- (1900 - 1934) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1900) Stage Play: Miss Prinnt. Musical comedy. Music by John L. Golden; Book by George V. Hobart. Lyrics by John L. Golden. Musical Director: Clarence Rogersoll. Additional music by Jean C. Havez and James B. Mullen. Victoria Theatre: 25 Dec 1900- 19 Jan 1901 (28 performances). Produced by Joseph Immerman.
- (1901) Stage Play: Don Caesar's Return.
- (1901) Stage Play: A Gentleman of France. Drama/romance. Written by Harriet Ford. Based on the romance of Stanley Weyman. Directed by H. Kyrle Bellew. and Edmund D. Lyons. Wallack's Theatre: 30 Dec 1901- Apr 1902 (closing date unknown/120 performances). Cast: Frank E. Aiken, E.E. Allen, Charles Barron, H. Kyrle Bellew [credited as Kyrle Bellew] (as "Gaston de Marsac"), Harry Benton, John Blair, Oscar G. Briggs [credited as Oscar Briggs] (Broadway debut), Caroline Butterfield, Simpson Carson, Minna Claussenius, Ada Dwyer, John Flood, Janet Ford, Clarence Handyside, Howell Hansel, Samuel Lewis, J.R. Martin, George Morton, Charles Randall, Eleanor Robson Belmont [credited as Eleanor Robson] (as "Mlle. de la Vire"), Edgar Selwyn, T.L. Sill, Charlotte Walker. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1902) Stage Play: The Crisis. Historical drama. Written by Winston Churchill. Based on the novel by Winston Churchill. Scenic Design by Arthur Voegtlin and William Camph. Directed by James K. Hackett.Wallack's Theatre: 17 Nov 1902- Dec 1902 (closing date unknown/50 performances). Cast: Grace Barber, Joseph Brennan, Florence Conron, Edward Donnelly, Alfonso D'Orta, Luigi D'Orta, Clyde Fogel, Gennaro Gibelli, Wayne Gray, James K. Hackett (as "Stephen Brice"), Thomas A. Hall, Charlotte Hicks, George LeSoir, John E. Mackin, Joaquin Madonna, Deronda Mayo, Harry R. Miller, Frederick Nichols, Frank Patton, Georgianna Pitcher, Isabel Richards, P. Charles Ringsdorf, Brigham Royce (as "Clarence Colfax"), James Sanford, Charlotte Walker (as "Virginia Carvel"). Produced by James K. Hackett.
- (1903) Stage Play: John Ermine of the Yellowstone. Written by Louis Evan Shipman. Based on "Sketches of Frontier Life" by Frederic Remington. Manhattan Theatre: 2 Nov 1903- Nov 1903 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Carl Ahrendt, E.L. Duane, James K. Hackett (as "John Ermine"), William Harcourt (as "Lieutenant Butler"), Albert Perry [Broadway debut], Theodore Roberts, James Seeley, Charlotte Walker (as "Katherine Searles"), Ann Warrington. Produced by James K. Hackett.
- (1904) Stage Play: The Crown Prince. Romance/satire/fantasy.
- (1904) Stage Play: Jack's Little Surprise. Farce. Written by Louis Eagan. Princess Theatre: 25 Aug 1904- Sep 1904 (closing date unknown/21 performances). Cast: A.S. 'Pop' Byron(as "Jack"), Grace Barber, Burke Clark, Frederick Cooley, Eugene A. Eberle, Carolyn Elberts, Albert French, Augusta Gardner, Samuel Greene, Louis R. Grisel [Broadway debut], Katherine Keyes, John E. Mackin, William Morley, John Prentice, Alonzo Price, Charlotte Walker, Mortimer Weldon, Maurice Wilkinson. Produced by James K. Hackett.
- (1904) Stage Play: The Fortunes of the King. Melodrama.
- (1904) Stage Play: The Prodigal Son. Drama.
- (1905) Stage Play: As Ye Sow. Drama.
- (1906) Stage Play: The Triangle. Melodrama.
- (1906) Stage Play: The Optimist. Comedy. Written by Sydney Rosenfeld. Daly's Theatre: 23 Apr 1906- 29 Apr 1906 (8 performances). Cast: Martin Alsop, Oscar Apfel [only Broadway role], Consuelo Bailey, Kathryn Browne (as "Phyllis"), Grace Gaylor Clark, Lizzie Hudson Collier, Wallace Eddinger (as "Jack"), J.H. Gilmour (as "Norman"), Gerald Griffin, Christine Hall, John Ince, Anna Stannard, Andrew Stephens, Genevieve Thomas, Wynne Vorhees, Charlotte Walker, Thomas A. Wise.
- (1906) Stage Play: The Embarrassment of Riches. Comedy. Written by Louis K. Anspacher. Directed by Edward A. Braden. Wallack's Theatre: 14 May 1906- May 1906 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Charles J. Bell, Gertrude Berkeley, Vellma Berrell, Henry Buckler, John Bunny, Charles Chappelle, Harold Cohill, Edward Cookson, Scott Cooper, Stanley Dark, Eva Dennison, H. Dudley Hawley [Broadway debut], James Kearney, Bruce McRae, Bernard Mullin, Charlotte Walker (as "Elizabeth Holt"), Frank Wunderlee. Produced by Edward A. Braden. Note: Filmed by Lillian Walker Pictures Corporation as The Embarrassment of Riches (1918).
- (1907) Stage Play: On Parole. Romance. Written by Louis Evan Shipman. Majestic Theatre: 25 Feb 1907- Mar 1907 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Frank E. Aiken, Morgan Coman, Francis X. Conlan, Scott Cooper, Frederick Forrester, Helen Graham, Thomas P. Jackson, Alethea Luce [Broadway debut], Frederick Nichols, Howard Pembroke, Vincent Serrano (as "Major Dale"), Charlotte Walker (as "Constance Pinckney"), Fay Wheeler. Produced by Henry Miller.
- (1907) Stage Play: The Warrens of Virginia. Written by William C. de Mille. Belasco Theatre (moved to The Stuyvesant Theatre from 4 May 1908- close): 3 Dec 1907- Oct 1908 (closing date unknown/380 performances). Cast: Raymond Bond (as "Blake") [Broadway debut], Mrs. Charles G. Craig, Cecil B. DeMille (as "Arthur Warren"), Emma Dunn, DeWitt Jennings (as "General Harding"), Frank Keenan, Ralph Kellard (as "Tom Dabney"), E. Allen Martin (as "Gen. Carr"), William McVay, Mary Pickford (as "Betty Warren") [Broadway debut], Willard Robertson, Richard Storey, Charles Waldron (as "Lt. Burton"), Isabel Waldron (as "Molly Hatton"), Charlotte Walker (as "Agatha Warren"), Frederick Watson (as "Zack Biggs"), Stanhope Wheatcroft (as "Cpl. De Peyster"). Produced by David Belasco.
- (1910) Stage Play: Just a Wife. Written by Eugene Walter. Belasco Theatre: 1 Feb 1910- Apr 1910 (closing date unknown/79 performances). Cast: Edmund Breese (as "John Emerson"), Frederick Burton, Amelia Gardner (as "Eleanor Lathrop"), Ernest Glendinning, Bobby North, Charlotte Walker (as "Mary Ashby"). Produced by David Belasco. Note: Filmed by National Picture Theatres Inc. [distributed by Select Pictures Corporation] as Just a Wife (1920)
- (1912) Stage Play: The Trail of the Lonesome Pine. Melodrama (original production). Written by Eugene Walter. Based on the novel by John Fox Jr. New Amsterdam Theatre: 29 Jan 1912- Feb 1912 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Berton Churchill (as "John Hale"), Charlotte Walker (as "June"), Lillian Dix, William S. Hart [final Broadway role], Alice Lindahl, Willard Robertson, Richard Sterling, Cyrus Wood, George Woodward. Produced by Klaw & Erlanger. Note: Filmed by Broadway Picture Producing Company as The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1914), by Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company [distributed by Paramount Pictures], by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1916), by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1923), by Out of the Inkwell Films [distributed by Red Seal Pictures] as Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1927) [short], by Walter Wanger Productions/Paramount Pictures [distributed by Paramount Pictures] (most notable version) as The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1936).
- (1915) Stage Play: The Two Virtues.
- (1918) Stage Play: Nancy Lee.
- (1920) Stage Play: Call the Doctor. Comedy. Written by Jean Archibald. Directed by David Belasco. Empire Theatre: 31 Aug 1920- Dec 1920 (closing date unknown/127 performances). Cast: John Amory (as "Judge Thomas"), Janet Beecher (as "Joan Deering"), Jane Houston (as "Alice Spencer"), Fania Marinoff (as "Balog-Mari"), Rea Martin (as "Nellie"), Philip Merivale (as "Dudley Townsend"), Barbara Milton (as "Harriet Lane"), William Morris (as "Howard Mowbray"), Charlotte Walker (as "Catherine Mowbray"), Mrs. Thomas A. Wise (as "Isabel Thomas"). Produced by David Belasco.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Skylark. Comedy.
- (1921) Stage Play: Trilby (Revival). Written by George L. Du Maurier. National Theatre: 23 Dec 1921- Jan 1922 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Joseph Allen, Violet Anderson, Frank Doane, Desmond Gallagher, Diana Gray, Ruth Harding, Geneva Harrison (as "Mimi"), I.B. Johnson, Harry Kittredge, Wilton Lackaye (as "Svengali"), Wilton Lackaye Jr. (as "Theodore de la Farce"), Rose Le Vere, Jeffreys Lewis, Edmund Lowe (as "William Bagot"), Ignacio Martinetti, Harry Mestayer (as "Gecko"), George Nash (as "Talbot Wynne/Taffy"), Carrie Radcliffe, Cyril Ring (as "Lorimer"), Charlotte Walker (as "Trilby O'Ferrall"), Laura Walters. Produced by Coöperative Players Inc. Note: Previously filmed by London Film Productions [UK distribution by Jury Films with no known US release] as Trilby (1914) [UK production], and by Equitable Motion Pictures Corporation [Distributed by World Film in original theatrical release, and released by Republic Distributing Corporation in 1920] as Trilby (1915) [starring Wilton Lackaye as "Svengali'], and by Richard Walton Tully Productions [distributed by Associated First National Pictures] as Trilby (1923) starring Arthur Edmund Carewe as "Svengali"). Other filmed versions: A short, Trilby and Little Billee (1896) was produced by The American Mutoscope Company acknowledging George L. Du Maurier. _Ella Lola, a la Trilby (1898)_ was produced by Edison Manufacturing Company in which dancer Ella Lola dances a routine based on the famous character of "Trilby", a short, The Adventures of Pimple: Trilby (1914) was produced in the UK by Folly Films [distributed by Phoenix Film Agency] that featured the same characters as the play, acknowledging George L. Du Maurier, but no playwright source credit was given.
- (1923) Stage Play: The School for Scandal. Comedy (revival). Written by Richard B. Sheridan. Lyceum Theatre: 4 Jun 1923- Jun 1923 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Albert G. Andrews (as "Moses"), Ethel Barrymore, Albert Bruning, John Craig, Henry F. Dixey, John Drew, Etienne Girardot (as "Mr. Crabtree"), Walter Hampden, Violet Kemble Cooper, Ernest Lawford (as "Trip"), Robert Mantell, Carroll McComas (as "Maria"), Grant Mitchell, McKay Morris, Charles Richman, Charlotte Walker (as "Mrs. Candour"), Reinald Warrenrath, Francis Wilson, Thomas A. Wise. Produced by the Players Company Inc.
- (1924) Stage Play: The Comedienne.
- (1925) Stage Play: Two By Two. Comedy. Written by John Turner and Eugenie Woodward. Selwyn Theatre: 23 Feb 1925- Mar 1925 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: St. Clair Bayfield (as "E. Lorrilard Price"), Jane Blanchard (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), Minette Buddecke (as "Elinor Cleves"), H.F. Clarens (as "A Clerk"), Jack Daniels (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), F.H. Day (as "Another Clerk"), May Donaldson (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), Lawrence D'Orsay (as "Lord Leighton"), Maud Durand (as "Sally"), Lionel Ferrend (as "Frank Phillips"), Frank I. Frayne (as "Nehemiah"), Mesdame Fredrichson (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), Alfred Goldie (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), Almerin M. Gowing (as "Jack Eaton"), E.L. Hackes (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), Wilma Henderson (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), Beatrice Herford (as "Lida Carroll"), Haroldine Humphreys (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), Arthur Lewis (as "Father Hollister"), Howard Lindsay (as "Richard Graham"), Lucille Lortel (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau") [Broadway debut], George Maxwell (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), Una Merkel [erroneously credited as Una Merkle] (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), Mesdame Meyers (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), Frank Miller (as "Guard"), Joseph Mitchell (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), William Parke (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), Edwin Philips (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), M. Ratner (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), Robert Ryles (as "Jim Hoskins"), Conway Sawyer (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), Audrey St. Clair (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), Frank Steinway (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), W. Leete Stone (as "Herbert"), Eva Victor (as "Part of the Marriage License Bureau"), Charlotte Walker (as "Mrs. Cleves"), Elinor Wells (as "Pauline"). Produced by Jessy Trimble Inc.
- (1931) Stage Play: The Roof. Drama.
- (1932) Stage Play: If Booth Had Missed. Drama (revival). Written by Arthur Goodman. Directed by Milton Smith. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 4 Feb 1932- Feb 1932 (closing date unknown/21 performances). Cast: Richard Barrows (as "John Nicholas"), Aubrey Beattie (as "General Ulysses S. Grant"), Thurlow Bergen (as "William H. Seward"), Doan Borrup [credited as Doan Borup] (as "Henry W. Davis"), Samuel Bunyan, John Burke, Orrin Burke (as "Chief Justice Chase"), Charles Crumpton, Lionel Dante (as "A Soldier"), John C. Davis (as "Senator Bayard"), Lawrence DeGaun, Paul Dorn, Fred Eric, A.C. Henderson (as "Gideon Wells"), Frank Kettrick, Howard Kyle, George C. Mantell, John Maroney, Morris McKenney, William McRobie, Earl Mitchell, Thomas Murphy, John Nicholson, Robert Ober, Anthony Pawley (as "Captain Smiley") [final Broadway role], Ernest Pollock (as "Andrew Johnson"), Daniel Poole (as "Abraham Lincoln"), Catherine Proctor, Hayden Rorke (as "Major Rathbone") [Broadway debut], George Sinclair (as "Senator Grimes"), Robert Toms (as "John Hay"), Royal Dana Tracey (as "Edwin M. Stanton"), Charlotte Walker (as "Mrs. Jefferson Davis"), George W. Williams, H.A. Wilson. Produced by Walter Hartwig. Produced in association with William A. Brady.
- (1932) Stage Play: The Boy Friend. Comedy.
- (July 1936) She acted in Lynn Riggs' play, "Russet Mantle," at the Ogunquit Playhouse in Ogunquit, Maine with Morgan Farley, Thomas W. Ross and Rosemary Ames in the cast.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content