- (1904- 1938?). Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- Glittering Gloria (1904). Musical comedy. Music by Bernard Rolt; Book by C.M.S. McLellan [credited as Hugh Morton]. Lyrics by Hugh Morton and Bernard Rolt. Featuring songs by Jean Schwartz and A. Baldwin Sloane. Featuring songs with lyrics by William Jerome and Edward Abeles. Daly's Theatre (moved to The Grand Opera House from 4 Apr 1904- close): 15 Feb 1904- Apr 1904 (closing date unknown/30 performances). Cast: Marie Allen, Percy Ames, Sybil Anderson, Katherine Black, Viola Clayton, Belva Don Kersley, Gertrude Douglas, Lotta Ettinger, Edna Farrell, Amy Forsland, E. Lovat Fraser, Edward Gore, Ferdinand Gottschalk (as "Zebedee Poskett, a rural solicitor"), Olive Haskell, John Hendy, Flora Hengler, May Hengler, May Hopkins, Ethel Intropidi (as "Chorus") [Broadway debut], Eugene O'Rourke, Carol Oty, Adelaide Prince, Jessie Radcliffe, Phyllis Rankin, Adele Ritchie (as "Gloria Grant, known as Glittering Gloria"), Forrest Robinson (as "Colonel Pasquale Gallegher, from El Paso, Texas"), Frieda Salber, George A. Schiller, Cyril Scott, Lottie Vernon, Marie L. Wilson. Produced by John C. Fisher and Thomas W. Ryley.
- (1904) Stage Play: A Venetian Romance. Musical comedy. Music by Frederic Coit Wright. Book by Cornelia Osgood Tyler. Lyrics by Frederic Coit Wright. Musical Direction by A.M. Langstaff. Featuring songs by Ted Snyder, T. Mayo Geary, Ed J. Coleman and Harry Frantzen. Featuring songs with lyrics by Ed Rose, Harry J. Breen, Harry Wilson and Joseph C. Farrell. Directed by Al Holbrook. Knickerbocker Theatre: 2 May 1904- 28 May 1904 (28 performances). Cast: Adele Carson, May Conwell, Genevieve Day, Daisy Dobrinor, Gertrude Eulalie, Cassius Freeborn, Mabel Hite, Margo Hobart, Ethel Intropidi, Josie Intropodi, Harry Lane, Harry MacDonough, Ignacio Martinetti, Carroll McComas (as "Selina") [Broadway debut], Neil McNeil, Joseph Miron, Walter Percival, P.B. Pratt, Edd Redway, Harry Short, Frank Smiley, W.C. Smith, Annabelle Whitford, William Zinell. Produced by Frank L. Perley.
- (1905) Stage Play: The Rogers Brothers in Ireland. Musical. Music by Max Hoffman Sr. Lyrics by George V. Hobart. Directed by Ned Wayburn. Liberty Theatre (moved to The New York Theatre on 29 Jan 1906 to close): 4 Sep 1905- 10 Mar 1906 (106 performances). Cast: Polly Addison (as "Chorus"), Daisy Ashton (as "Chorus"), Florence Carrette (as "Chorus"), Lillian Collins (as "Nora"), John Conroy (as "Dr. Philpot-Gavan O'Gaffeny"), Corinne (as "Alice O'Grady"), Gail Crandall (as "Chorus"), Julie Curtis (as "Chorus"), Lynn D'Arcy (as "Maggie/Chorus"), Maurice Darcy (as "Gerald Fitzgerald"), Bessie De Voie (as "Hannah Dooley"), George Earle (as "The Piper"), Julia Eastman (as "Sheila Rhue"), Marguerite Farrell (as "Chorus"), Frances Folsom (as "Chorus"), Arthur V. Gibson (as "Murty"), Grace Grindell (as "Lizzie/Chorus"), Beth Harrison (as "Chorus"), Clara Inge (as "Chorus"), Ethel Intropidi (as "Mary O'Gaffeny"), Josie Intropodi (as "Anastasia O'Hoolihan"), Bessie Kyle (as "Chorus"), Elona Leonard (as "Chorus"), Charles F. McCarthy (as "Dan O'Hoolihan"), Marie McDonald (as "Chorus"), Abita Morgan (as "Chorus"), Edward O'Connor (as "Pat Lynch"), Gus Rogers (as "Heinrich Punk"), Max Rogers (as "Nicholas Knox"), Lottie Sennett (as "Chorus"), Pauline Thorne (as "Peggy/Chorus"), William Torpey (as "Pat Shields"). Produced by Klaw & Erlanger.
- Judgment Day (1934). Drama. Written by Elmer Rice. Directed by Elmer Rice. Belasco Theatre: 12 Sep 1934- Dec 1934 (closing date unknown/93 performances). Cast: Carroll Ashburn (as "Dr. Wolfgang Bathory"), Lee Baker, William H. Barwald, St. Clair Bayfield, Raymond Bramley, Peggy Burt, Romaine Callender, Horace Casselberry, Lionel Dante, Brice Disque, Jr., Edward Downes, Olga Druce (as "Sonia Kuman"), Charles Durand, Ted Erwin, Walter Greaza (as "George Khitov"), W.J. Hackett, Edward Hill, Ferdi Hoffman, Ethel Intropidi (as "Marthe Teodorova"), House Jameson (as "Grigori Vesnic"), Joseph Julian, Ryder Keane, Louis Le Bay, Philip Leigh, Frank Lovejoy (as "Jorga"), Edward Mann, Fania Marinoff, James Moore, Thomas B. O'Connor, Robert Rice, Hans Robert, Mark Schweid, Vincent Sherman (as "Conrad Noli"), Aage Steenshorne Vidin St. John Terrell, William Toubin, Leslie Urbach, Josephine Victor, Eric Wollencott. Produced by Elmer Rice.
- Arms and the Girl (1916). Written by Grant Stewart and Robert M. Baker. Directed by Paul Dickey. Fulton Theatre: 27 Sep 1916- Dec 1916 (closing date unknown/77 performances). Cast: Fay Bainter, Francis Byrne, Paul Cazeneuve, H.F. DeMont, Karl Dietz, J. Malcolm Dunn, Marie Hassell, Ethel Intropidi, Suzanne Jackson, Cyril Scott, Henry Vogel. Produced by William H. Harris Jr. Note: Filmed by Famous Players Film Company (Jesse Lasky later known as Paramount Pictures), as Arms and the Girl (1917) starring Billie Burke.
- American Landscape (1938). Drama. Written by Elmer Rice. Directed by Elmer Rice. Cort Theatre: 3 Dec 1938- Jan 1939 (closing date unknown/43 performances). Cast: Jules Bennett (as "Paul Kutno"), Donald Cook (as "Gerald Spinner"), John Hammond Dailey (as "Patrick O'Brien") [final Broadway role], Pierre D'Ennery (as "Henri Dupont"), Charles Dingle (as "Captain Samuel Dale"), Isobel Elsom (as "Moll Flanders"), Lillian Foster (as "Harriet Beecher Stowe"), Phoebe Foster (as "Carlotta Dale"), Rachel Hartzell (as "Frances Dale Spinner"), Alfred Hesse (as "Klaus Stillgebauer"), Ethel Intropidi (as "Abby Kutno"), George Macready (as "Captain Anthony Dale"), Con MacSunday (as "Captain Heinrich Kleinschmidt"), Howard Miller (as "William Fiske"), Theodore Newton (as "Joe Kutno"), Patricia Palmer (as "Betty Kutno"), Emory Richardson (as "Reverend Jasper Washington"), Philip Singer (as "Abraham Cohen"), Aage Steenshorne (as "Nils Karenson"), Charles Waldron (as "Captain Frank Dale"), Sylvia Weld (as "Constance Dale"). Produced by The Playwrights' Company (Maxwell Anderson, S.N. Behrman, Elmer Rice, Robert E. Sherwood, Sidney Howard).
- (1932) Stage Play: Dinner at Eight. Comedy. Written by George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber. Assistant Director: Robert B. Sinclair. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Music Box Theatre: 22 Oct 1932- May 1933 (closing date unknown/232 performances). Cast: George Alison, Ann Andrews, Clarence Bellair, Marguerite Churchill (as "Paula Jordan"), Constance Collier, Margaret Dale (as "Hattie Loomis"), Malcolm Duncan, Austin Fairman, Janet Fox, Gregory Gaye, Robert Griffith, Paul Harvey, Vera Hurst, Ethel Intropidi, Sam Levene (as "Max Kane"), Frank Manning, William McFadden, Mary Murray, Hans Robert (as "Ed Loomis"), Cesar Romero (as "Ricci"), James Seeley (as "The Waiter"), Conway Tearle, Dorothy Walters (as "Mrs. Wendel") [final Broadway role], Judith Wood (as "Kitty Packard"), Olive Wyndham (as "Lucy Talbot") [final Broadway role]. Produced by Sam Harris. Note: Filmed as Dinner at Eight (1933), Dinner at Eight (1989), Dinner at Eight (2007).
- (1917) Stage Play: Losing Eloise. Written by Frederick J. Jackson [credited as Fred Jackson]. Harris Theatre: 17 Nov 1917- Jan 1918 (closing date unknown/72 performances). Cast: Francis Byrne, 'Charles Cherry (I)', Charles Hanbury, Violet Heming, Ethel Intropidi, S. Harry Irvine, Charles Mather, Lucile Watson. Produced by Selwyn & Co.
- (1923) Stage Play: The Guilty One. Drama. Written by Michael Morton and Peter Traill. Directed by Edward Elsner. Selwyn Theatre: 20 Mar 1923- Apr 1923 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: Charles Dalton (as "Mr. Seaton Davies"), Florence Edney (as "Annie"), Pauline Frederick (as "Irene Short"), Ethel Intropidi (as "Madge Ellis"), Noel Leslie (as "Dick Raston"), Charles Waldron (as "Ronald Short"), Henry Warwick (as "Dr. Brassey"). Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1930) Stage Play: Apron Strings. Comedy. Written by Dorrance Davis. Directed by Earle Boothe. Bijou Theatre: 17 Feb 1930- Sep 1930 (closing date unknown/224 performances). Cast: Audray Dale (as "Barbara Olwell"), Jefferson De Angelis (as "Ezra Hunniwell"), Ethel Intropidi (as "Inez Wakefield"), Josie Intropodi (as "Hester"), Frank Monroe (as "John Olwell"), Roger Pryor (as "Daniel Curtis"), Maidel Turner (as "Mrs. Olwell"). Produced by Forrest C. Haring. Note: Filmed by Universal Pictures as Virtuous Husband (1931).
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