- (1912) Stage: Wrote "The High Road", produced on Broadway. Melodrama. Directed produced by Harrison Grey Fiske and Minnie Maddern Fiske (credited as Mrs. Fiske). Hudson Theatre: 19 Nov 1912-Jan 1913 (closing date unknown/71 performances). Cast: A.S. 'Pop' Byron (as "John Stephen Maddock"), Minnie Maddern Fiske (credited as Mrs. Fiske; as "Mary Page"), Frederick Perry (as "Winfield Barnes"), Aldrich Bowker (as "Cornelius Murray"; Broadway debut), Barrett Clark (as "Harvey Lawrence"), Charles Fisher (as "Mr. Page"), Harry J. Holliday (as "Scott"), Lewis Howard (as "Martin Denison"), Nina Melville (as "Esther"), Joseph Selman (as "Leslie Farley"), F. Van Rensaelaer (as "James R. Kenyon"), Charles Waldron (as "Alan Wilson"). NOTE: Filmed as The High Road (1915).
- Playwright: "The Boss". NOTE: Filmed as The Boss (1915).
- Playwright: "The Princess Zim-Zim". NOTE: Filmed as A Coney Island Princess (1916).
- Playwright: "Egypt". NOTE: Filmed as The Call of Her People (1917).
- (1921) Stage: Wrote "Romance", produced on Broadway. Comedy/drama (revival). Playhouse Theatre: 28 Mar 1921-May 1921 (closing date unknown/106 performances). Cast: A.E. Anson (as "Cornelius Van Tuyl"), Dorothy Chase (as "Miss Frothingham"), William Davis (as "Eugene"), Frank Dawson (as "Mr. Harry Putnam"), Edward Duane (as "Servant at Mr. Van Tuyl's"), Miriam Elliott (as "Susan Van Tuyl"), Harold Gwynn (as "M. Baptiste"), Bertram Hanauer (as "David Norman"), Doris Keane (as "Mme. Cavallini"), Esther Lyon (as "Mrs. Rutherford"), Denise Morris (as "Miss Snyder"), Lynn Pratt (as "Mr. Fred Livingston"), Gustave Rolland (as "Francois"), Charles Romano (as "Frank Burroughs"), John Monk Saunders (as "Butler at Rectory"), Florence Short (as "Signora Vanucci"), Frederic Sims (as "Louis"), Basil Sydney (as "Thomas Armstrong"; Broadway debut), Helen Tracy (as "Mrs. Frothingham"; final Broadway role(, Isabelle West (as "Miss Armstrong"), Verna Wilkens (as "Mrs. Grey"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert. NOTE: Filmed as Romance (1930), Romance (1920).
- Playwright: "Salvation Nell". NOTE: Filmed as Salvation Nell (1931), Salvation Nell (1921), Salvation Nell (1915).
- Playwright: "The Song of Songs". NOTE: Filmed as The Song of Songs (1933), Lily of the Dust (1924), The Song of Songs (1918).
- (1926) Stage: Wrote (w/Charles MacArthur; earliest Broadway credit) "Lulu Belle", produced on Broadway. Directed / produced by David Belasco. Belasco Theatre: 9 Feb 1926-Mar 1926 (closing date unknown/39 performances). Cast: Joseph Allenton (as "Bunny Delano"), W.S. Bell (as "Roscoe"), Eva Benton (as "Mrs. Trumbull"), Clarissa Blue (as "A Flower Girl"), William Boag (as "Wilkins"), Samuel Bolen (as "A Bartender"), Minnie Brown (as "Coat Room Girl"), Sybil Bryant (as "Mrs. George Randall"), Olie Burgoyne (as "Mabel De Witt"), George 'Red' Callender (as "Mt. Vernon Jackson"), Fannie Belle De Knight (as "Mrs. Frisbie"), Jean Del Val (as "The Vicompte De Villars"), Utoy D'tyl (as "Pussy Harrison"), Laurence Eddinger (as "Uncle Gustus"), Oswald Edinborough (as "Elmer Jackson"), Sidney Elliott (as "Fred Harrison"), Jane Ferrell (as "Barton"), Mildred Hall (as "Lovie Bowtelle"), John Harrington (as "Butch Cooper"), Henry Hull (as "George Randall"), Loraine Hunter (as "Ada May Ramsey"), James Jackson (as "Lew"), J.W. Jackson (as "Happy"), Zaidee Jackson (as "An Entertainer"), J. Louis Johnson (as "Brother Staley"), Altomay Jones (as "Geranium Monroe"), Anthony Knilling (as "Ambulance Driver"), Fred Miller (as "Duke Weaver"), Edward Nannery (as "Policeman Healy" / "Sgt. Healy"), Margaret Petty (as "Violet Randall"), Evelyn Preer (as "Ruby Lee"), Herman Profit (as "Williams"), Seifert C. Pyle (as "Clarence De Voe"), Nellie R. Reynolds (as "Mrs. Monroe"), Annie Rhinelander (as "Sister Blossom"), Harold Seton (as "An Ambulance Doctor"), William St. James (as "Dr. J. Wilberforce Walker"), Goldye Steiner (as "Vangie Bowtelle"), William Taliafero (as "Royal Williams"), Edna Thomas (as "Valma Custer"), George Thomas (as "Another Patrolman"), Edward Thompson (as "Herman"), Edna Thrower (as "Mrs. Royal Williams"), Barclay Trigg (as "Milton"), Thomas Trisvan (as "Walter Randall"), Lenore Ulric (as "Lulu Belle"), Percival Vivian (as "Skeeter"), Allan Waith (as "Moke"), Jean Ward (as "Stella La Vergen"), Smothers Ward (as "Eugene Frisbie"), Mildred Wayne (as "Grace Wild"), Mattie Wilkes (as "Mrs. Jackson"), Elizabeth Williams (as "Mrs. Bowtelle"), Hemsley Winfield (as "Joe"), Virgie Winfield (as "Sister Sally"), Marguerite Wyatt (as "Ivy Whiteside"), Tammany Young (as "Shorty Noyes"). NOTE: Filmed as Lulu Belle (1948).
- (1930) Stage: Wrote (w/Margaret Ayer Barnes) "Dishonored Lady", produced on Broadway. Drama. Co-produced (w/Gilbert Miller) / directed by Guthrie McClintic. Empire Theatre: 4 Feb 1930-May 1930 (closing date unknown/127 performances). Cast: Fortunio Bonanova (as "Jose Moreno"), Katharine Cornell (as "Madeleine Cary"), Brenda Dahlen, Jimmy Daniels, Ruth Fallows, Paul Harvey (as "Lawrence Brennan"), Francis Lister, Edwin Morse, Lewis A. Sealy, Harvey Stephens, Fred Tiden (credited as Fred L. Tiden; final Broadway role). NOTE: Filmed as Dishonored Lady (1947).
- (2006) Stage: Wrote "Romance", performed at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago, IL, with Matt DeCaro in the cast.
- (1924) Stage: Wrote (w'Sidney Howard (I)') "Bewitched", produced on Broadway. National Theatre: 1 Oct 1924-Oct 1924 (closing date unknown/29 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "The Aviator"), Carol Benezet, Joseph Bingham, Edwin Caldwell, Willard Collins, Florence Eldridge (as "The Girl"), Robert Forsyth, Albert Hall, Stanley Landahl, José Ruben (as "The Marquis"), Joseph Sweeney (as "The Husband"), Herbert Westman, George Williams. Produced by John Cromwell.
- (1914) Stage: Wrote "The Garden of Paradise", produced on Broadway. From "The Little Mermaid" by Hans Christian Andersen. Park Theatre: 28 Nov 1914-Dec 1914 (closing date unknown/17 performances). Cast: Albert Barrett, Sheridan Block, Lionel Braham [Broadway debut], Frank Conroy, Clarence Felter, W.W. Gear, Richard Hale, Renee Kelly, Bennett Kilpack, Murray Kinnell [Broadway debut], Rosalie Mathieu, Eva Michner, Littledale Power, Maurice Robinson, John Rogers, Emily Stevens, Minnie Terry. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1919) Stage: Adapted material for "The Jest", produced on Broadway. Comedy/tragedy. Adapted from the Italian of Sem Benelli. Plymouth Theatre: 19 Sep 1919-28 Feb 1920 (179 performances). Cast: E.J. Ballantine (as "Fazio Gianetto's Servant"), John Barrymore (as "Giannetto Malespini, A Young Painter"), Lionel Barrymore (as "Neri Chiaramantesi, A Captain of the Mercenaries"), Cecil Clovelly (as "The Doctor"), Maud Durand, Margaret Fareleigh, Arthur Forrest, Maude Hanaford, Paul Irving, Charles Kennedy, Jacob Kingsberry, W.J. McClure, Martha McGraw, Arthur Rankin, H. Charles Smith, Gilda Varesi Archibald (as "Fiametta"), Thomas Williams, Louis Wolheim (as "The Executioner"). Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1935) Stage: Wrote "Romance," performed at the Cape Playhouse in Dennis, MA, with Jane Cowl in the cast.
- (8/1938) Stage: Wrote "Romance," performed at the Ogunquit Playhouse in Ogunquit, ME, with Cornelia Otis Skinner and 'Donald Cook (I)' in the cast.
- Playwright: Wrote "The Nigger". NOTE: Filmed as The Governor (1915).
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content