- (1899 - 1928) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1899) Stage Play: By the Sad Sea Waves. Musical comedy/vaudeville. Libretto by J. Sherrie Mathews and Harry Bulger. Music by Gustave Luders [earliest Broadway credit]. Musical Direction by Gustave Luders. Featuring songs by J. Sherrie Mathews, Harry Bulger, Barney Fagan, George A. Nichols, Leslie Stuart [earliest Broadway credit] and Josie DeWitt. Directed by Barney Fagan. Herald Square Theatre: 28 Feb 1899- 8 Apr 1899 (47 performances). Cast: Harry Bulger (as "Boston Budge, the answer to an advertisement"), Josie DeWitt (as "Faith Grace, daughter of the Judge"), Gilbert Gregory (as "Professor Wagner Flat, a musician playing for a place/John Phillips, who imagines he is Sousa"), Nellie Hawthorne (as "Charity Grace, daughter of the Judge"), Rose Melville (as "Sis Hopkins, an heiress to ills imaginary"), Julia Ralph (as "Miss Lavinia Primmer, school mistress of Finishville Academy") [Broadway debut], Lizzie Sanger (as "Hope Grace, daughter of the Judge"), J. Sherrie Mathews (as "Palmer Coin, sleight of hand and strong of nerve"), Ned Wayburn (as "General Smiles, good for a laugh; a soldier who thinks he thinks"), Will West (as "Algernon Campwell, the Colonel's son"), Bessie Bruno (as "Effie Greenway"), Helen Budd (as "Naomi North"), William Butters (as "Earl E. Frost, ice man"), Sara Carr (as "Susie Short"), Bessie Challenger (as "Vera White"), Lulu Cosgrove (as "Daisy Dresser"), Lizzie Creese (as "Winnie Western"), J. Doctor (as "Jimmie Gun, a continuous burglar by permission"), Gordon Eldrid (as "Dodge Bell, a waiter"), Lottie Ettinger (as "Georgie Greenwall"), Agnes Gildea (as "Glory Christian"), Estelle Hamilton (as "J. Wood Winham"), Benjamin Hopkins (as "Yank M. Inn, a policeman, also a club man"), Van Huntington (as "Van Winkle, sleep-walker"), Charles Jacklin (as "Sharpley Hunt, detective, finds them out when they are in"), Eva Leslie (as "Babette, who has a bad habit of forming habits"), Mattie Lill (as "Tillie Tallman"), W.H. Macart (as "Professor Vaulter Barr, instructor of athletics and talk designer/Sis Hopkins, an heiress to ills imaginary"), Sandy McDermott (as "J. Pullem, a policeman with badge"), Belle Miller (as "Billie Deux"), Gus Murtimer (as "Colonel Campwell, fond of America and other things"), May Norton (as "Rennie Redpath"), Mabel Rother (as "Viola Ramedell"), Robert Vernon (as "Judge Grace, who has patience with his patients"), Carrie Vincent (as "Sousie Southern"), Agnes Wayburn (as "Effie Eastman, she of the wedding breakfast eye"), Margaret Yorke (as "Phila Glass"). Produced by Dunne and Ryley.
- (1901) Stage Play: The Fatal Wedding. Melodrama.
- (1906) Stage Play: Forty-five Minutes from Broadway.
- (1906) Stage Play: Forty-five Minutes from Broadway (Revival).
- (1911) Stage Play: The Happiest Night of His Life. Comedy. Music by Albert von Tilzer. Book by Junie McCree and Sydney Rosenfeld. Lyrics by Junie McCree and Sydney Rosenfeld. Featuring songs by Phil Schwartz. Featuring songs with lyrics by Harold Atteridge. Musical Director: Rudolf Berliner. Directed by George W. Lederer. Criterion Theatre: 20 Feb 1911- 11 Mar 1911 (24 performances). Cast: Victor Bozardt, Jack Fairbanks, Edythe Gilbert, Jack Henderson, Maud Le Roy, Rose Leslie, Emma Littlefield, Leola Lucey, Beryl Marsden, Will A. McCormick, Junie McCree, Victor Moore (as "Dick Brennan"), James C. O'Neill, Dorothy Page, Mae Phelps, Julia Ralph (as "Martha Jelliman"), Phil Riley, Harry Smithfield, Lillian Stanton, Sallie Stembler, George W. Steteler, Bessie Stewart, Gertrude Vanderbilt, Charles E. Walt, Henry Ward, Annabelle Whitford, Edward C. Yeager. Produced by Harry Frazee and George W. Lederer.
- (1911) Stage Play: The Little Millionaire. Musical/farce.
- (1915) Stage Play: She's in Again.
- (1915) Stage Play: No. 13 Washington Square. Written by Leroy Scott. Park Theatre: 23 Aug 1915- Oct 1915 (closing date unknown/56 performances). Cast: Charles S. Abbe, Clara Blandick, Charlotte Carter, George Clarke, Richard Collins, Leonard Hollister, May Irwin, John Junior, Max Meyer, Georgia Olp, Ffolliott Paget, Julia Ralph, Lark Taylor, Joseph Woodburn.
- (1917) Stage Play: His Little Widows. Musical comedy. Music by William Schroeder. Book by Rida Johnson Young and William Carey Duncan. Lyrics by Rida Johnson Young and William Carey Duncan. Musical Director: Silvio Hein. Music orchestrated by Silvio Hein. Additional music by Malvin M. Franklin. Additional lyrics by Thomas J. Gray. Choreographed by David Bennett. Directed by Frank Stammers. Astor Theatre: 30 Apr 1917- 30 Jun 1917 (72 performances). Cast: Frank Aberwald (as "Ensemble"), James Brannon (as "Ensemble"), Hattie Burke (as "Murilla Lloyd"), Frances Cameron (as "Blanche Hale"), Wallace Camp (as "Officiating Elder"), Evelyn Cavanaugh (as "Dance Specialty"), Mae Clark (as "Ensemble"), Walter Coupe (as "Ensemble"), Dwight Dana (as "Hotel Manager"), Carter DeHaven (as "Pete Lloyd"), Harry Dempsey (as "Ensemble"), Richard Dore (as "Dance Specialty"), Bernard Druce (as "Ensemble"), Lillian Galer (as "Ensemble"), Carl Gordon (as "Ensemble"), Virginia Gunther (as "Ensemble"), Bernice Haley (as "Dahlia"), Grace Haley (as "Lily"), Lucille Haley (as "Tulip"), Mabel Haley (as "Rose"), Fifi Hansworth (as "Ensemble"), Helen Hastings (as "Ensemble"), Irene Held (as "Ensemble"), Robert Emmett Keane (as "Jack Grayson"), Frank Lalor (as "Abijah Smith"), Virginia Lillard (as "Ensemble"), Doris Lloyd (as "Ensemble"), May Manning (as "Ensemble"), Rena Manning (as "Ensemble"), James Nichols (as "Ensemble"), Flora Parker (as "Annabelle Lloyd"), Alma Pickard (as "Pansy"), Charles Prince (as "Harry Jolson"), Julia Ralph (as "Lucinda Lloyd"), John Robb (as "Sandy Barr"), Walter Rowley (as "Guard"), Wilfred Shepard (as "Ensemble"), Ivy Sherer (as "Ensemble"), Sol Solomon (as "Ensemble"), Louis Strangard (as "Ensemble"), Violet Strathmore (as "Mignonette"), Harry Tighe (as "Bif Hale"), Jeanne Voltaire (as "Ensemble"), Irma Von Nagy (as "Narcissus"), Frank Young (as "Guard"), Lucille Carlisle [credited as Lucile Zintheo] (as "Hyacinthe"). Produced by Gilbert M. 'Broncho Billy' Anderson and L. Lawrence Weber.
- (1918) Stage Play: Sick-a-Bed. Written by Ethel Watts Mumford. Gaiety Theatre: 25 Feb 1918- May 1918 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: Thomas Allyn, Mary Boland, David Burton, Frank Connor, Charles E. Evans, John Flood, Mary Newcombe, Edwin Nicander, Edward O'Connor, George Parsons, Julia Ralph, Dallas Welford. Produced by Klaw & Erlanger.
- (1920) Stage Play: Ladies' Night. Comedy/farce. Written by Avery Hopwood and Charlton Andrews. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 9 Aug 1920- Jun 1921 (closing date unknown/360 performances). Cast: Helen Barnes (as "Tillie"), John Cumberland (as "Jimmy Walters"), Eleanor Dawn (as "Miss Murphy"), Vincent Dennie (as "Bob Stanhope"), Edward Douglas (as "Cort Craymer"), Nellie Filmore (as "Lollie"), Claiborne Foster (as "Dulcy Walters"), Evelyn Gosnell (as "Mimi Tarlton"), Pearl Jardinere (as "Mrs. Green"), Grace Kaber (as "Josie"), Allyn King (as " Alicia Bonner"), Eda Ann Luke (as "Babette"), Julia Ralph (as " A Policewoman"), Mrs. Stuart Robson (as "Mrs. Shultz"), Adele Rolland (as "Suzon"), Charles Ruggles (as "Fred Bonner"), Fred Sutton (as "A Fireman"), Judith Vosselli (as "Rhoda Begova"). Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1923) Stage Play: Roger Bloomer. Written by John Howard Lawson. 48th Street Theatre: 1 Mar 1923- Apr 1923 (closing date unknown/50 performances). Cast: Halliam Bosworth (as "An Old Man/A Detective"), Alan Bunce (as "Office Assistant"), Frederick Burton (as "Elliott T. Rumsey"), Louis Calhern (as "Eugene Poppin"), Helen Carew (as "Another Salesgirl"), John Hammond Dailey (as "A College Examiner"), Margaret Fareleigh (as "A Street Walker"), Robert H. Forsythe (as "Office Assistant"), Mary Fowler (as "Louise"), Harry Hahn (as "Office Assistant/Another Drug Clerk"), Mina Henderson (as "Creature in a Dream"), John C. Hickey (as "Mr. Poppin"), Isabel Hill (as "Mary, The Maid"), Emil Hoch (as "Policeman/Prison Attendant"), Henry Hull (as "Roger Bloomer"), Thomas J. Keogh (as "A Judge"), Kate Morgan (as "Small Old Woman"), James G. Morton (as "Another Old Man"), Caroline Newcombe (as "Mrs. Bloomer"), Fletcher Norton (as "A Ragged Man"), Julia Ralph (as "A Landlady"), Rolph Ryan (as "Office Assistant"), Louis Segal (as "Creature in a Dream"), Helen Van Hoose (as "Miss Burns/Tall Old Woman"), Walter Walker (as "Everett Bloomer"), Charles Webster (as "Drug Clerk"), Sylvia Wiles (as "Creature in a Dream"), Adelaide Wilson (as "Emma, The Stenographer"). Produced by The Equity Players Inc.
- (1925) Stage Play: Arabesque. Music by Ruth White Warfield. Written by Cloyd Head and Eunice Tietjens. Scenic Design by Norman Bel Geddes and Cleon Throckmorton. Choreographed by Michi Itow. Directed by Norman Bel Geddes. National Theatre: 20 Oct 1925- 7 Nov 1925 (23 performances). Cast: Hortense Alden (as "Laila, A Bedouine from the desert"), Hamad Attab, Geraldine Ballard, Merlin Ballard, Mohammed Basher, Mohammed Ben Ali, Charles Berkley, Hamad Bisher, Clayton Braun, John Brewster, Florence Brinton, Earle Caddock, Conrad Cantzen (as "Baba Youssef"), Chief Whitehawk, Curtis Cooksey (as "Ahmed Ben Tahar"), Bus Daniels, Ruth Daniels, Boyd Davis (as "Tall Bedouin, to whom belongs Laila"), Claude Dougal, Anna Duncan, Rona Fray, B.A. Fripp, M. Garboat, James Gaylor, Etienne Girardot (as "The Caid of Nadour"), Lackaye Grant, Gladys Green, Ali Halel, Robert Halloway, Victor Hammond, Mustapha Hantoot, Ismut Hassen, Elsbeth Herbert, Mohammed Houssain, Yuji Itow, Larry Jason, Irene Joseph, Helen Judson, Raphael Kados, Helen Kim, Jacob Kingsbury (as "Chief Bedouin"), Naoe Kondo, Sarat Lahiri, Raise Lehassen, Mactar Lehedder, Bela Lugosi (as "Sheik of Hammam, a Minor Official"), Louise Mainland, Beine Makter, Yetta Malamude, Kay McKay, Hardwick Nevin, George Offerman Jr., Marie Offerman, Hamad B. Omar, Logan Paul, Nancy Pethbridge, Julia Ralph (as "The Sheik's Mother, Who Would Live in Tunis"), Edward Ray, Herman O. Roberts, Samuel Rosen, Prince Singh, William Skavlan, Sara Sothern, Philip Spector, George Thornton, Roland Twombley (as "Cobbler"), Ben Welden, Olive West, Elsie Winslow. Produced by Norman Bel Geddes and Richard Herndon.
- (1926) Stage Play: Bride of the Lamb.
- (1927) Stage Play: The Trial of Mary Dugan. Melodrama. Written by Bayard Veiller. Directed by A.H. Van Buren. National Theatre: 19 Sep 1927- Oct 1927 (closing date unknown/437 performances). Cast: Michelette Baroni, Robert Beggs, Rex Cherryman, Robert Cummings, John P. Dougherty, Charles Edwards, Ann Harding (as "Mary Dugan"), Louis Jean Heydt (as "Harry Jones"), Arthur Hohl (as "District Attorney Galway"), Edwin T. Jones, Cyril Keightley (as "Edward West"), Anna Kostant, Barton MacLane (as "Assistant District Attorney"), Merle Maddern, Jasper Mangione, Leona Maricle (as "Dagmar Lorne") [Broadway debut], Lewis McMichael, Dennie Moore (as "Mary Harris"), Oscar Polk (as "James Madison"), Julia Ralph (as "Mrs. Kate Burton"), John Ravold, Dean Raymond, Marie Santas, Jack Sayer, John Sharkey, Robert Williams. Produced by A.H. Woods. Note: Filmed as The Trial of Mary Dugan (1929), The Trial of Mary Dugan (1941), and as The Trial of Mary Dugan (1957).
- (1928) Stage Play: Veils. Musical. Music by Donald Heywood. Book by Irving Kaye Davis. Lyrics by Donald Heywood. Directed by Edward Elsner. Forrest Theatre: 13 Mar 1928- Mar 1928 (closing date unknown/4 performances). Cast: Grace Allen (as "Flossie"), Nancy Chalmers (as "Gladice"), Henry Crosby (as "Oscar Van Wyck"), Alan Floud (as "Father Francis"), Florence Foxhall (as "Sister Theresa"), Charlotte Granville (as "Sister Agnes"), Mimi Helmuth (as "Patricia Kent"), Chris Holt (as "Julien Macklin"), Alex Loghe (as "Col. Gerard Owens"), Agatha Lowry (as "Mamie"), John Mackley (as "A Bum"), J. Manley (as "Prison Guard"), Alice Manny (as "Jane"), Frank B. Miller (as "A Butler"), Mary Moore (as "Sister Veronica"), Helen O'Donnell (as "Lil"), Donald Page (as "A Detective"), Florence Pendleton (as "Mag"), Julia Ralph (as "Mrs. Annie Hughes"), George Rogers (as "Mike Brady"), Elsa Shelley (as "Nan/Sister Mary"), Ann Sherman (as "Sister Louise"), Hilda Spong (as "The Reverend Mother Superior"), Helen Steele (as "Sister Gertrude"), Grant Stewart (as "His Grace the Archbishop"), Mary Tabor (as "Nell Baxter"), Frances Underwood (as "Mrs. Angela Lumis"), Arthur Vinton [credited as Arthur R. Vinton] (as "Jim"), Arthur Wellington (as "Clifford Sturgis"), Charlotte Wilkins (as "Birdie"), Warren William (as "Mr. Robert Sloan"), Irene Winston (as "Rosa"), Alan Winterburn (as "Jake"). Produced by A.A. Snyder.
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