- (1905 - 1923) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1905) Stage Play: Adrea. Drama/tragedy [return engagement]. Music by William Furst. Written by David Belasco and John Luther Long. Choreographed by Carl Marwig. Staged by David Belasco. Directed by Wilfred Buckland. Belasco Theatre: 20 Sep 1905- 7 Oct 1905 (18 performances). Cast: Mrs. Leslie Carter (as "Adrea, The Daughter of King Menethus"), Corah Adams (as "Iulia Doma, Adrea's Sister"), Edwin Bradley (as "Ensemble"), Edward Brown (as "Galba, Soldier of Adrea"), H.G. Carlton (as "Master of the Tower"), J.W. Carroll (as "Slave of the Whips/Ensemble"), Ernest Dale (as "Slave of the Queen's Door/Ensemble"), Maria Davis (as "Garda, The Egyptian Slave to Adrea"), Belle De Gez (as "Lelit, Tiring Slave to the Queen/Ensemble"), Frank De Gez (as "Ensemble"), Zara Delaro (as "Ensemble"), Lydian Durrett (as "A Bargeman"), James Edlam (as "Ensemble"), F.L. Evans (as "Var-igon, Follower of Kaeso/Ensemble"), Edna Griffin (as "Servant of the Tower/Ensemble"), Harold Guernsey (as "Page of the Senate"), George Harcourt (as "Caius Valgus, Consul/Ensemble"), Edwin Hardin (as "Crassus, An Augur from the college at Rome"), H. Hendrickson (as "Ensemble"), Harold Howard (as "Holy Nagar"), Charles Hungerford (as "The Shade of Menethus"), Teft Johnson (as "Zastus, Soldier of Adrea"), Louis Keller (as "Dyaixes, The Persian, an Ambassador of note"), Henry Francis Koser (as "Ensemble"), James Linhart (as "Ensemble"), Madeleine Livingston (as A Singing Bird/Ensemble"), Cornelia Lynds (as "Ensemble"), Franklin Mills (as "Herald of the Senate"), Charles Milward (as "Kaseo of Noricum, The Leader of a Barbarian Horde"), Grace Noble (as "Ensemble"), Lura Osborn (as "Lefta, Tiring Slave to the Queen/Ensemble"), Carel Parrish (as "Ensemble"), June Pelton (as "The Child Vasha"), Francis Powers (as "Mimus the Echo, A fool in the household of Iulia Doma") [final Broadway role], Calla Roberts (as "Myris, Tiring slave to the Queen/Ensemble"), Cornelia Roberts (as "Ensemble"), Gilmore Scott (as "Sylvestros/Ensemble/A Prince of Greece, an Ambassador of note"), Victor Seegars (as "Ensemble"), William Shay (as "A Mock Herald/Ensemble"), Willard Sterling (as "Thryssos, Master of Wild Horses from Thrakia"), Charles A. Stevenson (as "Arkissus of Frisia, Under Kaeso"), Elmore Stuart (as "Ensemble"), J.L. Van Ordstrand (as "Ensemble"), Fred Voke (as "Bram-Bora, From India, an Ambassador of Note/Ensemble"), Marshall Welch (as "Marcus Lecca, Princes of the Senate, a Consul") [final Broadway role], Gordon West (as "Idmondus, A Herald at the Palace"), Frank H. Westerton (as "Bevilaccas, A Licensed news-barrer") [Broadway debut], Eleanor Wilson (as "Ensemble"), Francis Woodward (as "Ensemble"), Charles Wright (as "Sigrad, Follower of Kaeso/Ensemble"). Produced by David Belasco.
- (1906) Stage Play: The Rose of the Rancho. Written by David Belasco and Richard Walton Tully. Directed by David Belasco. Belasco Theatre: 27 Nov 1906- 29 Jun 1907 (480 performances). Cast: Wayne Arey, Virgilio Arriaza, J.H. Benrimo, C.A. Burnett, Norbert Cills, Grace Gaylor Clark, Louise Coleman, Richard S. Conover, John W. Cope (as "Kinkaid"), Maria Davis, Frank De Felice, Vincent De Pascale, William Elliott, Julio Grau, Regino Lopez, Frank Losee, Marta Melean, Atalanta Nicolaides, Leonardo Piza Lopez, Francesco Recchio, Hamilton Revelle [credited as A. Hamilton Revelle], Charles Richman (as "Kearney"), Fermin Ruiz, Gilmore Scott, Frances Starr (as "Juanita"), Catherine Tower, Regina Weil, Frank H. Westerton, Candido Yllera, Salvatore Zito. Produced by David Belasco. Note: Filmed by Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as Rose of the Rancho (1914), and by Paramount Pictures as Rose of the Rancho (1936).
- (1908) Stage Play: The Patriot. Farce. Written by J. Hartley Manners and William Collier Sr.. Garrick Theatre: 23 Nov 1908- Apr 1909 (closing date unknown/160 performances). Cast: William Collier Sr. (as "Sir Augustus Plantagenet Armitage"), John B. Adam, Thomas Beauregard, William "Buster" Collier Jr., Helena Collier-Garrick, Max Esberg, Helen Hale, M.E. Kelly, Paula Marr, Thomas Martin, Reginald Mason, Rex McDougal, John Saville, Margaret Warren, Frank H. Westerton, Wallace Worsley. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1910) Stage Play: The Scandal. Written by Henri Bataille. Garrick Theatre: 17 Oct 1910- Oct 1910 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Trixie Allen, H. Kyrle Bellew, G. Harrison Carter, Virginia Chauvenot, Frank Connor, Viola Dale, Carlotta Doty, Bernard Fairfax, Edgar Franklin, Gladys Hanson, Stapleton Kent, W. Logan, Ffolliott Paget, Vincent Serrano, Ernest Stallard, Frank H. Westerton. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1910) Stage Play: Raffles, the Amateur Cracksman (Revival). Written by Eugene Wiley Presbrey. Based on the stories of E.W. Hornung. Gaiety Theatre: 1 Nov 1910- Nov 1910 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Kyrle Bellew, Claire Cassell, Frank Connor, Bernard Fairfax, Charles Hammond, Gladys Hanson, June May, Frank McCormack, William Moran, Ffolliott Paget, Ernest Stallard, Jane Tyrrell, Frank H. Westerton, Marsh Williams. Produced by Charles Frohman. Note: Previously filmed by Vitagraph Company of America as Raffles, the Amateur Cracksman (1905), then by Hyclass Producing Company/L. Lawrence Weber Photo Dramas Inc. as Raffles, the Amateur Cracksman (1917), then by Universal Pictures as Raffles: The Amateur Cracksman (1925), then by The Samuel Goldwyn Company [distributed by United Artists] as Raffles (1930), then, although filmed by Howard Productions [distributed by United Artists] as Raffles (1939), the playwright was not credited (the only version to not do so to date), and by Alameda Films [Mexico] as Raffles (1958). A TV adaption was produced by Yorkshire Television (YTV) [UK] in 1975.
- (1914) Stage Play: The Phantom Rival. Written by Ferenc Molnár. Belasco Theatre: 6 Oct 1914- Jan 1915 (closing date unknown/127 performances). Cast: Lila Barclay [final Broadway role], John Bedouin, Laura Hope Crews, Leo Ditrichstein, J.M. McNamee, Anna McNaughton, Lee Millar, Frank E. Norris, Louis Poiselli, Ethel Marie Sasse, Frank H. Westerton, Malcolm Williams. Produced by David Belasco.
- (1915) Stage Play: What Money Can't Buy. Written by George Broadhurst. Directed by George Broadhurst and Edward Elsner. 48th Street Theatre: 11 Oct 1915- Oct 1915 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Robert Cain, William Devereaux, George Fawcett, Frank Kemble-Cooper, William B. Mack, Anne Meredith, Adrian Rosley [credited as Adrian H. Rosely] (Broadway debut), Sydney Shields, Calvin Thomas, Gus Verace, Edith Campbell Walker, Frank H. Westerton, Mrs. Russ Whytall. Note: Filmed by Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as What Money Can't Buy (1917).
- (1916) Stage Play: The Tempest. Comedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Louis Calvert and John Corbin. Century Theatre: 24 Apr 1916- May 1916 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Reginald Barlow, Frank Bernard, Clinton Brooks, Wallace Brooks, Louis Calvert, Boyd Clark, Fred Esmelton, Arthur Grenville, George Hassell, Raymond H. Lee, Edwin Mordant, Harry Stanford, Frank H. Westerton, Alec Yanike, Cecil Yapp. Produced by Drama Society.
- (1916) Stage Play: Rich Man, Poor Man. Written by Maximilian Foster. Directed by Edward Elsner and Maximilian Foster. 48th Street Theatre: 5 Oct 1916- Nov 1916 (closing date unknown/44 performances). Cast: Geraldine Beck, John Bowers [final Broadway role], Rudolph Cameron, Helen Crane, Arthur Fitzgerald, Emily Fitzroy, Coates Gwynne, Marcia Harris, Brandon Hurst, Georgia Lawrence, William B. Mack, Jessie Ralph, Emmett Shackelford, Marie Wainwright, Frank H. Westerton. Produced by George Broadhurst. Note: Filmed by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation [later known as Paramount Pictures] as Rich Man, Poor Man (1918).
- (1917) Stage Play: Kitty Darlin'. Musical/romance. Book by Otto A. Harbach. Music by Rudolf Friml. Based on the play "Sweet Kitty Bellairs" by David Belasco, based on the novel by Egerton Castle. Musical Director: William Axt. Directed by Edward Royce. Casino Theatre: 7 Nov 1917- 17 Nov 1917 (14 performances). Cast: Edith Appleton, Rose Benedict, Frank Bradley, Peggy Brandon, Josephine Bryan, N.P. Bryan, Jane Buchanan, George Callahan, Helen Christie, Molly Christie, Bert Clark, H. Clark, Mary Comerford, S. Critcheson, Eleanor Daniels, Grace Dean, R.G. Elliott, C. Enisman, Sidonie Espero, Doris Faithful, Worthe Faulkner, Juanita Fletcher, Patricia Frewen, Glen Hall, Florence Haynes, Jackson Hines, Gertrude Hogan, William Hovel, Fayette Howard, Anton Ingaroa, Clare King, Olive Kingston, Louis LaVie, Charlotte Lenox, Shirley Love, Margaret May, Yetla Nicol, Alice Nielsen, Albert Noome, Ann Page, Walter Palm, Benjamin Rogers, H. Jess Smith, Muril Smither, Frank Sparling, Jeanne Sparry, R. St. John, Erna Steinway, Edwin Stevens, Mary Lee Stevens, Ruby Thomas, B. Tieman, Peggy Troland, Edward Watson, Frank H. Westerton. Produced by William Elliott, F. Ray Comstock and Morris Gest.
- (1918) Stage Play: Three Faces East. Written by Anthony Paul Kelly [earliest Broadway credit]. Cohan and Harris (moved to The Longacre Theatre from 17 Feb 1919- close): 13 Aug 1918- unknown (335 performances). Cast: Grace Ade, Emmett Corrigan (as "Valdar"), Herbert Evans (as "Thompson"), Fred J. Fairbanks, Marion Grey, Charles Harbury, Violet Heming, William Jeffrey, Harry Lambart, David L. Leonard, Mary Ilene Mack, Otto Niemeyer, Joseph Selman, Frank Sheridan, Frank H. Westerton, Cora Witherspoon (as "Miss Risdon"). Produced by Cohan & Harris. Note: Filmed by Cinema Corporation of America [distributed by Producers Distributing Corporation (PDC)] as Three Faces East (1926), and by Warner Bros. as Three Faces East (1930).
- (1921) Stage Play: The Champion. Comedy/farce. Written by A.E. Thomas and Thomas Louden. Directed by Sam Forrest. Longacre Theatre: 3 Jan 1921- Jun 1921 (closing date unknown/121 performances). Cast: Robert Lee Allen (as "Mr. Mooney"), Ann Andrews (as "Lady Elizabeth Galton"), Robert Ayrton (as "Marquis of Harroween"), Lucy Beaumont (as "Jane Burroughs"), Gordon Burby (as "Lord Brockington"), Horace Cooper (as "Earl of Chuffleigh"), Arthur Elliott (as "John Burroughs"), Rosalinde Fuller [credited as Rosalind Fuller] (as "Mary Burroughs"), Gerald Hamer (as "David Burroughs"), Harold Howard (as "Mr. Coykendall"), A.P. Kaye (as "Mayor of Knotley"), Grant Mitchell (as "William Burroughs"), Desiree Stempel (as "Antoinette"), Henry Warwick (as "Baron Halloway"), Frank H. Westerton [credited as Frank Westerton] (as "George Burroughs"), Tom Williams (as "Frank Smith"), Robert Williamson (as "Simmons"). Produced by 'Sam H. Harris (IV)'.
- (1922) Stage Play: It Is the Law. Melodrama. Written by Elmer Rice. Ritz Theatre: 29 Nov 1922- Mar 1923 (closing date unknown/125 performances). Cast: Charles P. Bates, Rose Burdick (as "Lillian"), John Burr, Joe De Stefani, Charles Goodrich, Arthur Hohl (as "Albert Woodruff"), Thomas Hood, William Ingersoll (as "Theodore Cummings"), Ralph Kellard, James Linhart, Alexander Onslow, Hans Robert, John Francis, Richard Stevenson, Alma Tell (as "Ruth"), Jack Thorne, Valerie Valaire, A.H. Van Buren (as "William Elliott"), Walter Walker, Frank H. Westerton (as "Edward Harley") [final Broadway role]. Produced by Samuel Wallach. Note: Filmed by Fox Film Corporation as It Is the Law (1924). Arthur Hohl reprised role in film (a 1922 Universal short shared the same title with no connection to the play).
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