- (1902 - 1922) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1902) Stage Play: The Billionaire. Musical/farce. Music by Gustav Kerker. Book by Harry B. Smith. Lyrics by Harry B. Smith. Musical Director: Antonio DeNovellis. Choreographed by Ned Wayburn. Directed by Herbert Gresham. Daly's Theatre (moved to The Grand Opera House from 6 Apr 1903- close): 29 Dec 1902- Apr 1903 (closing date unknown/112 performances). Cast: R.A. Beale (as "First Theatre-goer"), Patricia Rooney (as "A Page") [credited as Marion Bent], Vera Cameron (as "Miss Capitol"), George Dolan (as "Second Theatre-goer"), Marie Doro (as "Rosalba") [Broadway debut], Edward Everett (as "Southern Gent"), Sallie Fisher (as "Flora"), L.C. Fitzroy (as "First Ticket Speculator"), Louis Foley (as "Hot Stuff Jake"), Nellie Follis (as "Pansy Good"), Abraham Friedland (as "Ping Pong"), James Grant (as "Mr. Gummel"), William Havens (as "Mr. Fidget"), Lillian Hudson (as "Miss Gotham"), Walter James (as "Second Ticket Speculator"), Harry Kelly (as "Tim Lafferty"), John P. Kennedy (as "Monsieur Achille Petipas"), Thomas C. Leary (as "Mr. Peppercorn"), George Lyman (as "Third Theatre-goer"), Harry MacDonough (as "Baptiste"), Sallie McNeel (as "Miss Tremont"), Sadie Peters (as "Miss Tulane"), Hans F. Robert (as "Wally Peppercorn"), May Robson (as "Mrs. Peppercorn"), A. Rosenthal (as "Little Leopold"), Gertrude Saye (as "Miss Lakeside/Mirandy Hopkins"), Fred Scott (as "M. Cardenes"), Charles Sinclair (as "Messenger Boy"), Elphye Snowden (as "Miss Memphis"), Julius Steger (as "Lieutenant Ladislas"), John Steppling (as "Mr. Herman Rheinheister"), Albert S. Sykes (as "Hiram Hopkins"), Jerome Sykes (as "John Doe"), Frank Todd (as "A Stage Carpenter"), Hattie Waters (as "Miss Flossie Frivol"). Produced by Klaw & Erlanger.
- (1903) Stage Play: The Girl from Kay's. Musical. Music by Ivan Caryll. Additional numbers by Clare Kummer [earliest Broadway credit], Maurice J. Stonehill, Paul Rubens, Adrian Ross, Claude Aveling, J. Hickory Wood, Howard Talbot, Percy Greenbank, Bernard Rolt, Cecil Cook, Ernest Bucalossi and A.D. Cammeyer. Book by Owen Hall. Musical Director: Gus Salzer. Herald Square Theatre (recessed during summer of 1904 and moved to The Grand Opera House from 20 Mar 1905 to close): 2 Nov 1903- Mar 1905 (closing date unknown/231 performances). Cast: Elise Barney (as "Hilda French"), Sam Bernard, Vera Cameron, Mabel Clarke, Harry Davenport, Paul Decker, Belva Don Kersley, Marie Doro (as "Nancy Lowley"), Teddie DuCoe, Grace Dudley, Elsie Ferguson, Grace Freeman, Maud Granger (as "Mrs. Chalmers"), Homer Granville (as "Theodore Quench"), May Harding, Leonore Harris, Emil Heusel, Ernest Lambart, Maurice Lavigne, Margaret Malcolm, Sadie Peters, Lillian Seville, Winchell Smith (as "Joseph"), George R. Sprague, Olive Ullrich, Hattie Williams, Blanche Wood. Produced by Charles Frohman with George Edwardes-Hall.
- (1903) Stage Play: The Admirable Crichton. Fantasy. Written by J.M. Barrie. Lyceum Theatre: 17 Nov 1903- Mar 1904 (closing date unknown/144 performances). Cast included: William Gillette, Pattie Browne, Ethel Bruce, Florence Busby, Sybil Campbell, Sybil Carlisle (as "Lady Mary Lasenby"), Rosalind Coghlan (as "Lady Agatha Lasenby"), Frances Comstock, Fred Courteney, Ernest Crawford, Marie Doro (as "Lady Catherine Lasenby"). Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1904) Stage Play: Little Mary. Written by J.M. Barrie. Empire Theatre: 5 Jan 1904- Jan 1904 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Jessie Busley, Henry E. Dixey, Marie Doro, Walter Eddinger, Arthur Elliott, Alfred Fischer, Arthur Herman, Kathryn Hutchinson, M.A. Kennedy, Fred Tyler, Ida Waterman, Fritz Williams. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1904) Stage Play: Granny. Written and directed by Clyde Fitch. Lyceum Theatre: 24 Oct 1904- Nov 1904 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Frank E. Aiken, Frank Brownlee, Marie Doro, Mrs. G.H. Gilbert Dorothy Hammond, Emmett C. King, William Lewers, Herbert Marion, Olive Murray, Jennie Reiffarth, Sydney Rice, Austin Webb. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1905) Stage Play: Friquet. Drama. Written by Pierre Berton. Directed by William Seymour. Savoy Theatre: 31 Jan 1905- Feb 1905 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Marie Doro (as "Friquet"), Orme Caldara, C.B. Chester, William Courtleigh, Dorothy Donnelly, Laurence Eddinger, W.J. Ferguson, Eugenie Flagg, Ernest Glendinning, John Heron, Wright Kramer, Frank Losee, Frederick Perry, Florida Pier, Alison Skipworth, Virginia Staunton, George Henry Trader, Flossie Wilkinson, Edgar Allan Woolf. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1906) Stage Play: The Little Cherub. Musical comedy. Music by Ivan Caryll. Book by Owen Hall. Musical Director: William T. Francis. The song "The Doggie in Our Yard" by Marie Doro. Lyrics by Owen Hall. Additional music by Charles Collins, Jerome Kern, Frank Tours and Jean Schwartz. Additional lyrics by Charles Collins, Adrian Ross, George Grossmith, Jr., C.H. Bovill, Clifford Harris and William Jerome. Scenic Design by Ernest M. Gros. Costume Design by Mrs. Robert Osborn and Pascaud. Directed by Ben Teal. Criterion Theatre (moved to The Grand Opera House from 30 Dec 1906- Jan 1907. On hiatus during most of Jan 1907 and reopened in Feb 1907 to close): 6 Aug 1906- Feb 1907 (closing date unknown/176 performances). Cast: David Bennett, James Blakeley, Richard Chawner, Grace Field, Emily Francis, Charles Gibson, Martin Haydon, Harold Hendee, Andrew Higginson, Mabel Hollins, Eithel Kelly, Grace Kimball, John Mayon, May Naudain, Clara Pitt, Elsa Reinhardt, John F. Rogers, Edna Sidney, Beth Stone, Will West, Hattie Williams, Winona Winter, Thomas A. Wise [credited as Tom Wise], Dorothy Zimmerman. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1906) Stage Play: Clarice. Comedy. Written by William Gillette. Garrick Theatre: 16 Oct 1906- Dec 1906 (closing date unknown/79 performances). Cast included: Marie Doro, William Gillette, Goro Kodama, Stokes Sullivan. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1907) Stage Play: The Morals of Marcus. Written by William J. Locke [credited as William J. Locke] (earliest Broadway credit). Criterion Theatre: 18 Nov 1907- Dec 1907 (closing date unknown/44 performances). Cast: Eda Bruna, Ivo Dawson, Marie Doro, William Evans, Beatrice Forbes-Robertson, Alice Gale, Alexander King, Kate Meeks, Ethel Morrey, Alice Neal, Leonore Palmer, Forrest Robinson, C. Aubrey Smith, Mrs. J.P. West. Produced by Charles Frohman. Note: Filmed by Famous Players Film Company [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as The Morals of Marcus (1915) [starring Marie Doro as "Carlotta"], and by Realart Pictures Corporation [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as Morals (1921).
- (1909) Stage Play: The Richest Girl. Written by Michael Morton and Paul Gavault. Criterion Theatre: 1 Mar 1909- Mar 1909 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Frank Burbeck, Harrison Carter, Marie Doro, Fred Eric, George Gaul, Orrin Johnson, Louis Massen, Elsa Maxwell, Harry Melick, Anne Meredith, Ethel Morrey, Hollister Pratt, George K. Rolland, Fred Tiden. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1910) Stage Play: Electricity. Written by William Gillette. Lyceum Theatre: 31 Oct 1910- Nov 1910 (unknown closing date/16 performances). Cast: Harry Barfoot, Oliver Doud Byron, L. de Bellefraie, Marie Doro, Allen Fawcett, Henry Hall, Shelly Hull, Francis D. McGinn, Ann Murdock, Edwin Nicander, Myrtle Tannehill, Mrs. Thomas Whiffen. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1912) Stage Play: Oliver Twist (Revival). Written by Comyns Carr. Based on the book by Charles Dickens. New Amsterdam Theatre (moved to The Empire Theatre from 25 Mar 1912- close): 26 Feb 1912- May 1912 (closing date unknown/190 performances). Cast: Alice Belmore, Gertrude Boswell, Perceval Clarke [credited as Percival Clark], Constance Collier (as "Nancy"), Marie Doro (as "Oliver"), Courtenay Foote, Ada Gifford, Nat C. Goodwin (as "Fagan"), Alfred Grey, Charles Harbury, Lyn Harding (as "Bill Sykes"), Frank A. Lyons, Fuller Mellish, Charles Rogers, Percival Vivian, Robert Vivian, Jane Wilson. Produced by Liebler & Co. Note: Filmed as Oliver Twist (1912) (starring Nat C. Goodwin as Fagan and Vinnie Burns as Oliver)--- historically significant as the earliest known, if not the first feature length American film [Of the film's original five reels however, only four of them survive], and by Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company as Oliver Twist (1916), starring Marie Doro as Oliver Twist.
- (1912) Stage Play: Patience. Musical/operetta (revival). Written by W.S. Gilbert. Music by Arthur Sullivan. Lyric Theatre: 6 May 1912- 1 Jun 1912 (32 performances).
- (1913) Stage Play: The New Secretary. Written by Francis de Croisset, with an adaptation by Cosmo Gordon Lennox. Lyceum Theatre: 23 Jan 1913- Mar 1913 (closing date unknown/44 performances). Cast: A.G. Andrews, Kitty Brown, Conrad Cantzen [Broadway debut], Charles Cherry, Marie Doro, Annie Esmonde, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Wilson Hummel, Frank Kemble-Cooper, Mac Macomber, Harry Redding, Robert W. Smiley, Mrs. Thomas Whiffen, Edith Wycoff. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1914) Stage Play: Diplomacy (Revival). Written by Victorien Sardou. Directed by Gustav von Seyffertitz. Empire Theatre: 20 Oct 1914- Dec 1914 (closing date unknown/63 performances). Cast: Blanche Bates, John Carmichael, Henry Dornton, Marie Doro, Leslie Faber, Bertha Fordyce, William Gillette, Burford Hampden, Jeffreys Lewis, George Majeroni [credited as Giorgio Majeroni], Malise Sheridan, Norman Tharp, W. Van Loon, Gustav von Seyffertitz. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1917) Stage Play: Barbara. Written by Florence Lincoln. Plymouth Theatre: 5 Nov 1917- Nov 1917 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Frank Bacon, Edna Baker, Lillian Dix, Marie Doro, Margaret Fealy, Walter D. Greene, Robert Hudson, John Miltern, Helen Tracy. Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1921) Stage Play: Lilies of the Field. Drama. Written by William Hurlbut. Directed by Harry McRae Webster. Klaw Theatre: 4 Oct 1921- Feb 1922 (unknown closing date/169 performances). Cast: Alice Cavanaugh (as "A Manicurist"), Gertrude Clemens (as "Nettie"), Dan Day (as "A Private Detective"), Dorothy Day (as "Louise"), Marie Doro (as "Mildred Harker") [final Broadway role], Josephine Drake (as "Maisie Lee"), Evelyn Duncan (as "Amy Van Epps"), Elfin Finn (as "Rose"), Pauline Garon (as "Doris Carter"), J. Cleneay Mathews (as "James Overstreet"), Y. Mimura (as "Suki"), Mary Phillips (as "Pink Cortney"), Alison Skipworth (as "Florette Ellwood"), Norman Trevor (as "Lewis Willing"), Roy Walling (as "Walter Harker"), Cora Witherspoon (as "Gertrude Ainlee"). Produced by Garrick Productions.
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