- (1900 - 1933) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1900) Stage Play: Prince Otto. Written by Otis Skinner [earliest Broadway credit]. Based on the novel by Robert Louis Stevenson. Wallack's Theatre: 3 Sep 1900- Oct 1900 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Charles Adams, William Andrews, Caroline Butterfield, H. Rees Davies, Edward Dillon, Maud Durbin, E.A. Eberle, Alfred Edwards, Grace Filkins, Eugenie Flagg, Paula Gloy, Herbert Grigsby, Lumsden Hare [Broadway debut], Percy Haswell, Elizabeth Lea, Elizabeth Lowe, George Nash, Jane Peyton, Otis Skinner [Broadway debut], Frank Sylvester, Frederick Van Rensselaer, Frank Wallace, Louis Webster. Produced by Otis Skinner.
- (1900) Stage Play: The Land of Heart's Desire/In a Balcony.
- (1901) Stage Play: The Land of Heart's Desire/In a Balcony.
- (1901) Stage Play: Francesca da Rimini. Tragedy (revival).
- (1904) Stage Play: The Taming of the Shrew. Written by William Shakespeare. Lyric Theatre: 18 Jan 1904- unknown (unknown performances/played in repertory with The Merchant of Venice, The School for Scandal). Cast: John Boylan, George Clark, Russell Crauford, Katherine Everts, Walter Hale, Mabel Howard, Walter Howard, Gordon Johnstone, Walter P. Lewis, Walter Pyre, Ada Rehan, Ben T. Ringgold, William Roselle [Broadway debut], Otis Skinner, Edwin Varrey, Joseph Weaver. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1924) Played the title role in stage production of Sancho Panza, in New Orleans in 1924.
- (1911) Stage Play: Kismet. Written by Edward Knoblock. Directed by Harrison Grey Fiske and Lawrence Marston. Knickerbocker Theatre: 25 Dec 1911- Jun 1912 (closing date unknown/184 performances). Cast: Amelia Barleon (as "Kabirah"), Sheridan Block (as "The Sheik Jawan"), Harrison Carter (as "Zayd"), Del De Louis (as "The Imam Mahmund"), Fred Eric (as "The Caliph Abdullah"), Eleanor Gordon (as "Kut-al-Kulub"), Macey Harlam, Daniel Jarrett (as "Amru"), Rita Jolivet (as "Marsinah") [Broadway debut], Bennett Kilpack (as "Afife"), William Lorenz (as "Attendant of Mansur"), Merle Maddern (as "Miskah"), Sydney Mather (as "The Guide Nasir"), George Relph (as "Kafur"), Hamilton Revelle (as "The Wazir Mansur"), Violet Romer (as "The Almah"), Martin Sanders (as "The Gaoler Kistayt"), Otis Skinner, T. Tamamoto (as "The Muezzin"), John Webster (as "A Mufti"). Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1920) Stage Play: Pietro. Comedy/drama. Written by Maud Durbin [credited as Maud Skinner] (final Broadway credit) and Jules Eckert Goodman. Criterion Theatre: 19 Jan 1920- Mar 1920 (closing date unknown/41 performances). Cast: Robert Ames (as "Keith Oliphant, Jr."), Elizabeth Ariaans (as "The Bambina"), Clarence Bellair (as "Padre Michetti"), Thurlow Bergen (as "Keith Oliphant"), William Bonelli (as "Clark"), J.T. Chaillee (as "The Court Interpreter"), O.B. Clarence (as "Alfred Peyton"), George Harcourt (as "Jarrold"), Madalyn Kent (as "The Jail Matron"), Ruth Rose (as "Angela"), Walter F. Scott (as "The Bailiff"), Mary Shaw (as "Teresa"), Otis Skinner (as "Peter Barban/Pietro Barbano"), Robert Smiley (as "Tomlinson"), Joe Spurin (as "Miguel"). Produced by Charles Frohman Inc.
- (1904) Stage Play: The Harvester. Drama. Written by Charles M. Skinner. Based on "Le Chemineau" by Jean Richepin. Directed by Otis Skinner. Lyric Theatre: 10 Oct 1904- Nov 1904 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, John Boylan, George Clarke, Lizzie Hudson Collier, J.M. Colville, Russell Crauford, Maud Durbin, Walter P. Lewis, Daniel Pennell, Ben T. Ringgold, Otis Skinner. Produced by Joseph Buckley.
- (1911) Stage Play: Sire. Written by Henri Lavedan. Book adaption by Louis N. Parker. Criterion Theatre: 24 Jan 1911- Feb 1911 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: A.G. Andrews, Mabel Burt, John Clurlow, George Devereaux, Edward Fielding, Alice Gale, Arthur Hyman, Izetta Jewell, Thomas Kingsbury, Arthur Row, Margaret Sayres, Walter Skinner, Otis Skinner, Charles B. Wells. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (February 16, 1931) He acted in Marcel Pagnol's play, "Marius," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio.
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