.
[1][2] She went to New York City in her teens and found her first role on Broadway in the chorus of The Quaker Girl.
He died two years afterward in July 1926,[4] leaving a sizeable fortune of $27 million and a young daughter, Lucetta, behind.
[5] After that she had a series of marriages that did not last; Lytton Grey Ament (from 1927 to 1930), lawyer Charles Hann Jr. (from 1931 to divorce 1932), William M. Magraw, president of Manhattan's Underground Installations Company (from 1932 to 1941), and a Georgian-Russian Prince Vladimir Eristavi-Tchitcherine (married June 15, 1941, at a Russian Orthodox Church in New York City).