- (1900- 1913?). Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1900) Stage Play: The Belle of Bohemia.
- (1901) Stage Play: The New Yorkers. Musical. Music by Ludwig Englander. Book by Glen MacDonough. Lyrics by George V. Hobart. Musical Director: Selle Simonson. Featuring songs by Jackson Gouraud. Featuring songs with lyrics by George Sidney. Scenic Design by D. Frank Dodge and Ernest Albert. Costume Design by Caroline Seidle. Directed by George W. Lederer. Herald Square Theatre: 7 Oct 1901- 30 Nov 1901 (64 performances). Cast: Jessie Banks (as "Chorus"), Kathryn Bartlett (as "Calypso"), Rose Beaumont (as "Sallie Waters"), Gertrude Blanke (as "Chorus"), William Cameron (as "Alkali Ike"), Marguerite Clark (as "Mary Lamb"), Idalene Cotton (as "Olga Patoff"), Dan Daly (as "Upson Downes"), Isabel D'Armond (as "Clorinda"), Mildred De Vere (as "Chorus"), Belva Don Kersley (as "Chorus"), Virginia Earle (as "Olive Green"), Thomas Evans (as "Bryton Beach"), Geraldine Fair (as "Chorus"), Frank Farrington (as "Herr Fitzenstatts"), James A. Furey (as "Bobby Bobbett"), William Gould (as "Lorenzo Lenz"), Powers Gouraud (as "G. Reginald Dobbs"), Nell Gwenn (as "Chorus"), Ethel Jewett (as "Chorus"), Pauline Karmen (as "Chorus"), Anna Laughlin (as "Lottie Lee"), William Lavine (as "Dr. Kerr"), Nick Long (as "Paul Patoff"), Tessie Mooney (as "Cleo"), Florence Parker (as "Clytie"), Carrie E. Perkins (as "Jennie O'Jones"), Ruby Reid (as "Chorus"), George A. Schiller (as "De Long Green"), Vernie Snyder (as "Chorus"), Frank Tannehill (as "Ricardo"), Fred Titus (as "R. Witherington Bobbs"), Edwin Wilson. Produced by George W. Lederer.
- (1902) Stage Play: The Wild Rose. Musical comedy. Music by Ludwig Englander. Book by Harry B. Smith and George V. Hobart. Lyrics by Harry B. Smith and George V. Hobart. Musical Direction by Frederic Solomon. Featuring songs with lyrics by William H. Penn, Ren Shields [earliest Broadway credit] and Clifton Crawford. Additional lyrics by William Jerome, Junie McCree, Cecil Mack, John Gilroy and Vincent Bryan. Additional music by Harry Linton, Will Marion Cook, Harry von Tilzer, Ben Jerome, Melville Ellis and Jean Schwartz. Scenic Design by D. Frank Dodge. Costume Design by Caroline Seidle. Dances arranged by Adolph Neuberger. Directed by George W. Lederer. Knickerbocker Theatre: 5 May 1902- 30 Aug 1902 (136 performances). Cast: Madge Adae (as "Diane D'Ivry"), Marion Alexander (as "La Boulotte"), George Ali (as "Baby"), Neva Aymer (as "Michelline"), Theresa Barron (as "Lena"), David Bennett (as "Lieutenant Marcel de Talleyrand-Perigord"), Irene Bentley (as "Rose Romany"), Irene Bishop (as "Fanchonette"), William Wallace Black (as "Count von Lahn/Scipio"), Minna Blackman (as "Lisa"), Madge Brooks (as "La Radieuse"), Marie Cahill (as "Vera von Lahn"), Viola Carlstedt (as "Lieutenant Goetz"), Marguerite Clark (as "Lieutenant Gaston Gardennes"), Ma Belle Davis (as "Cigale"), Louise De Rigney (as "Lieutenant Bourbon"), Belva Don Kersley (as "Germinie"), Teddie DuCoe (as "Gretchen"), Elsie Ferguson (as "Philomele"), Evelyn Florence (as "Vashti"), Mazie Follette (as "Petite Singe"), Edwin Foy (as "Paracelsus Noodles"), Ida Gabrielle (as "Rafael"), Archie Guerin (as "Fritz"), Averell Harris (as "Lieutenant Walther"), Albert Hart (as "Mahomet"), Charles Hooker (as "Lieutenant Pierre de Rastignac"), Helga Howard (as "Beppo"), Ethel Jewett (as "La Joyeuse"), Louis Kelso (as "Lieutenant Henri St. Bris"), Elba Kenny (as "Lieutenant Charlevoix"), Richard Lambert (as "Major Hauptmann"), V.H. Lee (as "Lieutenant Conrad"), David Lythgoe (as "Rudolph von Walden"), Hazel Manchester (as "Barbara"), Madge Marston (as "Eve Bonheur"), Junie McCree (as "Victor Hugo de Brie"), Rube Miller (as "Lieutenant Franz von Richter"), Charles Morton (as "Lieutenant Leopold"), E.H. O'Connor (as "Aristotle"), Carrie E. Perkins (as "Mirabel"), Nina Randall (as "La Rouleuse"), Mollie Sherwood (as "Rosalie"), Maida Van Buren (as "Rigolette"), Mai Walker (as "Lieutenant Drachenfels"). Produced by George W. Lederer.
- (1903) Stage Play: Mr. Pickwick. Musical. Music by Manuel Klein [earliest Broadway credit]. Book by Charles Klein. Based on the book by Charles Dickens. Lyrics by Grant Stewart. Featuring songs with lyrics by Hermann Klein. Featuring songs by George Spink. Directed by George F. Marion. Herald Square Theatre (moved to The Grand Opera House from 27 Apr 1903 to close): 19 Jan 1903- May 1903 (closing date unknown/73 performances). Cast: J.K. Adams, Guy H. Bartlett, Digby Dell, Laura Joyce Bell, George Chapman, Marguerite Clark, Augustus Coletti, Philip Connor, Mary Davis, Grace Fisher, Louise Gunning, Ruth Halbert, DeWolf Hopper Sr., Marion Lee, Henry Norman, Louis Payne, Alice Maude Poole, George Rolland, Grant Stewart (as "Alfred Jingle"), George Williams. Produced by The De Wolfe Hopper Opera Company.
- (1903) Stage Play: George W. Lederer's Mid-Summer Night Fancies.
- (1905) Stage Play: Happyland. Musical comedy/opera.
- (1908) Stage Play: The Pied Piper. Musical comedy.
- (1909) Stage Play: The Beauty Spot. Musical. Music by Reginald De Koven. Book by Joseph Herbert. Featuring songs with lyrics by Terry Sullivan. Choreographed by Julian Alfred. Herald Square Theatre: 10 Apr 1909- 7 Aug 1909 (137 performances). Cast: Marguerite Clark, Isabel D'Armonde, Jefferson De Angelis, Alfred De Ball, W.H. Denny, Frank Doane, Viola Gillette, Frank Kelly, Arline La Cross, George MacFarlane, Mr. Maxwell, Jean Newcombe, Mr. Smith, Harry Tebbutt, Francis Tyler, Morgan Williams.
- (1910) Stage Play: The King of Cadonia.
- (1910) Stage Play: The Wishing Ring.
- (1910) Stage Play: Jim the Penman (Revival). Written by Sir Charles Lawrence Young. Directed by Lawrence Marston. Lyric Theatre: 10 May 1910- Jun 1910 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: George Barnum, Thurlow Bergen, Marguerite Clark, J.H. Davies, Arthur Forrest, Ernest Glendinning, Wilton Lackaye, Jeffreys Lewis, John Mason, Louis Massen, Frederick Paulding, Grace Reals, Florence Roberts, Theodore Roberts. Produced by William A. Brady. Note: Produced as Jim the Penman (1921) by Whitman Bennett Productions as a Lionel Barrymore vehicle.
- (1910) Stage Play: Baby Mine. Comedy. Written by Margaret Mayo. Daly's Theatre (moved to The Majestic Theatre from 3 Apr 1911- unknown, then moved to The Lyric Theatre from 24 Apr 1911- close): 23 Aug 1910- unknown (287 performances). Cast: Marguerite Clark (as "Zoie Hardy"), Sara Biala, E.D. Cromwell, Ruth Findlay, Frank Glendinning (as "Alfred Hardy"), Harry H. Hart, Walter Jones (as "Jimmy Jinks"), John E. Mackin, Ivy Troutman (as "Aggie Jinks"). Produced by William A. Brady. Note: Considered to be a monster hit by the standards of pre-WWI Broadway.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Affairs of Anatol. Written by Arthur Schnitzler. Directed by George Foster Platt. Little Theatre: 14 Oct 1912- Dec 1912 (closing date unknown/72 performances). Cast: John Barrymore (as "Anatol"), Marguerite Clark (as "Hilda"), Alfred De Ball (as "Waiter"), Albert Easdale (as "Franz"), Katherine Emmett (as "Gabrielle"), Gail Kane (as "Bianca"), Doris Keane (as "Mimi"), Isabel Lee (as "Lona"), Oswald Yorke (as "Max"). Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1912) Stage Play: Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Written by Jessie Graham White. Based on the stories of the The Brothers Grimm. Little Theatre (moved to Maxine Elliott's Theatre from 27 Jan 1913- Close): 7 Nov 1912- unknown (72 performances). Cast: Marguerite Clark (as "Snow White"), Elaine Inescort (as "Wicked Queen"), Madeline Chieffo. William H. Davis, Jeanette Dix, Charles Everett, Madeline Fairbanks, Marion Fairbanks, Dorothy Farrier, Thomas Fife, Harriet Ingalls, Frank McCormack, Dorothy Preyer, Edward See, Marie Stanley. Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1913) Stage Play: Are You a Crook? Comedy. Written by William J. Hurlbut and Frances Whitehouse. Longacre Theatre: 1 May 1913- May 1913 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Marguerite Clark (as "Amy Herrick"), Marion Ballou, Harry Barefoot, Scott Cooper, George Fawcett, Joseph Kilgour, Malcolm Lang, Elizabeth Nelson, Elita Proctor Otis, Harry Stockbridge, Robert Taller, Ivy Troutman, Forrest Winant. Produced by H.H. Frazee.
- (1913) Stage Play: Prunella [or Love in a Garden]. Drama. Written by Laurence Housman and Harley Granville-Barker. Music by Joseph Moorat. Little Theatre (moved to The Booth Theatre from 8 Dec 1913- close): 27 Oct 1913- unknown (104 performances). Cast: Marguerite Clark (as "Prunella") [final Broadway role], Ernest Glendinning (as "Pierrot"), Kathleen Comegys [Broadway debut], Edwin Cushman, Kate De Becker, William Evill, Nennelle Foster, Winifred Fraser, Paul Gordon, Marie Hudspeth, Master Albert James, Raymond Lockwood, Luke Martin, Cecilia Radclyffe, Ada St. Clair. Produced by Winthrop Ames. Note: Filmed by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation as Prunella (1918).
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