- (1908) Stage Play: Three Twins. Musical.
- (1908) Stage Play: The American Idea. Musical comedy. Book by George M. Cohan. Music by George M. Cohan. Lyrics by George M. Cohan. Orchestra under the direction of George A. Nichols. Music orchestrated by Charles J. Gebest. Featuring "They Always Follow Me" by Jean Schwartz and William Jerome. Featuring "The Garden That Blooms for You" by Milton Lusk and Willliam Kendall Evans. Music for "March Finale" by Charles J. Gebest. Directed by George M. Cohan. New York Theatre: 5 Oct 1908- 28 Nov 1908 (64 performances). Cast: George Beban (as "Pierre Souchet"), Trixie Friganza (as "Mrs. Waxtapper"), Gilbert Gregory (as "Herman Budmeyer"), Walter Le Roy (as "Daniel Sullivan"), Miss Alexander (as "Ensemble"), M. Avery (as "Ensemble"), Miss Barron (as "Ensemble"), Carrie Bowman (as "Catherine Budmeyer"), Miss Brooks (as "Ensemble"), M. Conway (as "Ensemble"), Miss Courtney (as "Ensemble"), Miss Coyle (as "Ensemble"), Robert Daily (as "Stephen Hustleford"), M. Day (as "Ensemble"), M. Doyle (as "Ensemble"), Miss V. Earl (as "Ensemble"), M. Fink (as "Ensemble"), Harold Forbes (as "Charlie Sullivan"), Miss Ford (as "Ensemble"), Bessie Friganza (as "Ensemble"), Miss Gilbert (as "Ensemble"), Miss Glasson (as "Ensemble"), Harold Gordon (as "Bellboy"), Rosie Green (as "Vera"), Stella Hammerstein (as "Edythe Yellowback"), Miss Harries (as "Ensemble"), Miss Hartford (as "Ensemble"), Miss Hartman (as "Ensemble"), Miss Hay (as "Ensemble"), Miss Hilton (as "Ensemble"), M. Lasher (as "Ensemble"), Miss Lee (as "Ensemble"), Miss LeRoy (as "Ensemble"), M. Levallin (as "Ensemble"), M. Lorraine (as "Ensemble"), Edith MacBride (as "The Mysterious Girl"), Hugh Mack (as "The Mysterious Man"), Miss Martin (as "Ensemble"), Minna Martrit (as "Ensemble"), Miss F. Martyn (as "Ensemble"), M. McCormick (as "Ensemble"), Miss McNown (as "Ensemble"), Lola Merril (as "Nellie Sullivan"), Miss Monroe (as "Ensemble"), M. Monte (as "Ensemble"), Miss Newell (as "Ensemble"), M. Rawley (as "Ensemble"), Miss E. Ross (as "Ensemble"), Miss F. Ross (as "Ensemble"), M. Shattick (as "Ensemble"), M. Shields (as "Ensemble"), Miss Snyder (as "Ensemble"), M. Stevens (as "Ensemble"), Richard Taber (as "Herman Budmeyer"), Richard Tobin (as "Officier"), Miss Troutman (as "Ensemble"), Gertie Vanderbilt (as "Violette"), Mr. Waite (as "Ensemble"), Miss Watson (as "Ensemble"), Miss Whiteford (as "Ensemble"), Miss Wilson (as "Ensemble"). Produced by George M. Cohan and Sam Harris.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Pearl Maiden. Musical. Music by Harry Archer[credited as Harry Auracher]. Libretto by Earle C. Anthony and Arthur F. Kales. Musical Director: Silvio Hein. Musical Staging by James Gorman. Directed by Al Holbrook. New York Theatre: 22 Jan 1912- 10 Feb 1912 (24 performances). Cast: Burrell Barbaretto (as "Bob Norris, in love with Loraine"), Marie Benton (as "Ensemble"), Henry Bergman (as "Bilge/Alfonse, Kaliko's chef"), Winifred Browne (as "Ensemble"), Herbert A. Burnham (as "Ensemble"), Sadie Carr (as "Ensemble"), Kitty Collier (as "Ensemble"), Lottie Crossland (as "Ensemble"), Maude Crossland (as "Ensemble"), Dan Dale (as "Ensemble"), Lillian Davis (as "Ensemble"), Jefferson De Angelis (as "Pinkerton Kerr, the wireless operator, Mona Island"), Martha Dean (as "Ensemble"), L.J. De Bold (as "Cockeye Morgan"), Dorothy Dunn (as "Ensemble"), Phyllis Erroll (as "Ensemble"), Marie Farrell (as "Ensemble"), Nell Feltas (as "Ensemble"), Alice M. Gibbons (as "Ensemble"), Margie Graham (as "Ensemble"), Patsy Hamilton (as "Ensemble"), F. Holmes(as "Peg Leg Jukes, captain of Nadine's crew"), Maureen Hubin (as "Ensemble"), Thomas LeMode (as "Ensemble"), Daisy Leon (as "Talulu, Kaliko's daughter, the Cannibal Princess"), Grace Lloyd (as "Ensemble"), Walter Lysat (as "Vincenzo"), Ethel Lytle (as "Ensemble"), Albertine Marr (as "Ensemble"), Jerry McAuliffe (as "Gideon Slim, a pearl trader and adventurer"), Joe Murphy (as "Ensemble"), Gordon R. Newman (as "Ensemble"), Carrie Poltz (as "Ensemble"), Florrie Poltz (as "Ensemble"), Russell Price (as "Ensemble"), Charles Prince (as "Kaliko ,King of Powi Island"), Roy Pruette, Jr. (as "Ensemble"), Edna Richardson (as "Ensemble"), Elsa Ryan (as "Loraine, Sharpe's daughter"), Nat Saunders (as "Ensemble"), Gloria Starr (as "Ensemble"), Pauline Sterling (as "Ensemble"), Charles J. Stine (as "Veritas Sharpe, president of the International Pearl Company"), Richard Taber [credited as Richard Tabor] (as "Jack Sharp, Sharpe's son"), John W. Walker (as "Ensemble"), Ella Warner (as "Ensemble"), Davis Wheeler (as "Anaka, a native servant"), Grace Wickahm (as "Ensemble"), Fred Wilson (as "Ensemble"), Nellie Young (as "Ensemble"), Flora Zabelle (as "Nadine, the Pearl Maiden"). Produced by Weich and Aarons.
- (1912) Stage Play: Little Miss Brown. Comedy.
- (1913) Stage Play: Kiss Me Quick. Book by Philip Bartholomae. Directed by E.M. Bostwick and Philip Bartholomae. 48th Street Theatre: 26 Aug 1913- Sep 1913 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: Charles Ashley, Arthur Aylesworth, Eugene Bottler, Emily Calloway, Louise Drew, Sadie Harris, Mary Hastings, Robert Kelly, Edward Kummerou, Laura Laird, Helen Lowell, Migno McGibeny, J.J. Sambrook, Fred Santley, Richard Taber. Produced by Philip Bartholomae.
- (1916) Stage Play: Coat-tales.
- (1917) Stage Play: The Willow Tree.
- (1917) Stage Play: The Land of the Free.
- (1918) Stage Play: Follow the Girl. Musical comedy. Based on material and lyrics by Henry Martyn Blossom. Music by Zoel Parenteau. Musical Direction by Frank Tours. Featuring songs by Sigmund Romberg and Buddy G. DeSylva. Additional lyrics by Harold Atteridge. Choreography by Walter Brooks. Directed by J.C. Huffman. Lew Fields' 44th Street Roof Garden (moved to The Broadhurst Theatre from 18 Mar 1918 to close): 2 Mar 1918- 23 Mar 1918 (25 performances). Cast: Roy Adams, Claude E. Archer, Anna Berg, Jane Berlyn, George L. Bickel, Walter Catlett (as "Buck Sweeney"), Charles Clear, William Danforth, Peggy Dempsey, Tom Doolan, Nancy Everett, William Everett, Rita Faust, Harry Fender, Dorothy Godfrey, Byrd Goolsby, Bessie Gross, Jobyna Howland, Mae Jennings, Mercedes Lorenze, Maurie Madison, Ernestine Myers, Ralph Nairn, Nita Naldi, Robert Emmett O'Connor, Helen O'Day, Courtney Palmer, Frank Peters, Phyllis Prince, Jean Rebara, Ethel Rinehart, Aileen Rooney, Frances Ross, Alice Ryan, Louise Saunders, Ivy Sherer, Albert Shrubb, Marie Stone, Richard Taber, Eileen Van Biene, Claire Vernon, Ann Warrington, Grace Weeks, Louise White, Arthur Wilson. Produced by Raymond Hitchcock and E. Ray Goetz.
- (1918) Stage Play: Another Man's Shoes.
- (1918) Stage Play: The Voice of McConnell. Comedy.
- (1919) Stage Play: A Good Bad Woman.
- (1920) Stage Play: Mrs. Jimmie Thompson. Comedy.
- (1920) Stage Play: Blue Bonnet. Comedy. Written by George Scarborough. Princess Theatre: 28 Aug 1920- Oct 1920 (closing date unknown/73 performances). Cast: Neil Burton (as "Jim Cooksey"), Robert Harrison (as "Judge Stegall"), Mattie Keene (as "Mrs. Gilstrap"), Helen Lowell (as "Miss Sallie Jenkins"), Edgar Nelson (as "Jep Clayton"), Richard Taber (as "Terry Mack"), Mona Thomas, Ernest Truex (as "Billy Burleson") Maria Ziccardi (as "Cuca"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1925) Stage Play: Is Zat So? Comedy. Written by James Gleason and Richard Taber. Cast: Robert Armstrong (as "Eddie "Chick" Cowan"), Tom Brown (as "Master James Blackburn Parker"), Marie Chambers (as "Susan Blackburn Parker"), Marjorie Crossland (as "Marie Mestretti") [Broadway debut], James Gleason (as "A.B. "Hap" Hurley"), John C. King (as "Robert Parker"), William London (as "Smith"), Victor Morley (as "Major, the Hon. Maurice Fitz-Stanley"), Eleanor Parker (as "Grace Hobart"), Carola Parson (as "Angie Van Alsten"), Duncan Penwarden (as "Fred Hobart"), Jack Perry (as "John Duffy"), Sidney Riggs (as "C. Clinton Blackburn"), Jo Wallace (as "Florence Hanley"). Produced by Earle Boothe. Note: Filmed as by Fox Film Corp. as Is Zat So? (1927) and by Paramount Pictures as Two Fisted (1935).
- (1928) Stage Play: Ringside. Written by Edward E. Paramore Jr., Hyatt Daab and George Abbott. Directed by George Abbott. Broadhurst Theatre: 29 Aug 1928- Sep 1928 (closing date unknown/37 performances). Cast: Laurel Adams, Suzanne Caubaye, Warren Colston, Harry Cooke (as "Phil"), Ashley Cooper, Joseph Crehan (as "Sid Durham"), Carlo De Angelo, Brian Donlevy (as "Huffy"), William Franklin, Robert Gleckler (as "John Zelli"), Yvonne Grey, Dan E. Hanlon, Kaye Hastings, Donald Heywood, James Horgan, James Lane, Harriet E. MacGibbon (as "Doris O'Connell"), John Meehan (as "Peter Murray"), Packey O'Gatty, J. Ascher Smith (as "Radio Announcer"), Richard Taber (as "Bobby Murray"), Frank Verigun, Charles Wagenheim (as "Joe"), William F. Walker, Bobbe Weeks, Craig Williams, George J. Williams. Produced by Gene Buck. Note: Filmed as Night Parade (1929).
- (1929) Stage Play: Nigger Rich (The Big Shot). Comedy. Written by John McGowan. Directed by John McGowan. Royale Theatre: 20 Sep 1929- Sep 1929 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: Don Beddoe (as "Blake") [Broadway debut], John A. Butler (as "Joe Burns"), Eric Dressler (as "Mike Kelly"), Elvia Enders (as "Helen Page"), Helen Flint (as "Nina Welman"), Franklyn Fox (as "Ray Cole"), Adelaide Hibbard (as "Mrs. Mason"), Rikel Kent (as "Martin"), William Lemuels (as "Tucker"), Roderick Maybee (as "Denning"), Richard Taber (as "Gunny Jones"), Spencer Tracy (as "Eddie Perkins"), Gene West (as "Gates"). Produced by Lee Shubert.
- (1935) Stage Play: Battleship Gertie. Farce.
- (1935) Stage Play: A Journey By Night. Drama. Written by Arthur Goodrich from the German of Leo Perutz. Directed by Robert B. Sinclair. Shubert Theatre: 16 Apr 1935- Apr 1935 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Sarah Allen (as "Guest at the Night Bar"), Hobart Amory (as "Guardsman"), George Barr (as "Policeman"), Mimi Bontemps (as "Hedwig"), Jane Buchanan (as "Janet Fleming"), Eduardo Ciannelli (as "Max"), Martin Corne (as "Guest at the Night Bar"), Tom Coyle Guest at the Night Bar"), Isabel Delehanty (as "Trudie"), Ann Dere (as "Guest at the Night Bar"), Annette Downes (as "Vilma"), Harold Eidelseim (as "Guest at the Night Bar"), Jack Hartley (as "Schimke"), Nicholas Joy, Elizabeth Kendall (as "Anna"), Waldemar Klavun (as "Otto"), Jerome Leng (as "Guest at the Night Bar"), Greta Maren (as "Claire"), Kate Mayhew (as "Weinigl"), Joseph McInerney (as "Police Officer"), John Meehan (as "Guest at the Night Bar"), Fuller Mellish (as "Fritz"), Mary Murray (as "Hilda"), P. Phillips (as "Guest at the Night Bar"), Francis Pierlot (as "Adolph"), John Ray (as "Guest at the Night Bar"), Otis Schaeffer (as "Lisa"), James Stewart (as "Carl"), Beatrice Swanson (as "Julie"), Richard Taber (as "Ferdie"), Albert Dekker (as "Franz Urban") [credited as Albert Van Dekker], Frank Wilcox (as "Warren Fleming"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1935) Stage Play: Knock on Wood. Comedy.
- (1935) Stage Play: A Slight Case of Murder. Comedy.
- (1936) Stage Play: Mid-West. Drama.
- (1936) Stage Play: Iron Men. Drama.
- (1937) Stage Play: Behind Red Lights. Drama.
- (1937) Stage Play: Something for Nothing. Comedy.
- (1938) Stage Play: Window Shopping. Comedy. Written by Louis E. Schecter and Norman Clark. Directed by Arthur Sircom. Longacre Theatre: 23 Dec 1938- Jan 1939 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: Marjorie Blair (as "Nurse"), Ruth Conley (as "Mrs. Snodgrass"), Alice Fleming (as "Miss Doolittle"), Franklyn George (as "Mr. Simpson"), W.J. Hackett (as "Inspector Kennedy"), Philip Huston (as "Jack Garfield"), Ruth Lee (as "Janet Dixon"), Edith Leslie (as "Penelope"), Tony Lord (as "McGinty"), Donald MacKenzie (as "Judge Polk"), Jean Mann (as "Miss Miller"), Patricia Rice (as "Secretary"), Gerta Rozan (as "Trudy Huber"), Phillip M. Sheridan (as "Walsh"), George Sidney (as "Herman Garfield") [final Broadway role], George Spaulding (as "Mr. Talbot"), George Spelvin (as "Photographer"), Ethel Strickland (as "Mrs. Stansbury"), Richard Taber (as "Ned Korn"), Ann Thomas (as "Molly Moran"), Solly Ward (as "Matson"), Mortimer Weldon (as "Mr. Frisby") [final Broadway role]. Produced by Thomas Kilpatrick.
- (1939) Stage Play: Off to Buffalo. Written by Max Liebman and Allen Boretz. Scenic Design by Donald Oenslager. Directed by Melville Burke. Ethel Barrymore Theatre: 21 Feb 1939- Feb 1939 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Matt Briggs, Frank Camp, Nat Cantor, Peggy Chamberlain, Dudley Clements (as "Johnson"), Joe Cook (as "Gus Delaney"), Fay Courtney, Hume Cronyn (as "Harry Quill"), George Dewey, William Dewey, Edmund Dorsay, Joan Engel, Otto Hulett (as "Gabby O'Keefe"), James Kelso, Burton Lewis, Fred Lightner, Elizabeth Love, Martell Brothers, G. Albert Smith (as "McChesney"), Richard Taber (as "Mannheim"), Henry Tobias, Luba Wesoly, Albert West, Harold Whalen. Produced by Albert Lewis.
- (1942) Stage Play: Lily of the Valley.
- (1943) Stage Play: Tomorrow the World. Drama.
- (1946) Stage Play: Wonderful Journey. Comedy. Written by Harry Segall. Scenic Design by Raymond Sovey. Costume Design by Bianca Stroock. Directed by Frank Emmons Brown. Coronet Theatre: 25 Dec 1946- 1 Jan 1947 (9 performances). Cast: Wallace Acton (as "Messenger 7013"), Fay Baker (as "Julia Farnsworth"), Sidney Blackmer (as "Mr. Jordan"), Robert Caldwell (as "Radio Announcer/Doctor"), Hal Conklin (as "Tony Abbott"), Carmen Costi (as "A Workman"), Stephen Elliott (as "Handler"), Jean Gillespie (as "Bette Logan"), Barry Kelley (as "Williams"), Michael Lewin (as "2nd Escort/Trainer"), Philip Loeb (as "Max Levene"), Donald Murphy (as "Joe Pendleton"), Phil Stein (as "1st Escort/Plain-Clothesman"), Ann Sullivan (as "Susie"), Richard Taber (as "Ames/Lefty"), Richard Temple (as "Ames"). Produced by Theron Bamberger. Produced in association with Richard Skinner.
- (1949) Stage Play: Mrs. Gibbons' Boys. Written by Will Glickman and Joseph Stein. Scenic Design by John Root. Costume Design by John Robert Lloyd. Directed by George Abbott. Music Box Theatre: 4 May 1949- 7 May 1949 (5 performances). Cast: Edward Andrews (as "Woodrow Grupp"), Loïs Bolton (as "Mrs. Peggy Gibbons"), Richard Carlyle (as "Francis X. Gibbons"), Francis Compton (as "Lester MacMichaels"), Royal Dano (as "Ernie "Horse" Wagner"), William David (as "Coles"), Glenda Farrell (as "Myra Ward"), Tom Lewis (as "Rudy Gibbons"), Helen Mayon (as "Pearl"), Richard Taber (as "Mr. Rausch"), Ray Walston (as "Rodla Gibbons"). Produced by George Abbott.
- (February 15, 1926 - September 1926) James Gleason and his play, "Is Zat So?" was performed at the Apollo Theatre in London, England with James Gleason, Robert Armstrong, George Relph, Amy Brandon Thomas, George Curzon, Marjorie Crossland, Peter Dearing, Jack Parry, and Jo Wallace in the cast.
- (November 16, 1942) He acted in Major Robert Presnel's play, "Her First Murders," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio with Zasu Pitts, St. Clair Bayfield, Oliver Thorndike, Joseph Caskey, Merle Maddern, John Parrish, Ann Mason, Osna Palmer, Tito Vuolo, Frank Milton, George Spaulding, Alfred Webster, and William Challee in the cast. The play is based on a novel by Torry Chanslor. Cleon Throckmorton was set designer. Lange was Miss Pitts' costume designer. Marion Gering was director and producer. Victor Payne Jennings was also producer.
- (July 1948) James Gleason and his play, "Is Zat So?," was performed at the Ogunquit Playhouse in Ogunquit, Maine with Frank McHugh in the cast.
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