- (1917 - 1933) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1917) Stage Play: A Tailor-Made Man. Written by Harry James Smith. Cohan and Harris: 27 Aug 1917- Aug 1918 (closing date unknown/398 performances). Cast: John A. Boone (as "Mr. Russell"), Barlowe Borland (as "Peter") [Broadway debut], Rowland Buckstone (as "Pomeroy"), Frank Burbeck (as "Abraham Nathan"), Lloyd Carpenter (as "Bobby Westlake"), L.E. Conness (as "Mr. Rowlands"), Josephine Deffry (as "Mrs. Fitzmorris"), Theodore Friebus (as "Dr. Gustavus Sonntag"), Frank G. Harley (as "Wheating"), Harry Harwood (as "Mr. Stanlaw"), William C. Hodges (as "Mr. Flynn"), Lottie Linthicum (as "Mrs. Kitty Dupuy"), John Maccabee (as "Mr. Cain"), Gus Weinberg (as "Mr. Huber"), Lawrence White (as "Mr. Grayson"). Produced by Cohan & Harris.
- (1919) Stage Play: Clarence. Comedy.
- (1922) Stage Play: Romeo and Juliet. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Arthur Hopkins. Longacre Theatre: 27 Dec 1922- Jan 1923 (closing date unknown/29 performances). Cast: Ethel Barrymore (as "Juliet, daughter to Capulet"), Barlowe Borland (as "Sampson, servant to Capulet"), Edwin Brandt (as "Escalus, prince of Verona"), Lenore Chippendale (as "Lady Capulet, wife to Capulet"), John C. Davis (as "An Old Man, of the Capulet family"), Vivian Geison (as "Page to Paris"), Charlotte Granville (as "Nurse to Juliet"), Harvey Hays (as "Capulet"), Frank Howson (as "Montague"), James Hull (as "Abraham, servant to Montague"), Kenneth Hunter (as "Tybalt, nephew to Lady Capulet"), Alice John (as "Lady Montague, wife to Montague"), William Keighley (as "Paris, a young nobleman, kinsman to the prince"), T. Jerome Lawler [credited as Jerome Lawler] (as "Benvolio, nephew to Montague and friend to Romeo"), Barry Macollum (as "Peter, servant to Juliet's nurse/Apothecary"), Howard Merling (as "Balthasar, servant to Romeo"), McKay Morris (as "Romeo, son of Montague"), Albert Reed (as "Gregory, servant to Capulet"), Basil Sydney (as "Mercutio, kinsman to the prince and friend to Romeo"), Russ Whytal [credited as Russ Whytall] (as "Friar Laurence, a Franciscan"). Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1925) Stage Play: Lass O'Laughter. Comedy. Written by Edith Carter and Nan Marriott-Watson [earliest Broadway credit]. Directed by Ira Hards. Comedy Theatre: 8 Jan 1925- Feb 1925 (closing date unknown/28 performances). Cast: Leslie Austen (as "Ronald, Lord Maxwell"), St. Clair Bayfield (as "Davie Nicholson"), Cosmo Kyrle Bellew (as "James Cox"), Barlowe Borland (as "Sandy MacDougall"), Miriam Elliott, Jean Gordon, Anthony Kemble-Cooper (as "Hon. Ian Maxwell") [Broadway debut], Flora Le Breton, Lewis Sealy (as "Richards"), Alma Tell (as "Lady Ailsa Weyman"), J.R. Tozer. Produced by Henry W. Savage.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Little Minister. Drama (revival). Written by J.M. Barrie. Directed by Basil Dean. Globe Theatre: 23 Mar 1925- Apr 1925 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Barlowe Borland (as "Andrew Mealmaker"), Ruth Chatterton (as "Lady Babbie"), Roy Cochrane, Boyd Davis (as "Sergeant Davidson") [credited as W. Boyd Davis], Hubert Druce, Robert Drysdale (as "Snecky Hobart"), Louie Emery (as "Jean"), Thomas Findley [credited as Thomas Findlay] (as "Thomas Whamond"), Ralph Forbes (as "Gavin Dishart"), Kenneth Hunter (as "Capt. Halliwell"), J.M. Kerrigan (as "Joe Cruikshanks"), Francis Louden (as "Thwaits"), Molly Pearson, William Quinn (as "Micah Dow"), Walter Roy (as "Rob Dow"), Marjorie Wood (as "Felice"). Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1926) Stage Play: Saturday Night. Written by Jacinto Benavente. Directed by Eva Le Gallienne. Civic Repertory Theatre: 25 Oct 1926- Nov 1926 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: Hardie Albright (as "Nunu"), David Belbridge, Nancy Bevill, Alan Birmingham, Barlowe Borland, Egon Brecher (as "Mr. Jacob"), Georgiana Brown, Marlyn Brown, Allan Campbell, Grace Carlisle, Edwin Cooper, Sayre Crawley, Beatrice De Neergaard, Francoise Du Moulin, Ian Emery, Rose Hobart (as "Donina"), Russell Hopkins, Alexander Ivanoff, Arthur Jacobson, Wesley John (as "Lelia's Husband"/"3rd Sailor"), Isabel Jones, Ruth Lavington, Eva Le Gallienne (as "Imperia"), Martha Leavitt, Mimi Lehman, Paul Leyssac, Margaret Love, Sidney Machat, Agnes McCarthy, John F. Miller, Harold Moulton, Gordon Pascal, Hilda Plowright (as "Princess Etelvina"), Leona Roberts (as "Majesta"), Robert F. Ross, Diana Rust, Prince Singh, Beatrice Terry, Don Vere, Mary Ward, Conway Washburne, Winthrop Wayne, Eugene Wellesley, Ruth Wilton. Produced by Civic Repertory Theatre, Inc.
- (1926) Stage Play: La Locandiera (The Mistress of the Inn). Comedy.
- (1926) Stage Play: Twelfth Night. Comedy (revival).
- (1927) Stage Play: Baby Cyclone. Farce. Written by George M. Cohan. Scenic Design by Joseph Wickes. Costume Design by Frank Jenkins. Directed by Sam Forrest. Henry Miller's Theatre: 12 Sep 1927- Feb 1928 (closing date unknown/184 performances).
- (1932) Stage Play: The Anatomist. Written by James Bridie. Directed by Thomas Wood Stevens. Bijou Theatre: 24 Oct 1932- Oct 1932 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Leslie Barrie (as "Walter Anderson"), Paula Bauersmith (as "Mary Paterson"), Barlowe Borland (as "Landlord of the Three Tuns"), Frank Conroy (as "Robert Knox, M.D."), Ralph Cullinan (as "William Burke"), Denis Gurnsy (as "Augustus Raby"), Jack McGraw (as "William Burke"), Eunice Osborne (as "Mary Belle Dishart"), Bernard Ostertag (as "Janet"), Molly Pearson (as "Jessie Ann"), Audrey Ridgewell [credited as Audrey Ridgwell] (as "Amelia Dishart"), George Tawde (as "Davie Paterson"). Produced by Frank Conroy.
- (1932) Stage Play: The Lancashire Lass. Melodrama. Written by H.J. Byron. Directed by Walter Hartwig. President Theatre: 30 Dec 1932- Jan 1933 (closing date unknown/21 performances). Cast: Barbara Allen (as "Fanny Danville"), John Boone (as "Mr. Gregory Danville"), Barlowe Borland (as "A Party of the Name of Johnson") [final Broadway role], Jack C. Connelly (as "Sergeant Donovan"), Mercedes Desmore (as "Ruth Kirby"), Edward M. Favor (as "Jellick"), Laura Grey (as "A Flower Girl"), John Hilton (as "Phil Andrews"), Colin Hunter (as "Inspector Kitely"), Bernard Jukes (as "Spotty"), Josef Lazarovici (as "Farmer Kirby"), James Lindsay (as "A Postman"), Bernard Ostertag (as "Kate Garstone"), Herbert Ranson (as "Ned Clayton"), Carl Benton Reid (as "Robert Redburn"), Charles P. Thompson (as "Milder"), Cecile Wulff (as "Mrs. Agatha Bootle"). Produced by Walter Hartwig.
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