- Post Road (1934). Comedy.
- (1910) Stage Play: The Call of the Cricket.
- (1926) Stage Play: Buy, Buy, Baby. Farce. Written by Russell G. Medcraft and Norma Mitchell. Based on a play by Francis R. Bellamy and Lawton Mackall. Princess Theatre: 7 Oct 1925- Oct 1926 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Shirley Booth (as "Betty Hamilton"), Maurice Burke, Mabel Colcord, Laura Hope Crews, Malcolm Duncan, Thurston Hall, Charles Mather, Edwin Nicander, Alison Skipworth, Verree Teasdale (as "Pauline Lunt"). Produced by Bertram Harrison.
- (1925) Stage Play: Cradle Snatchers. Comedy/farce. Written by Norma Mitchell and Russell G. Medcraft. Music Box Theatre: 7 Sep 1925- Jun 1925 (closing date unknown/332 performances). Cast: Mary Boland, Willard Barton, Humphrey Bogart, Moon Carroll (as "Jackie") [Broadway debut], Margaret Dale, Gene Raymond (credited as Raymond Guion), Raymond Hackett, Myra Hampton, Stanley Jessup, Mary Loane, Margaret Moreland, Mary Murray, Edna May Oliver, Cecil Owen, Gerald Phillips. Produced by Sam Harris, in arrangement with Hassard Short. Notes: (1) Filmed as The Cradle Snatchers (1927), Let's Face It (1943). (2) Theatre owned and operated by Sam Harris and Irving Berlin [Berlin had no involvement with production].
- (1924) Stage: Appeared (as "Mrs. Zola Massarcone") in "Dancing Mothers", produced on Broadway. Written by Edgar Selwyn (also director / producer) and Edmund Goulding. Booth Theatre: 11 Aug 1924-May 1925 (closing date unknown/312 performances). Cast: Rodolfo Badaloni (as "Charley"), Alison Bradshaw (as "A Young Woman"), Hugh Brooke (as "Second Young Man"), Edward Brooks (as "A Young Man"), Grace Burgess (as "Mrs. Barnes"), Joan Cockram (as "Blondy"), Michael Dawn (as "Kenneth Cobb"), Alven Dexter (as "Escort"), Helen Eby-Rock (as "Marie"), John Halliday (as "Gerald Naughton"), George Harcourt (as "Mr. Williams"), Helen Hayes (as "Catherine 'Kittens' Westcourt"), Elsie Lawson (as "Irma Raymond"), Albert Marsh (as "Second Waiter"), Arthur Metcalfe (as "Davis"), Ella Peroff (as "Second Young Woman"), Henry Stephenson (as "Hugh Westcourt"), Timothy Thomas (as "Clarence Houston"), Lewis Waller (as "Andrew"), Adin Wilson(as "McGuire"), Mary Young (as "Ethel Westcourt").
- (1924) Stage Play: The New Poor.
- (1922) Stage: Appeared in "Why Not?", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Jesse Lynch Williams. Directed by Mrs. Shelley Hull and O.P. Heggie. 48th Street Theatre: 25 Dec 1922-Apr 1923 (closing date unknown/120 performances). Cast: Marguerite Churchill (as "Molly") [Broadway debut], Warburton Gamble, Jane Grey, Gene Raymond (credited as Raymond Guion; as "Billy Thompson"), Margaret Mower, Tom Powers, Cecil Yapp (as "Chuchill Smith"). Produced by The Equity Players Inc.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Goldfish.
- (1922) Stage Play: To the Ladies.
- (1921) Stage: Appeared (as "Claudia Kitts") in "March Hares" on Broadway. Satire. Written by Harry Wagstaff Gribble. Directed by W.H. Gilmore. Bijou Theatre: 11 Aug 1921-Nov 1921 (closing date unknown/60 performances). Cast: Alexander Onslow (as "Geoffrey Wareham"), Charles Warburton (as "Oliver"), Brandon Peters (as "Edgar Fuller"), Nellie Griffen (as "The Cook"), Lucile Watson (as "Mrs. Janet Rodney"), Frank Dekum (as "Mr. Brown"), Gertrude Percell (as "Ethel"), Adrienne Morrison (as "Janet Rodney"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- Her Husband's Wife (1917). (Revival).
- The Truth Wagon (1912).
- (1932) Stage Play: Cradle Snatchers. Comedy/farce (revival). Written by Norma Mitchell and Russell G. Medcraft. Princess Theatre: 7 Oct 1926- Oct 1926 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Produced by Bertram Harrison.
- (August 1942) Wilbur Steele and her play, "Post Road," was performed at the Ogunquit Playhouse in Ogunquit, Maine.
- (August 1946) Russell Medcraft and her play, "Cradle Snatchers," was performed at the Ogunquit Playhouse in Ogunquit, Maine with Daisy Atherton in the cast.
- (Summer 1959) Wilbur Daniel Steele and her play, "Post Road," was performed at the Cherry County Playhouse in Traverse City, Michigan with Zasu Pitts in the cast. Ruth Bailey was founder and artistic director.
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