- (1902 - 1947) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1902) Stage Play: A Trip to Buffalo. Musical comedy.
- (1903) Stage Play: The Knickerbocker Girl. Musical comedy. Music by Alfred E. Aarons. Book by George Totten Smith. Lyrics by George Totten Smith. Musical Director: Anton Heindl. Featuring songs with lyrics by M.E. Rourke. Musical Director: Al Newberger. Herald Square Theatre: 15 Jun 1903- 27 Jun 1903 (14 performances). Cast: Nellie Beaumont (as "La Rosa Estrobana"), Grace Belmont (as "Eleanor de Reuyter"), Ada Bernard (as "Daisy Deuce"), Florence Campbell (as "Miss Pelham"), Georgia Campbell (as "Miss Piermont"), Alice Clifford (as "Messenger Boy"), Gwendoline Coate (as "Dolores"), Sydney Deane (as "Sanford Merton"), Beatrice Flint (as "Miss Larchmont"), Josephine Hall (as "Mehitabel Merton"), Edgar Halstead (as "Baldwin"), Meigal Rosaros"), Kittie Hamilton (as "The Tough Girl"), Aida Hemmi (as "Roxie"), George Honey (as "Don Carlos Estrobana"), Helen Irwin (as "Miss Madison"), Minnie Johnston (as "Miss Irvington"), Charles Judels (as "Captain Barnacle/Captain Nunez"), John Keefe (as "Terry"), Harry Kelly (as "Abner Merton"), Edna Kerr (as "Miss Woodford"), Ione Kerr (as "Miss Million"), Maude LeRoy (as "Murray Hill"), Effie Leslie (as "Miss Hoffman"), Caroline Locke (as "Miss Lexington"), Sadie Long (as "Inez"), Clara MacCord (as "Miss Englewood"), Edythe Moyer (as "Miss Grammercy"), Nina Randall (as "Trixie Tiller"), Will H. Sloan (as "Professor Herman Wartz"), Louie Sprague (as "Miss Waldorf"), Ollie Wooldford (as "Miss Riverside"), Produced by Frank Howe Jr.
- (1904) Stage Play: Flo-Flo. Musical. Book by Collin Davis. Lyrics by Collin Davis. Music by Howard Whitney. Additional lyrics by Howard Whitney and Lois Evan Davis. Directed by James Gorman. West End Theatre: 21 Nov 1904- 26 Nov 1904 (9 performances). Cast: Andrew Buckley (as "James"), Nat K. Cafferty (as "Jackson Paths"), John Clahane (as "Deuteronomy Jones"), Albert Farrington (as "Lieutenant Barry"), Gilbert Fitzgerald (as "Scotty"), Louise Gould (as "Rachel McFen"), Charles Judels (as "Obadiah Floral"), Matthew Kennedy (as "Mickey McFen"), Stella Mayhew (as "Flo Floral"), Violet McMillan (as "Gertie"), Charles A. Pusey (as "Lord Smiley Smiles"), Josie Rooney (as "Violet Blossom"), Julia Rooney (as "Rose Bloom"), Izetta Sprague (as "Willie Wring"), Esther Wallace (as "Minnie Mint"). Produced by E.D. Stair and George H. Nicolai.
- (1909) Stage Play: Old Dutch. Musical/farce. Music by Victor Herbert. Book by Edgar Smith. Lyrics by George V. Hobart. Musical Director: Louis F. Gottschalk. Electrical effects by John Whalen. Costume Design by Melville Ellis. Scenic Design by John H. Young. Directed by Ned Wayburn. Herald Square Theatre: 22 Nov 1909- 5 Feb 1910 (88 performances). Cast: Albert Aporta (as "Chorus"), Mabel Barnes (as "Chorus"), Louis Boyle (as "Chorus"), Blanche Brooks (as "Chorus"), John Bunny (as "Franz von Bomberg"), Miriam Butler (as "Chorus"), Josephine Carlin (as "Kate"), Harry Carmack (as "Chorus"), Vernon Castle (as "Honorable Algernon Clymber"), Jeanne Crane (as "Chorus"), Billee Cuppia (as "Mabel"), Charlotte Cushman (as "Chorus"), Natalie Dare (as "Chorus"), Eva Davenport (as "Rosa von Bomberg"), Minna Davenport (as "Chorus"), Henry Detloff (as "Chorus"), Harry Devine (as "Chorus"), Libby Diamond (as "Chorus"), Edna Dodsworth (as "Chorus"), Layne Donaldson (as "Chorus"), John Donnelly (as "Grenwald/Chorus"), Alice Dovey (as "Lisa Streusand"), George Dowling (as "Gendarmes"), Sue Duval (as "Chorus"), Lew Fields (as "Ludwig Streusand"), Dolly Filly (as "Chorus"), Louis Finnery (as "Chorus"), Arthur Fisher (as "Chorus"), Lillian Foster (as "Chorus"), Robert Fuehrer (as "Little Hans"), Wood Gobel (as "Oskar"), Gertrude Grant Chorus/Gretchen"), Frank Griffiths (as "Chorus"), Jane Grover (as "Gwendolyn"), Frank Hallam (as "Chorus"), Harry Harrington (as "Franz"), Helen Hayes (as "Little Mime"), John E. Henshaw (as "Leopold Mueller"), Hannah Hess (as "Babette"), Rhea Hess (as "Fleurette"), Hortense (as "Dance Specialty"), George Howe (as "Chorus"), Nettie Hyde (as "Olga"), Victor Hyde (as "Messenger/Allan"), Isabelle Jason (as "Chorus"), Mack Johnston (as "Jean"), Charles Judels (as "Joseph Cusinier"), Mazie Kimball (as "Chorus"), Elsie Le Boy (as "Margaret"), Adah Baker Lewis (as "Alma Villianyi"), Lighting Charlie (as "Lighting Charlie"), George Lynch (as "Wilhelm"), Evelyn Martin (as "Chorus"), Lavinia Mason (as "Chorus"), Thomas B. McCormick (as "Adelbert"), Rose Monroe (as "Chorus"), Paul Moore (as "Chorus"), Lotta Morse (as "Chorus"), Marise Naughton Julia"), Joseph Norwich (as "Gustave"), Robert O'Neill (as "Chorus"), Beatrice Priest (as "Chorus"), Elsie Raymond (as "Chorus"), William Raymond (as "Alfred von Bomberg"), Ruth Rider (as "Lois/Chorus"), Fred Roberts (as "Rudolf"), Irene Russell (as "The Girl with the Hair Lip"), Opal Scott (as "Chorus"), Gwen Sears (as "Chorus"), Evelyn Smith (as "Chorus"), William Steyers (as "Chorus"), Joseph Torpey (as "Gendarmes"), Marion Whitney (as "Maude"), William Whittaker (as "Chorus"), May Willard (as "Freda/Chorus"). Produced by Sam S. and Lee Shubert Inc. and Lew M. Fields.
- (1910) Stage Play: The Summer Widowers. Musical. Written by Glen MacDonough. Music orchestrated by Frank Saddler. Miss Franklin's songs composed by: Burt Green. Musical Director: George Purdy. Directed by Ned Wayburn. Broadway Theatre: 4 Jun 1910- 1 Oct 1910 (140 performances). Produced by Lew M. Fields.
- (1911) Stage Play: The Slim Princess. Musical comedy. Music by Leslie Stuart. Book by Henry Blossom. Lyrics by Henry Blossom. From a story by George Ade. Musical Director: William E. MacQuinn. Costume Design by Percy Anderson. Directed by Austin Hurgon. Globe Theatre: 2 Jan 1911- 1 Apr 1911 (104 performances). Cast: Edna Bates (as "Chorus"), Julia Beaubien (as "Chorus"), Alys Belga (as "Chorus"), Leila Benton (as "Chorus"), Babe Beresford (as "Chorus"), Jackie Beryl (as "Chorus"), Jane Bliss (as "Chorus"), Elizabeth Brice (as "Lutie Longstreet"), Max Brown (as "Chorus"), Sam Burbank (as "Tom Golding/Chorus"), Evelyn Carson (as "Chorus"), Joseph Cawthorn (as "Herr Louis von Schloppenhauer"), Peggy Dana (as "Chorus"), Arthur J. Engel (as "Baluchistan"), Helen Falconer (as "Chorus"), May Fields (as "Chorus"), Julia Frary (as "Princess Jeneka"), Dolly Germaine (as "Chorus"), Fred Gould (as "Chorus"), Norah Gourley (as "Chorus"), Josephine Harriman (as "Chorus"), Pauline Hathaway (as "Chorus"), Carl Hayden (as "Hamdi Pasha"), Bessie Holbrook (as "Chorus"), Elsie Janis (as "Princess Kalora"), Charles Judels (as "Count Luigi Tincagni Tomasso"), Josephine Kernell (as "Chorus"), Alice Keyes (as "Chorus"), Charles King (as "Tod Norcross"), Josephine Lachmar (as "Chorus"), Albert Lamson (as "Chorus"), Wallace McCutcheon (as "Alex Pike"), Joseph C. Miron (as "Prince Selim Malagsaki"), Ralph Nairn (as "Hon. Crawley Plumston"), Anna Pallas (as "Chorus"), Estelle Perry (as "Chorus"), Fred Pirkuritz (as "Chorus"), Henrietta Pouts (as "Chorus"), Peggy Preston (as "Chorus"), Olive Quimby (as "Chorus"), Eugene Revere (as "Harry Romaine"), Margaret St. Clair (as "Chorus"), Elise Steele (as "Chorus"), Harriet Sterling (as "A Visitor"), Albert Stewart (as "Lucas"), Mona Trieste (as "Chorus"), Queenie Vassar (as "Madame Saidis"), Neil Walton (as "Bokhara"), Kate Wingfield (as "Mrs. Plumston"). Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1912) Stage Play: Ziegfeld Follies of 1912. Musical revue/extravaganza. Music by Raymond Hubbell. Lyrics by Harry B. Smith. Music orchestrated by Frank Saddler. Musical Direction by Frank Darling. Additional music by William Jerome, James Monaco, A. Seymour Brown, Bert Grant, Jack E. Hazzard, Blanche Merrill, Leo Edwards and Bert Williams. Directed by Julian Mitchell. Moulin Rouge: 21 Oct 1912- 4 Jan 1913 (88 performances). Cast: Ida Adams, Beatrice Allen, Marie Baxter, Evelyn Carlton, Eleanore Christy, Zaina Curzon, Natalie Dagwell, The Dolly Sisters, Grace DuBoise, Leon Errol, Bessie Fennell, Charles Gilmore, Dorothy Godfrey, Bernard Granville, Marion Hale, Elise Hamilton, Flo Hart, Olga Hempstone, Lola Hilton, Madeline Howard, Charles Judels, Adele La Pierre, William LeBrun, Frances Leslie, May Leslie, Hazel Lewis, Jessie Lewis, Ruby Lewis, Lillian Lorraine, Harry Luck, Vivian MacDonald, Vera Maxwell, Margaret Morris, Catheryn Peters, Murray Queen, Josie Sadler, Ray Samuels, Clifford Saum, Max Scheck, John G. Schrode, Charles Scribner, Katheryn Smyth, Eleanor St. Claire, Peter Swift, Daisy Virginia, Ella Warner, Jane Warrington, Harry Watson, Bert Williams, Fred Woodward. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- (1913) Stage Play: Anna Held's All Star Variete Jubilee. Vaudeville.
- (1914) Stage Play: Twin Beds.
- (1915) Stage Play: Nobody Home. Book by Guy Bolton and Paul Rubens. Music by Jerome Kern. Based on the libretto for the English musical "Mr. Popple of Ippleton" by Joseph W. Herbert. Additional music by C.W. Murphy, Dan Lipton, Otto Motzan, Ford Dabney and James Reese Europe. Additional lyrics by Schuyler Greene, Herbert Reynolds, Lawrence Grossmith and Harry B. Smith. Musical Director: Max Hirschfeld. Music orchestrated by Frank Saddler. Scenic Design by Elsie DeWolfe. Costume Design by Hickson, Inc. and R.B. Fashion Clothes. Directed by J.H. Benrimo. Princess Theatre (moved to Maxine Elliott's Theatre from 7 Jun 1915- close): 20 Apr 1915- 7 Aug 1915 (135 performances). Cast: George Anderson (as "Vernon Popple"), Winifred Browne (as "Beatrice Beresford"), Theodore Buerk (as "Daggett Ramsdell"), Cleo Carter (as "Edna Esmelton"), Helen Clarke (as "Dolly Dip"), Ethel Clayton (as "Clarice Carrington"), Della Connor (as "Barmaid"), Byrd Coolsby (as "Edward Pinaud"), Marion Dale (as "Trilby Tango"), Marion Davies (as "Polly Polka"), Alice Dovey (as "Violet Brinton"), Flora Fredericks (as "Gertie Gavotte"), Lillian Gaylor (as "Veroniva Vandelier"), Tom Graves (as "An Interior Decorator/An Unknown"), Lester Greenwood (as "Splendor Colgate"), Lawrence Grossmith (as "Freddy Popple"), Charles Judels (as "Rolando D'Amorini"), Irving Kreuder (as "Riker Hegeman"), George Lydecker (as "Jack Kenyon"), Carl Lyle (as "Platt"), Elizabeth Moore (as "Violet Vivienne"), Helen O'Day (as "Patricia Parkington"), Maude Odell (as "Mrs. D'Amorini"), Frank Ross (as "Roger Gallet"), Adele Rowland (as "Miss Tony Miller"), Mona Sartoris (as "Hilda Hesitation"), Quentin Todd (as "Bellboy/Havelock Page"), Lillian Tucker (as "Jack Kenyon"), Vera Vendome (as "Maria Maxixe"), Gertrude Waixel (as "Tessie Trot"), Louise White (as "The Pippin"), J. Abbott Worthley (as "Regan Terry"). Produced by Elisabeth Marbury and F. Ray Comstock.
- (1916) Stage Play: Step This Way. Musical comedy.
- (1916) Stage Play: Go to It. Musical.
- (1917) Stage Play: My Lady's Glove. Musical/operetta. Music by Oscar Straus. Additional numbers by Sigmund Romberg. Material by Edgar Smith and Edward A. Paulton. Lyrics by Edgar Smith and Edward A. Paulton. Based on a Viennese operetta by Leopold Jacobson and Leo Stein. Musical Direction by Gaetano Merola. Choreographed by Allan K. Foster. Production Supervised by J. J. Shubert. Directed by J.C. Huffman. Lyric Theatre: 18 Jun 1917- 30 Jun 1917 (16 performances). Cast: Isabel Adams, Faye Atkins, Gene Aubrey, Pearl Baremore, Helen Berkley, Paul Burtnett, Grace Burton, Joan Butlin, Sylvia Cassell, Rebekah Cauble, Florence Challenger, Beatrice Cloak, Suzanna Collingwood, Grace Daniels, Ann Delmore, Frances Demarest, Jack Donnelly, Herman Fink, Virginia Fissinger, Eleanor B. Fox, Lottie Franklyn, Arthur Geary, Mareta George, C.H. Gilbert, Mabel Godding, C.L. Henderson, Charles Judels, J.W. Kelly, Katherine Kildare, Fay King, Nita Lamabrid, Madeline Levene, Gladys Logan, Doris Marvin, Charles McNaughton, C.H. Miller, Ned Monroe, Ray Moore, Alexander Morrissey, Larry Mulvaney, Maude Odell, Charles Purcell, Josephine Ray, Helen Rintelen, Harold Rolland, Vivienne Segal, Florence Shortell, Horace Sinclair (as "Lieutenant Ponsonby") [Broadway debut], Joe Stenton, Teddy Stevens, Nadina Tagelli, Rose Timble, Kenneth Tudor, Neil Walton, Pearl Weber, Silvia Wood. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1917) Stage Play: Doing Our Bit. Musical revue. Book by Harold Atteridge. Music by 'Sigmund Romberg' (av) and Herman Timberg. Lyrics by Harold Atteridge. Musical Direction by Oscar Radin. Additional music by Anatol Friedland, Al Piantadosi, Fred Fisher, Nat Osborne, Billy Frisch, Howard Johnson and Henry Leslie. Additional lyrics by Billy Frisch, Alfred Bryan, Henry Lewis, L. Wolfe Gilbert, Al Wilson, Joseph McCarthy, Sam Ehrlich, Howard Johnson and Henry Leslie. Choreographed by Allan K. Foster. Production Supervised by Jacob J. Shubert. Directed by J.C. Huffman. Winter Garden Theatre: 18 Oct 1917- 9 Feb 1918 (130 performances). Cast: Sam Ash, Elsie Bambrick, Kitty Berg, Tina Bidekoff, Rose Birdenfild, Gertrude Blake, David Brown, Eduardo Cansino, Elsa Cancino, Millie Carlson, Frank Carter, Rebekah Cauble, Chilson-Ohrman, Viola Clarens, James Clemons, Beatrice Cloak, Edna Commerford, George Coogan, James J. Corbett, Mildred Coughlan, Dorothy Court, Dorothy Coyle, Rose Coyle, Aieda Crucini, Babe Dakin, Beatrice De Roe, Anna DeLaurentis, Helen DeSeife, Harry DeWitt, Adrienne Dillon, Rosetta Duncan, Vivian Duncan, Ilene Edwards, Florence Elmore, Joe Evans, Nancy Everett, Virginia Fissinger, Jeane Fowler, Inez Francis, Mazibelle Glover, Miriam Glover, Sheila Goffe, Rose Goldhair, Mattie Gromley, Andrew Harper, Rae Hartley, C.L. Henderson, Mildred Holliday, Corinne Jackson, Sylvia Jason, Charles Judels, Roma June, Grace Keeshon, Mabel Kelly, Marie Kennedy, Allison King, Mildred La Gue, Elsie LaMont, Gwendolyn LeMassena, Helen Leonard, Adah Baker Lewis, Henry Lewis, Hilda Major, Charlotte Marmont, Virginia May, Carolyn Maywood, Barbara McCree, Ed. McHenry, Frank McMasters, Vera Mercer, Clyde Miller, Sophie Mills, Irene Mitchell, James Monohan, Helen Montague, Marion Mooney, Bud Murray, Bud Murry, Mitzi Nada, Leah Norah, Lucile Panteloff, Blanche Parks, Evelyn Parks, Marion Parks, Anna Paula, Mary Pell, Helen Pennell, Augusta Pessman, Edith Pierce, Leonore Puron, Hattie Rand, Jessie Reed, Nora Reed, Vera Roehm, Aileen Rooney, Nida Rose, Adele Rudolph, Billie Sheridan, Ingrid Slettengren, Floyd Snyder, Katherine Stang, Jean Staples, Reba Stewart, Ed Stokem, Ethel Sturges, Mildred Symons, Lola Taylor, Fay Teller, Herman Timberg, Frank Tinney, Fay Tunis, Gladys Turner, Rose Villa, Leila Von Holk, Henrietta Wall, Dolly Wallace, Eugene White, Edna Whitney, Ruby Whitney, Florence Wilde, Winona Wilkins, Ailene Wilmer, Ed Wynn. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1918) Stage Play: Head Over Heels. Musical. Music by Jerome Kern. Lyrics by Edgar Allan Woolf. Book by Edgar Allan Woolf. Dramatized by Lee Arthur. From the story "Shadows" by Nalbro Bartley. Additional music by Harold A. Levey. Musical Director: Harold A. Levey. Musical Staging by Julian Mitchell. Directed by George F. Marion. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 29 Aug 1918- 23 Nov 1918 (100 performances). Cast: Angele Baber (as "Philene Van Stroock"), Irving Beebe (as "Mr. Edward Sterling"), Andy Bennett (as "Buxaume"), Martha Bowes (as "Miss Wentworth"), Florence Browne (as "Miss Collins"), Gertrude Dallas [final Broadway role], Grace Daniels, Joseph Dunn (as "Toni"), Marion Earle (as "Anita Vanderhayden"), Adelaide Fiset (as "Wanda Van Zandt"), Dorothy Gilbert (as "Diane Van Renssaler"), Edmund Gurney (as "Jarvis"), Fan Haggerty (as "Miss Graham"), Mitzi Hajos (as "Mitzi Bambinetti"), Marie Hollywell (as "Fanchon Van Twiller"), Edna Hyatt (as "Elsie Van Pelt"), Charles Judels (as "Signor Bambinetti"), Robert Emmett Keane (as "Mr. T. Anthony Squibbs"), Margaret Linden (as "Mrs. Sarah Montague"), Eleanor Livingston (as "Miss Hammond"), Dorothy MacKaye (as "Miss Muriel Sterling"), Jean Mann (as "Miss Edith Penfield"), Ernest Marini, Boyd Marshall (as "Mr. Robert Lawson"), Irma Marwick (as "Zoie Van Puyster"), Niobe Marwick (as "Lorine Vandusen"), Edward Mathews (as "Henri"), Carrie McManus (as "Molly"), James Oliver (as "Oscar"), Paul Oscard (as "Baron Everard Cesare D'Oultremont"), Ruth Parker (as "Dijonne Van Piet"), Marion Phillips (as "Delia Van Maarck"), Dorothy Smoller (as "Luella Vanderwater"), Lambert Terry (as "Office Boy"), Martha Voight (as "Marcine Vanbaar"). Produced by Henry W. Savage.
- (1920) Stage Play: Mary. Musical comedy.
- (1922) Stage Play: For Goodness Sake. Musical comedy. Material by Fred Jackson. Lyrics by Arthur Jackson. Music by William Daly and Paul Lannin. Musical Director: William Daly. Additional music by George Gershwin. Additional lyrics by Arthur Francis. Musical Staging by Allan K. Foster. Additional Staging by Julian Alfred. Directed by Priestly Morrison. Lyric Theatre: 21 Feb 1922- 20 May 1922 (103 performances). Cast: Harry R. Allen, Adele Astaire, Fred Astaire, Roger Buckley, Helen Ford, Vinton Freedley, Marjorie Gateson, Jack Goeirs, Kitty Gray, Jack E. Hazzard, James Herold, Doris Hyde, Sylvia Jocelyn, Charles Judels, Bebe LaVelle, Muriel Lodge, Lenore Lukens, Dana Mayo, Peggy Mitchell, Fred Packard, Helen Paine, Ann Poulson, Phyllis Reynolds, Lorraine Sherwood, Russell Swann, Violet Vale. Produced by Alex A. Aarons.
- (1923) Stage Play: Wildflower. Musical. Book and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II and Otto A. Harbach. Music by Herbert Stothart (also Musical Director) and Vincent Youmans. Music orchestrated by Robert Russell Bennett. Gowns and Costumes Designed by Charles Le Maire. Scenic Design by Gates & Morange. Choreographed by Dave Bennett. Directed by Oscar Eagle. Casino Theatre: 7 Feb 1923- 29 Mar 1924 (477 performances). Cast: Edith Day (as "Nina Benedetto"), Florence Ashton, Evelyn Cavanaugh, Viola Clarens, Elizabeth Coyle, Jerome Daley, James Doyle, Charles Froom, Frank Grinell, Muriel Harrison, Adele Hart, Agnes Horter, Esther Howard (as "Lucrezia La Roche"), Olin Howland (as "Gabrielle"), Robert Hurst, Charles Judels (as "Gaston La Roche"), Al Kinley, Louis Laub, Helen Lewis, Ursula Mack, Genevieve Markham, Beverly Maude, William McGurn, Myrtle Miller, Margaret Morris, Verona Oakley, Marie Otto, Marion Phillips, Paul Porter, Marion Randall, Martinez Randall, Guy Robertson, Kenneth Smith, Sybil Steward, Peggy Stohl, Emmy Tattersall, Marjorie Wood. Produced by Arthur Hammerstein.
- (1925) Stage Play: Gay Paree. Musical revue. Music by Alfred Goodman, Maurice Ruebens and J. Fred Coots. Book by Harold Atteridge. Lyrics by Clifford Grey. Musical Director: Alfred Goodman. Music orchestrated by Emil Gerstenberger. Additional lyrics by Harold Atteridge, Henry Creamer, Buddy G. DeSylva, Ballard MacDonald, Lester Allen, Harry Woods, Charles Tobias and Al Sherman. Additional music by Harry Woods, Charles Tobias, Al Sherman, James Hanley, Walter Donaldson and Joseph Meyer. Scenic Design by Watson Barratt. Costume Design by Ernest Schrapps. Musical Staging by Earl Lindsay. Choreographed by Alexis Kosloff. Directed by J.J. Shubert and Charles Judels. Shubert Theatre: 18 Aug 1925- 30 Jan 1926 (181 performances). Cast: Newton Alexander, Betty Allen, Lucille Arden, William Baden, Dorothy Barber, Pauline Blair, Frances Blythe, Richard Bold, Ilsi Bott, Alice Boulden, Carol Boyer, William Brainerd, Lorraine Brooks, Camille, Jean Caswell, Chandler Christy, Helen Claire, Eddie Conrad, Claire Daniels, Isabel Dawn, Claudia Dell, Johnny Dove, Louise Dove, Clarice Durham, Mabel Earle, Beth Elliott, Byrdeatta Evans, Florence Fair, Rosemary Farmer, Margie Finley, Walton Ford, Ruth Gillette, Florence Golden, Viola Griffith, Texas Guinan, Jack Haley, Ruth Hamilton, Thalie Hamilton, Edith Higgens, Alice Hooke, Edna Hopper, Florence Horne, Gus Hyland, Katherine Janeway, Frank Kimball, Marty Kolinsky, Lillian Lane, George LeMaire, Fern LeRoy, Winnie Lightner, Martha Linn, Gertrude Lowe, Viola Marshall, Betty Maurice, Arthur May, Verdi Milli, Marie Price, Prosper & Maret, Dorothy Rae, Nora Reed, Camille Renault, 'Charles "Chic' Sale', Salt and Pepper, Wilfred Seagram, Winifred Seale, Dorothy Shepard, Jeanette Simard, Bartlett Simmons, Marie Simpson, Bernadette Spencer, Louise Taylor, Billy B. Van, Lorraine Weimar, Margaret Wilson. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert. Produced in association with Rufus LeMaire.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Merry World. Musical revue. Music by Maurice Ruebens, J. Fred Coots, Herman Hupfeld and Sam Timber. Lyrics by Clifford Grey. Musical Director: Alfred Goodman. Featuring songs by Marc Anthony and Albert von Tilzer. Featuring songs with lyrics by Leo Robin, Donovan Parsons and Herbert Reynolds. Staged by James C. Huffman. Directed by Charles Judels. Imperial Theatre (moved to The Shubert Theatre from 2 Aug 1926- close): 8 Jun 1926- 21 Aug 1926 (87 performances). Cast: Beatrice Bickel, Laine Blaire, Billie Blake, Marian Boazo, Ray Bolger, Emil Boreo, Margaret Breen, Ann Burnes, Donald Calthrop, Louise Chowning, Carmen Conley, Grace Connelly, Lucita Corvera, Wilma Crossman, Edith Davis, Betty De Pascue, Bernard Dudley, Mary Dunckley, Irving Edwards, Sudworth Frazier, Selby Galloway, Grace Glover, Alexander Gray, Nicholas Grey, Elna Gudrun, Fred Harper, Morris Harvey, Grace Hayes, Evelyn Herbert, Frank Jarvis, Ann LaVerne, Edwin Lawrence, Morhora Lloyd, Lily Long, Lillian Lorray, Yoland Losee, June Lovewell, Cookie Lunsford, Eva Lynn, Frances Lynn, Helen Madigan, Ada Marcus, Jaquelyn Marshall, Ritta Martin, Maryland Collegians, Marion Mooney, Gale Moore, Jane Moore, Ruth Moore, Maxine Morton, Sylvia Neirick, Dorothy Noble, Starke Patterson, Betty Pecan, Bunnie Pedreau, Lola Raine, Dezso Retter, Annie Rose, Salt and Pepper, Betty Sheldon, Ruth Simmons, Lily Smart, Olga Smirnova, Evan Southwell, Leonie Spiro, Frances Suzanne, Mabelle Swor, Myrtle Thompson, Kao Tortoni, Peaches Tortoni, Rosalie Trego, Nicholas Tripolitoff, Helen Wallace, Thomas Whitely, Dorothy Whitmore, Virginia Whitmore. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1926) Stage Play: A Night in Paris. Musical revue [return engagement]. Book by Harold Atteridge. Music by J. Fred Coots and Maurice Ruebens. Lyrics by Clifford Grey and McElbert Moore. Musical Director: Charles Drury. Additional music by Maurice Yvain. Choreographed by George Dobbs, Oyra and Gertrude Hoffman. Production Supervised by J.J. Shubert. Directed by Charles Judels. 44th Street Theatre (moved to Jolson's 59th Street Theatre from 18 Oct 1926- close): 26 Jul 1926- 30 Oct 1926 (113 performances). Cast: Isabelle Bennett, Ray Bolger, Carol Boyer, Ruth Brady, Jacqueline Brown, Patricia Caron, Dorothy Chadwick, Morine Clarke, Ralph Coram, Annette Davies, William Davis, Jane Dobbin, George Dobbs, Frances Ebert, Rosemary Farmer, Antonina Fechner, Misha Ferenzo, Margie Finley, Lillian Ford, Helene Franz, Catherine Gallimore, Helen Gay, Miss Gilberti, Eleneva Karola, Naoe Konda, Lucien La Riviere, Richard Lee, Madeline Luzon, Marion Luzon, Marguerite Marano, Olga Marye, Olive McClure, Margaret McGonigle, Mary McGonigle, Lucienne Moineau, Mia Muselle, Peggy Neil, Marietta O'Brien, Harry O'Neal, Jack Osterman, Oyra, Eleanor Painter, Barnett Parker, Jack Pearl, Nancy Phillips, Annie Pritchard, Betty Rappe, Ruth Rappe, Kathryn Ray, Gladys Rennick, Loretta Rhodes, Catherine Sheeran, Ivy St. Clair, Miss Swan, Corinne Sylvae, Norma Terris, Edna Tobin, Barbara Vernon, Myrtle Wagner, June Wall, Ruth-Ann Watson, Virginia Watts, Edna Webster, Emily Woolley. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1926) Stage Play: My Country. Comedy.
- (1926) Stage Play: Gay Paree. Musical review (revival). Directed by James C. Huffman. Dialogue Directed by Charles Judels. Winter Garden Theatre: 9 Nov 1926- 9 Apr 1927 (192 performances). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1927) Stage Play: A Night in Spain. Musical revue. Music by Jean Schwartz. Book by Harold Atteridge. Lyrics by Alfred Bryan. Musical Director: Max Hoffmann. Additional music by Ted Healy, Phil Baker and Sid Silvers. Additional lyrics by Ted Healy, Phil Baker and Sid Silvers. Scenic Design by Watson Barratt. Costume Design by Ernest Schrapps. Scenic Design by Watson Barratt. Directed by Charles Judels. 44th Street Theatre (moved to The Winter Garden Theatre from 10 Oct 1927- close): 3 May 1927- 12 Nov 1927 (174 performances). Cast: Roslind Abbomonte, George Anderson, Andreini Trio, Phil Baker, Barbera, Julia Barker, Bee Basil, Frances Blythe, Grace Bowman, Sam Braun, Jay Brennan, Andrienne Brower, Peggy Burgess, Ann Cabot, Marie Caldwell, Gloria Christy, Morine Clarke, Tito Coral, Cortez and Peggy, Xavier Cugat, Amanda Daisey, Mildred Douglas, Dorothy Drum, J. Colville Dunn, Marion Fedro, Elsa Freed, Bernice Gardener, Bert Gardener, Helen Gesty, Bert Haines, Thaile Hamilton, Grace Hayes, Betty Healy, Ted Healy, Jean Henderson, Aini Hendricks, Shemp Howard, Helba Huara, Pearl Jentoft, Helen Kane, Carla King, Rhea Mason, Kay McHugh, Charlotte Middlemore, Loretta Minogue, Betty Montgomery, Mabel Pauley, Agatha Phillips, Bobby Pinkus, Florence Powell, Rae Powell, Georgie Price, Lola Raine, Evangeline Raleigh, Olive Rector, Dot Richman, Stanley Rogers, Ethel Seiberling, Emily Sherman, Peggy Sickle, Sid Silvers, Bartlett Simmons, Lillian Smith, Ellen Speeler, Ann Sutherland, Margaret Swanson, Norma Terris, Dolly Thain, Trainor Brothers, Dollie Trucksess, Gladys Turner, Barbara Vernon, Emilia Vidali, Lou Warren, Jeanette Wiate, Victoria Winter, Evelyn Wright. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1927) Stage Play: Artists and Models. Musical revue. Music by Harry Akst and Maurice Ruebens [credited as Maurie Rubens]. Lyrics by J. Keirn Brennan and Benny Davis. Additional lyrics by Ted Lewis and Jack Osterman. Musical Director: Max Meth. Featuring songs by Gus Kahn and Ray Henderson. Featuring songs with lyrics by Gus Kahn, Buddy G. DeSylva and Lew Brown. Choreographed by Ralph Reader, Earl Lindsey and Jan Oyra. Directed by J.C. Huffman and Charles Judels. Winter Garden Theatre: 15 Nov 1927- 24 Mar 1928 (151 performances). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1947) Stage Play: Louisiana Lady. Musical comedy.
- (1944) Stage musical: Song of Norway - playing Tito; presented at the Los Angeles Philharmonic Auditorium by the Los Angeles Civic Light Opera Association
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