- (1895) Stage: Wrote (earliest Broadway credit; w/Clyde Fitch) "Gossip", produced on Broadway. Drama. Based on the French of Jules Clarétie. Palmer's Theatre: 11 Mar 1895-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Lily Langtry, Eben Plympton, Effie Shannon.
- (1895) Stage: Appeared (as "Zou Zou") in Trilby" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Paul M. Potter, from the novel by George L. Du Maurier. Garden Theatre: 15 Apr 1895-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Mathilde Cottrelly (as "Mme. Vinard"), John Glendinning (as "Alexander McAllister, the Laird"), Virginia Harned, Alfred Hickman, Wilton Lackaye (as "Svengali"), Burr McIntosh (as "Talbot Wynne/Taffy"), Rosa Rand, E.L. Walton.
- (1897) Stage: Wrote (w/Clyde Fitch) "A Superfluous Husband", produced on Broadway. Melodrama. From the German of Ludwig Fulda. Fifth Avenue Theatre: 4 Jan 1897-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: E.M. Holland, Joseph Holland, Olive Oliver.
- (1897) Stage: Wrote (w/B.B. Valentine) / appeared (as "Andre") in "A Southern Romance", produced on Broadway. Melodrama. Based on the novel "In God's Country" by Dolly Higbee. Fifth Avenue Theatre: 4 Sep 1897-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Frank C. Bangs (as "Col. Wyckoff Ransom"), Emmett Corrigan (as "Beverly Johnstone"), Katherine Grey (as "Lydia Ransom").
- (1898) Stage: Wrote (w/Clyde Fitch) "The Head of the Family", produced on Broadway. Drama. Based on "Hasemanns Tochter" by Adolphe L'Arronge. Knickerbocker Theatre: 6 Dec 1898-unknown (unknown performances). Cast [as known]: William H. Crane.
- (1899) Stage: Translated "Mlle. Fifi", produced on Broadway. Farce. Written by Philippe Dumanoir & Carre. Manhattan Theatre: 1 Feb 1899-closing date unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Louise Beaudet (as "Mlle. Fifi"; Broadway debut), Aubrey Boucicault, Rose Coghlan, Grace George. Produced by William A. Brady and Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- (1899) Stage: Appeared in "At the White Horse Inn", produced on Broadway. Farce. Written by Sydney Rosenfeld. Based on the German of Oskar Blumenthal and Gustaf Kadelburg. Wallack's Theatre: 6 Feb 1899-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Amelia G. Bingham, Joseph Holland, Miriam Nesbitt.
- (1899) Stage: Wrote "The Song of the Sword", produced on Broadway. Romance. Directed by Edward E. Rose. Daly's Theatre: 24 Oct 1899-26 Nov 1899 (40 performances). Cast: Frank Andrews, Frank Beamish, Adele Block, George E. Bryant, Rowland Buckstone, H.E. Chase, John J. Collins, Norman Conniers, Genevieve Dolaro, Thomas Doyle, Roydon Erlynne, Owen Fawcett, C.P. Flockton, Edward Fowler, Charles W. Giblyn, Frank Greppo, Virginia Harned, C.E. Henry, Daniel Jarrett, Arthur R. Lawrence, Edward Lester, Bertha Lingston, Charles Martin, R.R. Neill, Harry Northrup, Norman Parr, Edna Phillips, William J. Phinney, Richard Pitman, Morton Selton, E.H. Sothern, Ernest Tarleton, H.S. Wood. Produced by Daniel Frohman.
- (1900) Stage: Appeared in "Twelve Months Later" on Broadway. Farce. Written by Oskar Blumenthal and Gustaf Kadelburg. Hoyt's Theatre: 26 Mar 1900-Apr 1900 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Alma Ayers, Richard Bennett, Frederick Bond, Charles H. Bradshaw, David Elmer, Estabrook Galloway, Mrs. Hart Jackson, Adelaide Keim, F.M. Norcross, Robert Smiley, Fred Summerfield, Anne Sutherland, Elizabeth Tyree, Douglas J. Wood.
- (1900) Stage: Wrote "All on Account of Eliza", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Garrick Theatre (moved to Wallack's Theatre from 25 Feb 1901-close): 3 Sep 1900-Mar 1901 (closing date unknown/56 performances). Cast: Rose Beaudet, Birdie Bertrand, Little Irma Bertrand, Christine Blessing, William F. Carroll, Daisy Clayton, Oscar Dane, James P. Doyle, Mrs. E.A. Eberle, Mollie Hamlin, Emma Janvier, Susie Knight, Clara Lipman, Beatrice Litchfield, Louis Mann, Master Walter McArdle, Edwin Nicander, Edward See, Charles E. Sturges, Angie Ward, Susie Wilkison. Produced by Rich & Harris.
- (1901) Stage: Directed / wrote (w/Robert Grant) "Unleavened Bread", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Based on "Unleavened Bread" by Robert Grant. Savoy Theatre: 26 Jan 1901-Feb 1901 (closing date unknown/35 performances). Cast: Charles Barkus, Virginia Buchanan, George Fawcett, Alice Fischer, Margaret Fuller, Harry Hanlon, Genevra Ingersoll, Lawrence Marston, E.J. Morgan, Florida Pier, Eleanor Robson, Alice Rogers, Morton Selton, Vivian Townsend, Elizabeth Tyree, Malcolm Williams, George Woodward.
- (1901) Stage: Adapted book for / directed / appeared (as "George Fisher") in "Are You a Mason?", produced on Broadway. Farce. Adapted from the German of Lauf and Kraatz. DWallack's Theatre: 1 Apr 1901- Apr 1901 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Nellie Butler, Sally Cohen, Charles Greene, Charlotte Lambert, Amy Muller, Jeanette Northern, Theresa Renold, John C. Rice, George Richards, May Robson, Esther Tittell, Thomas A. Wise. Produced by Charles Frohman. NOTE: Filmed as Are You a Mason? (1915), Are You a Mason? (1934).
- (1901) Stage: Adapted book for / appeared in "Are You a Mason?", produced on Broadway. Farce (revival). Adapted from the German of Lauf and Kraatz. Garrick Theatre: 19 Aug 1901-Sep 1901 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Hazel Chappel, Sally Cohen, Oscar Dane, James S. Edwards, Grace Hadsell, Charles Halton [Broadway debut], Amy Muller, John C. Rice, George Richards, Esther Tittell, Maude Travers, Gertrude Whitty, Thomas A. Wise.
- (1902) Stage: Directed (w/Max Figman) / wrote "The Last Appeal", produced on Broadway. Drama. Wallack's Theatre: 14 Apr 1902-Apr 1902 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Henry Bergman, George C. Boniface, Robert Drouet (as "Crown Prince Waldemar"), Clara Glendinning, Katherine Grey, George Harcourt, D.H. Harkins, Nacy Paget, Becton Radford, Rosa Rand, Harold Russell, Richard Sterling, Cora Tanner, Robert C. Turner, William Wray, Stephen Wright. Produced by Henry B. Harris.
- (1902) Stage: "There's Many a Slip" / "At the Telephone" [joint production] on Broadway. "There's Many a Slip": Comedy. Written by Capt. R. Marshall. Directed by Joseph Humphries. Garrick Theatre: 15 Sep 1902-Oct 1902 (closing date unknown/20 performances). Cast: James Erskine, Sidney Herbert, Beatrice Irwin, Arthur Merle, Jesse Millward, Harry Rose. "At the Telephone": Drama. Written by André de Lorde. Based on a short story by Charles Foley. Garrick Theatre: 2 Oct 1902-Oct 1902 (closing date unknown/20 performances). Cast: Mary Burroughs, Sidney Donalds, Maggie Holloway Fischer, Virginia Laring, Helen Lowell, Martin V. Merle, Edwin Stevens, A.H. Stuart, William Weston. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1902) Stage: Wrote "His Excellency the Governor", produced on Broadway (revival).
- (1903) Stage: Wrote "Vivian's Papas", produced on Broadway. Garrick Theatre: 17 Aug 1903-Sep 1903 (closing date unknown/49 performances). Cast: Thomas Burns, Hazel Chappel, William Davis, Charles Greene, Lillie Hall, J. Beresford Hollis, Jack J. Horwitz, David Johnson, John J. Mahony, Hall McAllister, John C. Rice, Esther Tittell, John Watts, Gertrude Whitty, Hattie Williams, Thomas A. Wise. Produced by Rich & Harris.
- (1903) Stage: Wrote "What's the Matter with Susan?", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Bijou Theatre: 1 Dec 1903-Dec 1903 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Edith Barker, Charles Bradshaw, Morgan Coman, Edward Dresser, Alice Fisher (as "Susan"), George Fox, Charles Green, William Harcourt, Edwin Holt, Nellie King [Broadway debut], John S. Robertson, Charles Sturgis, Esther Tittell, Myrtle Vinson, Harry Wright. Produced by Henry B. Harris.
- (1904) Stage: Wrote "Harriet's Honeymoon", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Garrick Theatre: 4 Jan 1904-Jan 1904 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: A.S. 'Pop' Byron (as "Elliot Baird"), Lillie Hall, Charles Haskins, Louise Hollister, Jack Horwitz, H. Irwin, Adolph Jackson, Carolyn James, Henry Kolker [Broadway debut], Kate Lester, Mary Mannering (as "Harriet Baird"), Sydney Mansfield, Louis Massen, Hall McAllister, David Proctor, Edward See, Hope Sansberry, Frances Stevens, Thomas A. Wise. Produced by Frank McKee.
- (1904) Stage; Wrote "Tit For Tat", produced on Broadway. Farce. Based on the French of Maurice Hennequin and Paul Bilhaud. Scenic Design by Joseph A. Physioc. Savoy Theatre: 25 Apr 1904-May 1904 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: W.J. Constantine, Leo Ditrichstein, John Emerson, Elizabeth Emmett, John Flood, Joseph Kilgour, Jane Marbury, Deronda Mayo, Felice Morris, Alice Neal, Robert Ober, Frank Powell, Charles Ransome, Helen Tracy, Elizabeth Tyree, Harold R. Woolf.
- (1904) Stage: Wrote / appeared in "Military Mad", produced on Broadway. Comedy. From the German of Franz von Schoenthan. Garrick Theatre: 22 Aug 1904-Sep 1904 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Herbert Ayling, Edith Barker, William Cline, Elly Collmer, Ida Conquest , Henry V. Donnelly, John Emerson, Elizabeth Emmett, Charles J. Greene, Charles James, Henry Kolker, Amy Lesser, William Little, Jennie Reiffarth, Brinsley Shaw, Giles Shine, Harry Surgent, Margaret Sutherland, Florence Thornton, George Henry Trader, Thomas A. Wise.
- (1904) Stage: Adapted book for / appeared in "Are You a Mason?", produced on Broadway. Farce (revival). Adapted from the German of Lauf and Kraatz. Garrick Theatre: 5 Sep 1904-Sep 1904 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Edith Barker, John Emerson, Charles J. Greene, Henry Kolker, Amy Lesser, Jennie Reiffarth, Marguerite Sutherland, Florence Thornton, George Henry Trader, Gertrude Whitty, Adelaide Wise. Produced by Rich & Harris.
- (1905) Stage: Appeared (as "Zou Zou") in "Trilby" on Broadway. Comedy (revival). Written by Paul M. Potter. Based on the novel by George L. Du Maurier. Choreographed by Carl Marwig. New Amsterdam Theatre: 8 May 1905-May 1905 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Herbert Ayling (as "Dodor"), Meredith G. Brown, Grace Campbell, Ulric B. Collins, Mathilde Cottrelly (as "Mme. Vinard"), William Courtenay (as "William Bagot" / "Little Billee"), Mabel Findlay, Maude Fisher, John Glendinning (as "Alexander McAllister, the Laird"), Virginia Harned (as "Trilby O'Ferrall"), Marie Horgan (as "Contralto"), Wilton Lackaye (as "Svengali"), Marguerite Lewis (as "Musette"), Dorothy Maynard (as "Angele"), Burr McIntosh (as "Taffy"), E.W. Morrison, Almas Peltier (as "Phillippe"), Rosa Rand, (as "Mrs. Bagot"), Edmund H. Reardon (as "Lorimer"), E.L. Walton (as "Rev. Thos. Bagot"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1905) Stage: Wrote / appeared in "Before and After", produced on Broadway. Farce. Americanized from "La Poudre de l'escampette" by Albert Millaud and Alfred Hennequin. Manhattan Theatre: 12 Dec 1905-Feb 1906 (closing date unknown/72 performances). Cast: Frederic Barton, Kenyon Bishop, George C. Boniface, Roy Fairchild, Mabel Findlay, Katherine Florence, Georgie Lawrence, John Daly Murphy, Jean Newcombe, Helen Warren, Fritz Williams, Thomas A. Wise. Produced by Robert Hunter.
- (1907) Stage: "The Ambitious Mrs. Alcott" on Broadway.
- (1907) Stage: Wrote / appeared in "Before and After" on Broadway. Farce (revival). Americanized from "La Poudre de l'escampette" by Albert Millaud and Alfred Hennequin. Astor Theatre: 25 Apr 1907-May 1907 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: John L. Arthur, Kenyon Bishop, Charles Dickson, Henry V. Donnelly, Mabel Findlay, Ralph C. Herz, Georgie Lawrence, F. Newton-Lindo, Charles Rowan, Belle Taube, Julia Taylor. Produced by Wagenhals and Collin Kemper.
- (1908) Stage: "Bluffs" on Broadway. Farce.
- (1909) Stage: Wrote "Is Matrimony a Failure?", produced on Broadway. Comedy. From the German of Oskar Blumenthal and Gustaf Kadelburg. Directed / produced by David Belasco. Belasco Theatre: 24 Aug 1909-Jan 1910 (closing date unknown/183 performances). Cast: James Bradbury, Frank Bolt, Helen Braun, Jane Cowl (as "Fanny Perry"), Helen Ferguson, W.J. Ferguson, Jane Grey, Edward Langford, F. Newton Lindo, Louise MacKintosh, Frank Manning, William Morris, Nat Nazarro Jr., Julia Reinhardt, Lou Ripley, Robert Rogers, Gilmore Scott, Josie Morris Sullivan, Anne Sutherland, H.J. Tobin, Gretta Vandell, John F. Webber, Louise Woods, Frank Worthing, Blanche Yurka.
- (1909) Stage: "The Lily" on Broadway.
- (1910) Stage: Adapated book for / appeared in "The Concert", produced on Broadway. Written by Hermann Bahr. Belasco Theatre: 4 Oct 1910-May 1911 (closing date unknown/264 performances). Cast: Adelaide Barrett, Janet Beecher, Margaret Bloodgood, Edith Cartwright, John W. Cope, Elsie Glynn, Jane Grey, Edna Griffin, Mary Johnson, William Morris, Alice L. Pollock, Catherine Proctor, Belle Theodore, Kathryn Tyndall, Cora Witherspoon (as "Edith Gordon") [Broadway debut]. Produced by David Belasco.
- (1911) Stage: Wrote "The Million", produced on Broadway. From the French of Georges Berr. Based on Marcel Guillemaud. Directed by Richard Pittman and T. Daniel Frawley. 39th Street Theatre (moved to The Herald Square Theatre from 8 Jan 1912-close): 23 Oct 1911-Feb 1912 (closing date unknown/126 performances). Cast: George Bates, William Burress, John A. Butler, Irene Fenwick, Bert Grant [Broadway debut], Gustave Hartzheim, Taylor Holmes, Eulalie Jenson, Paul Ker, Robert Webb Lawrence, William J. Mahoney, Charles McCarthy, John Needham, Eugene O'Brien, Fred Osborn, Fred Sears. Produced by Henry W. Savage.
- (1913) Stage: Wrote / appeared (as "Jacques Dupont") in "The Temperamental Journey", produced on Broadway. Based on "Pour Vivre Heureux" by André Rivoire and Yves Mirandeis. Belasco Theatre (moved to The Theatre Republic from 29 Sep 1913-close): 4 Sep 1913-unknown (124 performances). Cast: Isabel Irving, Henry Bergman, Caree Clarke, Frank Connor, William Dixon, Edouard Durand, Dorothy Ellis, Earle W. Grant, Richie Ling, Julian Little, Anna McNaughton, Lee Millar [Broadway debut], M. Daniel Schatts, Josephine Victor, Cora Witherspoon, Edwin R. Wolfe. Produced by David Belasco.
- (1913) Stage: "High Jinks" on Broadway. Musical comedy.
- (1914) Stage: Wrote source material (play) for "When Claudia Smiles", produced on Broadway. Farce. Written by / lyrics by Anne Caldwell. Music by Jean Schwartz. Additional lyrics by William Jerome, Marion Sunshine, Jamie Kelly, Gene Buck, Stanley Murphy, Lou Klein and Arthur Weinberg. Additional music by Henry I. Marshall, Frank Gillen, Dave Stamper and Clarence Jones. Musical Direction by Al Ellis. Directed by Charles Winninger (also in cast as "Charles D. Hofman"). 39th Street Theatre (moved to The Lyric Theatre from 23 Feb 1914-close): 2 Feb 1914-21 Mar 1914 (56 performances). Cast: Claire Bertrand (as "Belle Nesville"), Gladys Breston (as "Clara Rockaway"), Albert Byrnes (as "Officer Casey"), Marie Callahan (as "Violet Richmond"), Edward Clyne (as "Jimmy Jansen"), Harry Conor (as "Frederick W. Walker"), Jack Costello (as "Bertie Billings"), Peggy Coudray (as "Hyancinth Hartford"), Rae Daly (as "Blanche DeFontenoy"), Harry Delmar (as "Reggie Renfrew"), R.M. Dolliver (as "Saladillo Escalada Del Mendoza"), Peter Donovan (as "Officer Nolan"), Florence Edney (as "Mme. Verdier"), Pearl Evans (as "Lily Atlanta"), Nellie Fillmore (as "Cynthia"), Mahlon Hamilton (as "Chester D. Hoffman"), Harry Hilliard (as "Johnny Rogers"), William Keller (as "Albert"), Anna Laughlin (as "Kate Walker"), Cleo LeMoyne (as "Daisy Tottenham"), Bertha Mann (as "Alice Hoffman"), Emma McGrath (as "Pansy Portland"), Evelyn Mead (as "Daisy Denver"), James Minnehan (as "Elevator Attendant"), Dolores Parquette (as "Angie DuPont"), Harry Rensler (as "Percy Plimpton"), Blanche Ring (as "Claudia Rogers"), John J. Scannell (as "Bunny Van Tyne"), Charles Silber (as "Jingle Bells"), Eva Stuart (as "Cleo Berode"), Edwin H. Weihe (as "Billy Bender"), Harry Wesner (as "Willie Wilbur"), Claire Weston (as "Rose Reno"). Produced by Frederic McKay.
- (1914) Stage: Appeared in "The Phantom Rival" on Broadway. 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, J.M. McNamee, Anna McNaughton, Lee Millar, Frank E. Norris, Louis Poiselli, Ethel Marie Sasse, Frank Westerton, Malcolm Williams. Produced by David Belasco.
- (1915) Stage: Appeared (as "Zou Zou) in "Trilby" on Broadway (revival). Written by Paul M. Potter. From the novel by George L. Du Maurier. Shubert Theatre: 3 Apr 1915-Jun 1915 (closing date unknown/73 performances). Cast: Leslie Austen, Cynthia Brooke, Virginia Fox Brooks, Rose Coghlan, 'Annie Esmond, Walter Fredericks, Taylor Holmes (as "Gecko"), Cecil King, Wilton Lackaye (as "Svengali"), George MacFarlane, Frederick Macklyn (as "Theodore de la Farce"), Burr McIntosh (as "Taffy"), Leslie Ryecroft, Brandon Tynan. Produced by Joseph Brooks and Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert. NOTE: Filmed as Trilby (1915).
- (1915) Stage: Wrote (w/Frederic Hatton, Fanny Hatton) / appeared in "The Great Lover" on Broadway. Romantic comedy. Longacre Theatre: 10 Nov 1915-Jun 1916 (closing date unknown/245 performances). Cast: Virginia Fox Brooks, Malcolm Fassett, Alfred Kappeler, Julian Little, Frederick Macklyn, Anna McNaughton, Lee Millar, Alexis H. Polianov, William Ricciardi, George E. Romain, Antonio Salerno, M.D. Shatts, Beverly Sitgreaves, Cora Witherspoon. Produced by Cohan & Harris. NOTE: Filmed as The Great Lover (1931).
- (1917) Stage: "The King" on Broadway.
- (1918) Stage: "The Matinee Hero" on Broadway.
- (1920) Stage: "The Purple Mask" on Broadway. Melodrama.
- (1920) Stage: "The Americans in France" on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1921) Stage: Appeared (as Antoine de Tillois" / "Toto") in "Toto" on Broadway. Comedy. Book adapted by Achmed Abdullah. Bijou Theatre: 21 Mar 1921-Jun 1921 (closing date unknown/89 performances). Cast: Gustav Bowhan, Albert Brown, Nellie Burt (as "Jeannette"), Beach Cooke (as "Evariste de Merinville"; Broadway debut), Orlando Daly (as "Henri de Tergy"), Phoebe Foster, Josephine Hamner, M.A. Kelly, Emma Knill, Lee Millan, Belle Murry, Edith Rose Scott, Edward See [credited as Edward H. See], Paula Shay, Ruth Thomas, Frances Underwood, Clyde Veaux. Produced by Lee Shubert.
- (1921) Stage: Appeared (as "Jose Henriquez") in "Face Value" on Broadway. Comedy. Based on the Italian of Sabatino Lopez. Book adapted by Solita Solano. Written by Laurence Grass. 49th Street Theatre: 26 Dec 1921-Jan 1922 (closing date unknown/41 performances). Cast: Nellie Burt (as "Cecilla Leonard"), Orlando Daly (as "Dr. Frederick Cutris, Husband of Alma Curtis"), Mary Duncan (as "Miss Farrell"), Josephine Hamner (as "Mrs. Rose Jennings"), M.A. Kelly (as "Henry"), Clara Mackin (as "Arabella Mapes"), Lee Millar (as "Edward Barton"), Hugh O'Connell (as "Harry Stewart"; Broadway debut), Alexis Polianov (as "Alexis Borozouff"), Frances Underwood (as "Alma Curtis"). Produced by Lee Shubert.
- (1922) Stage: Wrote "The Egotist", produced on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1923) Stage: Wrote "The Business Widow", produced on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1932) Stage: Wrote (w/Frederic Hatton, Fanny Hatton) "The Great Lover", produced on Broadway. Romantic comedy (revival).
- (October 3, 1922) He played Felix Tarbell in Ben Hecht's play, "Under False Pretenses," at the La Salle Theatre in Chicago, Illinois with Maidl Turner (Sally Jenkins); Gustav Bowman (Mr. Smart); Clyde Veaux (Manny Epstein); Maude Hannaford (Helen Tarbell); Catherine Carter (Margaret Schmidt); Earle Mitchell (Mr. Gorman); Albert Morrison (Edward "Bud" Jenkins); Mary Duncan (Norma Ramon); Alexis Polianov (Sing); Young Leo (Toy); Carlotta Irwin (Virginia Hansen); M. Kelly (Murphy); and Lee Millar (Richard Collins) in the cast.
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