- (1912 - 1935) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1912) Stage Play: Fanny's First Play. Written by George Bernard Shaw. Collier's Comedy Theatre: 16 Sep 1912- Apr 1913 (closing date unknown/256 performances). Cast: Kate Carlyou, Walter Creighton, Charles Croker-King [Broadway debut], Herbert Dansey, Maurice Elvey, Gladys Harvey, Walter Kingsford, Eva Leonard Boyne, Arnold Lucy, Lionel Pape, Sydney Paxton, Valentine Penna, Frank Randall, 'Elizabeth Risdon' (qv, Tim Ryley, Quentin Todd. Produced by The Shuberts.
- (1919) Stage Play: The Luck of the Navy. Drama. Written by Clifford Mills [final Broadway credit]. Directed by Percy Hutchison. Manhattan Opera House: 14 Oct 1919- Nov 1919 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Tracy Barrow (as "Briggs"), Kate Carew (as "Mrs. Gordon Peel") [final Broadway role], Charles Croker-King (as "Schaffer"), Edward Crompton (as "Newspaper Boy"), R. Huddlestone (as "An Airman"), Percy Hutchison (as "Lieut. Clive Stanton, V.C., R.N."), A.P. Kaye (as "Admiral Maybridge"), Blanche Le Roy (as "Anna"), Patrick Ludlow (as "Midshipman Wing Eden") [Broadway debut], Muriel Martin-Harvey (as "Cynthia Eden"), Aubrey Mather (as "Sub-Lieut. Louis Peel"), Marcel Rousseau (as "Francois"), Elsie Stranack (as "Dora Green"), Eleanor Street (as "Maidservant"), Geoffrey Webb (as "Lieut.-Commander Perrin, R.N."), Barry Whitcomb (as "Police Inspector"). Produced by F. Ray Comstock and Morris Gest.
- (1921) Stage Play: Bulldog Drummond. Melodrama. Written by "Sapper." Directed by Fred G. Latham. Knickerbocker Theatre: 26 Dec 1921- May 1922 (closing date unknown/162 performances). Cast: J. W. Albaugh Jr. (as "Hospital Attendants"), G. Tracy Barlow (as "A Chinese Mute"), George Barraud (as "Wm. G. Travers"), St. Clair Bayfield (as "Jas. Handley"), H. Franklyn Bellamy (as "Peter Darrell"), Jas. A. Boshell (as "Brownlow"), Charles Croker-King (as "Dr. Lakington"), Augusta Davis (as "Maid"), Edward M. Favor (as "Denny"), Thomas Gillen (as "Derbyshire"), Wallace Hickman (as "Marcovitch"), J.H. Hunt (as "Hospital Attendants"), Sam Livesey (as "Carl Peterson"), A.E. Matthews (as "Capt. Hugh Drummond"), Wm. W. McNeill (as "W. Hocking"), Geoffrey Millar (as "Algy Longworth"), Mary Robson (as "Irma Peterson"), Dorothy Tetley (as "Phyllis Benton"). Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1924) Stage Play: The Little Angel.
- The Rat (1925).
- Hearts Are Trumps (1927).
- The Taming of the Shrew (1927).
- 12,000 (1928). Written by Bruno Frank. Book adapted by William A. Drake. Directed by Basil Sydney. Garrick Theatre: 12 Mar 1928- Jul 1928 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Charles Croker-King (as "His Serene Highness, the Prince of_____"), Mary Ellis (as "The Baroness of Spangenburg"), Lumsden Hare (as "A Colonel"), Walter Kingsford (as "Faucitt"), John McGovern (as "The Younger Brother"), Leonard Mudie (as "The Elder Brother"), Basil Sydney (as "Piderit"), Robert Vivian (as "Treysa"). Produced by The Garrick Players.
- White Lilacs (1928). Musical. Music by Karl Hajos. Book by Harry B. Smith. Lyrics by Harry B. Smith. Original German book by Sigurd Johannsen. Musical Director: Pierce de Reeder. Additional music by Maurice Ruebens and Sammy Timberg. Additional lyrics by David Goldberg and J. Keirn Brennan. Ensembles directed by Vaughn Godfrey. Directed by George F. Marion. Shubert Theatre (moved to Jolson's 59th Street Theatre from 8 Oct 1928- close): 10 Sep 1928- 12 Jan 1929 (136 performances). Cast: Catherine Allen (as "Ensemble"), Melba Alter (as "Louison/One of Trio"), Louise Beaudet (as "Catherine"), Helen Bishop (as "Ensemble"), Grace Brinkley (as "Delphine Potocka"), John Campbell (as "Ensemble"), Madeline Clancy (as "Ensemble"), Charles Croker-King (as "Giacomo Meyerbeer"), William Demarest (as "Ensemble"), Diana Doering (as "Ensemble"), Edwin Drake (as "Ensemble"), Eliz Fergusson (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Forsythe (as "Ensemble"), Mae Golding (as "Ensemble"), William Hall (as "Ensemble"), Maurice Holland (as "Gaston de Flavigny"), DeWolf Hopper Sr. (as "Dubusson"), Frank Horn (as "Prince Obelenski/Ensemble"), Juanita (as "Juanita"), Ernest Lawford (as "Heinrich Heine"), Vivian Lynn (as "Ensemble"), Wallace Magill (as "Ensemble"), Eva Mascagno (as "Mlle. Taglioni"), Steven McNulty (as "Ensemble"), Odette Myrtil (as "Madame George Sand"), Phyllis Newkirk (as "Marquise De Mours/One of Trio"), Paco (as "Paco"), Helen Page (as "Ensemble"), Louise Randolph (as "Ensemble"), Phil Reep (as "Ensemble"), Guy Robertson (as "Frederic Chopin"), Allan Rogers (as "Luselle"), Vernon Rudolph (as "Franz Liszt/Ensemble"), Edna Starck (as "Ensemble"), Franklin Van Horn (as "Balzac"), Douglas Vincent (as "Ensemble"), Frank Weiner (as "Ensemble"), Charlotte Woodruff (as "Countess D'Agoult/One of Trio"), Dora Zommerowna (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- His Majesty's Car (1930). Comedy. Written by Fanny Hatton and Frederic Hatton. From the Hungarian by Attila Von Orbok. Directed by Stanley Logan. Ethel Barrymore Theatre: 23 Oct 1930- Nov 1930 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Roman Arnoldoff (as "Alvarez"), Isabel Atwill (as "The Countess"), Arthur Barry (as "Von Werden"), Louise Bateman (as "The Baroness"), Peggy Conklin (as "Mitzi"), Edward Cradall (as "Robert Bardon"), Charles Croker-King (as "Ernest Dornik"), James Dunn (as "A Major-Domo"), Miriam Hopkins (as "Lily Dornik"), Anthony Kemble-Cooper (as "The King"), William Kershaw (as "Geo. Sappo"), Emile Littler (as "Reporter"), Gertrude Maitland (as "Mrs. Dornik"), Hugh Miller (as "Peter Hahn"), Wells Richardson (as "Cameraman"), Theodore St. John (as "Andre Dornik"), Herbert Standing (as "Strohn"), Marcella Swanson (as "Madelaine"), Lillian B. Tonge (as "Miss Marks"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- The School for Scandal (1931).
- Autumn Crocus (1932).
- (1935) Stage Play: Nowhere Bound.
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