- (1896 - 1922) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1896) Stage Play: The Geisha. Musical comedy. Music by Sidney Jones [earliest Broadway credit]. Book by Owen Hall [earliest Broadway credit]. Lyrics by Harry Greenbank. Additional music by Lionel Monckton. Directed by Augustin Daly. Daly's Theatre: 9 Sep 1896- 21 Apr 1897 (161 performances). Cast: Isadora Duncan (as "Chorus") [only Broadway role], Clara Emory (as "Tommy Stanley, Officer of the HMS Turtle"), Pauline French (as "Miss Marie Worthington") [Broadway debut], Mabelle Gilman (as "O Kinkoto San, Golden Harp"), Herbert Gresham (as "Dick Cunningham, Officer of the HMS Turtle"), Henry Gunson (as "George Grimson"), William Hazeltine (as "A Buyer"), Clara Hollywood (as "Chorus"), Mayme Kelso (as "Dorothy Sweet"), George LeSoir (as "Arthur Cuddy") [Broadway debut], Lillian Lipyeat (as "Chorus"), Violet Lloyd (as "Miss Molly Seamore"), Lena Loraine (as "Chorus"), Marion Marshall (as "Chorus"), Neil McCay (as "Lieutenant Katasna"), Lottie Moore (as "Chorus"), Ellen Mortimer (as "Chorus"), Dorothy Morton (as "O Mimosa San"), Helma Nelson (as "Juliette Diamont"), William T. Sampson (as "Wun Hi, Proprietor of the Tea House") [Broadway debut], Eric Scott (as "Hon. Reginald St. Pancras"), Robert Shepherd (as "Takemini"), Annette Spencer (as "Mabel Evant"), Clara St. Claire (as "Chorus"), Marie St. John (as "Lady Constance Wynne"), Edwin Stevens (as "The Marquis Imari") [Broadway debut], Mabel Strickland (as "Chorus"), Eugene Taylor (as "Chorus"), Mabel Thompson (as "O Kiku San, Chrysanthemum"), Maud Vincent (as "Chorus"), Van Rensselaer Wheeler (as "Lieutenant Reginald Fairfax, Officer of the HMS Turtle"), Margarete Whiticar (as "Chorus"), Alice Winston (as "Chorus"), Gerda Wisner (as "Miss Ethel Hurst"). Produced by Augustin Daly. Note: Filmed by William and Cia Productions [Brazil] as A Gueixa (1909).
- (1899) Stage Play: Peter Stuyvesant. Comedy. Written by Brander Matthews and Bronson Howard. Wallack's Theatre: 2 Oct 1899- Oct 1899 (closing date unknown/28 performances). Cast: William H. Crane (as "Peter Stuyvesant"), Harvey Banks, Leila Bronson, William Courtleigh, George F. De Vere, Will Dupont, George Fawcett, Daniel Fingleton, Henry Greisman, Percy Haswell, Carl Herbert, William Ingersoll, Selene Johnson, Ferris Mason, Sandol Milliken, Frank Molburn, William T. Sampson, Thad Shine, George L. Stevens, Frederick Truesdell [Broadway debut]. Produced by Joseph Brooks.
- (1899) Stage Play: A Rich Man's Son. Comedy. Written by Michael Morton; Based on "Das Grobe Hemd" by H. Karlweiss. Wallack's Theatre: 21 Oct 1899- 22 Nov 1899 (36 performances). Cast: Evelyn Carter, William Courtleigh, William H. Crane, George F. De Vere, Will Dupont, Percy Haswell, William Ingersoll, Charles Jackson, Selene Johnson, Sandol Milliken, William T. Sampson. Produced by William H. Crane.
- (1900) Stage Play: David Harum. Comedy. Written by R. Hitchcock and M.W. Hitchcock, from the novel by Edward Noyes Wescott. Directed by Edward E. Rose. Garrick Theatre: 1 Oct 1900- Feb 1901 (closing date unknown/148 performances). Cast: Charles Avery, Frank Burbeck [Broadway debut], Lois Frances Clark, William H. Crane, George F. De Vere, Will Dean, William Dupont, Katherine Florence, Homer Granville, Charles Jackson, Kate Meeks [credited as Kate Meek], George S. Probert, William T. Sampson, Sheridan Tupper. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1901) Stage Play: The Merchant of Venice. Comedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Knickerbocker Theatre: 24 May 1901- May 1901 (closing date unknown/3 performances). Cast: Macklyn Arbuckle (as "Antonio, a merchant of Venice"), Aubrey Boucicault (as "Bassanio, friend of Antonio"), William Courtleigh (as "Prince of Morocco"), J.E. Dodson (as "Launcelot Gobbo, servant to Shylock"), Maxine Elliott (as "Portia, an heiress in Belmont"), Effie Ellsler (as "Jessica, Shylock's daughter"), Arthur Garrels (as "Salarino, friend of Antonio"), Nat C. Goodwin (as "Shylock, a Jewish moneylender"), S.M. Hall (as "Balthasar, servant to Portia"), Annie Irish (as "Nerissa, Portia's waiting gentle-woman"), William J. Le Moyne (as "Gobbo"), Frank Mayne (as "Court Clerk"), Neil O'Brien (as "Tubal, an associate of Shylock"), Frederick Perry (as "Prince of Arragon, suitor to Portia"), William T. Sampson (as "Leonardo, servant to Bassanio"), Vincent Serrano (as "Gratiano, gentleman of Venice"), H.P. Stone (as "Solanio, friend of Antonio"), Frank Weston (as "Duke of Venice"), Henry Woodruff (as "Lorenzo, gentleman of Venice").
- (1903) Stage Play: A Midsummer's Night Dream. Comedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Herbert Gresham and Edmund D. Lyons. New Amsterdam Theatre: 2 Nov 1903- Nov 1903 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Arthur Barry (as "Snug, A joiner"), F. Bayly (as "Robin Starveling, A tailor"), Ida Conquest (as "Helena"), Margaret Crawford (as "Oberon"), Gilbert Douglas (as "Philostrate"), Thelma Fair (as "First Fairy"), William Farnum (as "Demetrius"), R. Kaufman, Mayme Kelso, Edmund D. Lyons, Neil O' Brien, Etienne Girardot (as "Francis Flute"), Nat C. Goodwin (as "Nick Bottom, A weaver"), A. Heerman (as "Mustardseed"), T. Heerman (as "Moth"), Kathryn Hutchinson (as "Titania"), I. Kaufman (as "Cobweb"), R. Kaufman (as "Peaseblossom"), Mayme Kelso (as "Second Fairy"), Helene Lackaye (as "Hippolyta"), Edmund D. Lyons (as "Peter Quince, A carpenter"), Neil O'Brien (as "Egeus"), Boyd Putnam (as "Theseus"), Florence Rockwell (as "Hermia, Daughter of Egeus"), William T. Sampson (as "Tom Snout, A tinker"), Lillian Swain (as "Puck/Robin Goodfellow"), Etta Weir (as "Third Fairy"), White Whittlesey (as "Lysander"). Produced by Klaw & Erlanger.
- (1904) Stage Play: Sunday. Comedy. Written by Thomas Raceward. Directed by William Seymour. Hudson Theatre: 15 Nov 1904- Jan 1905 (closing date unknown/79 performances). Cast: Ethel Barrymore, Harrison Armstrong, Joseph Bennan, Virginia Buchanan, Charles Harbury, James Kearney, Bruce McRae, Herbert Percy, Anita Rothe, William T. Sampson, Edgar Selwyn. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1905) Stage Play: The School for Husbands. Comedy. Written by Hugh Stanislaus Stange. Featuring songs by Julian Edwards. Incidental music by Julian Edwards. Directed by Hugh Stanislaus Stange. Wallack's Theatre: 3 Apr 1905- May 1905 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Lucy Ashton, Henry Belasco, Charles Bowser, Bruce Delamater, Edward Dresser, Grace Filkins, Jameson Lee Finney, Alice Fischer (as "Lady Belinda Manners"), Arthur Forrest, Mrs. Goldfinch, Ida Jeffreys Goodfriend, Joseph Kilgour, Robinson Newbold, Wilfred North, William T. Sampson, Frances Stevens. Produced by F.C. Whitney.
- (1907) Stage Play: The Aero Club. Comedy. Written by Sydney Rosenfeld. Directed by Herbert Gresham. Criterion Theatre: 28 Jan 1907- Feb 1907 (closing date unknown/22 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, James H. Bradbury, Orme Caldara (as "Jack Chandler"), Samuel Coit, Lizzie Conway, Ada Gilman, Lulu Glaser, William Herbert, Anna Johnson, Frank E. Lamb, Edmund Lawrence, Harry Odlin, John J. Pierson, William T. Sampson, John F. Ward, Fritz Williams, Olive Wyndham. Produced by Klaw & Erlanger.
- (1907) Stage Play: The Silver Box. Written by John Galsworthy. Empire Theatre: 18 Mar 1907- Apr 1907 (closing date unknown/20 performances). Cast: Ethel Barrymore, Fanny L. Burt, Louis Eagan, William Evans, Eugene Jepson, James Kearney, Bruce McRae, Helen Mooney, Mary Nash, M.B. Pollock, Soldine Powel [credited as Soldene Powell], Harry Redding, Forrest Robinson, Anita Rothe, Hattie Russell, William T. Sampson, Dorothy Scherer. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1911) Stage Play: Trelawny of the 'Wells'. Comedy (revival). Written by Sir Arthur Wing Pinero. Directed by George A. Highland. Empire Theatre: 1 Jan 1911- Feb 1911 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Harry Barfoot (as "Mr. Ablett"), Ethel Barrymore (as "Miss Rose Trelawny"), Alice Beresford (as "Sarah"), George C. Boniface (as "Mr. James Telfer"), Constance Collier (as "Miss Imogen Parrott"), Charles Dalton (as "Mr. Tom Wrench"), Lawrence D'Orsay (as "Captain De Foenix"), Louise Drew (as "Miss Avonia Bunn"), Helen Freeman (as "Clara De Foenix"), James Kearney (as "O'Dwyer/The Stage Manager"), Charles Millward (as "Mr. Ferdinand Gadd"), Maud Milton (as "Mrs. Telfer/Miss Violet Sylvester"), Arthur B. Murray (as "Charles"), Eugene O'Brien (as "Mr. Arthur Gower"), Lydia Rachel (as "Mrs. Mossop"), Anita Rothe (as "Miss Trafalger Gower"), William T. Sampson (as "Mr. Augustus Colpoys"), Charles Walcott [credited as Charles Walcot] (as "Vice Chancellor Sir William Gower"). Produced by Charles Frohman.
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