- (1896 - 1930) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1896) Stage Play: The Girl From Paris. Musical. Music by Ivan Caryll [earliest Broadway credit]. Book by George Dance. Music orchestrated by George Hayes. Scenic Design by D. Frank Dodge and Frank Rafter. Directed by Frank Smithson [earliest Broadway credit]. Herald Square Theatre: Dec 1896- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Nina Ainscoe (as "Ethel, The Major's daughter"), Adele Archer (as "Angela, The Major's daughter"), Olivia Astor (as "Violet, The Major's daughter"), Grace Belasco (as "Anna, A servant"), Charles A. Bigelow (as "Mr. Ebenezer Honeycomb"), Edward Chapman (as "Amos Dingle, Honeycomb's friend"), Phoebe Cohen (as "Mrs. Honeycomb"), Charles Dickson (as "Tom Everleigh, A barrister"), Josie Fairbanks (as "May, The Major's daughter"), Josephine Hall (as "Ruth, Honeycomb's servant") [Broadway debut], May Hamilton (as "Edith, The Major's daughter"), Joseph W. Herbert (as "Mr. Auguste Pompier, A French spy"), Thomas Kierns (as "Blatterwater, A gendarme"), May Lavigne (as "Gretchen"), Clara Lipman (as "Mlle. Julie Bon Bon, The Gay Perisienne"), Louis Mann (as "Hans, Proprietor of the Spa Hotel, Schoffenburgen") [Broadway debut], Willis Norton (as "Mabel, Norah's friend"), Matthew Ott (as "Fritz, A servant"), Ida Rock (as "Gladys, The Major's daughter"), John Savage (as "Cecil Smyth, Ducle's friend"), Cheridah Simpson (as "Norah Honeycomb"), Frank Smithson (as "Major Fossdyke, Of the Battersea Butterfly Shooters"), Sydney Tovey (as "Percy Tooting, Ducle's friend"), Harold Vizard (as "Algernon P. Ducle, An American") [Broadway debut], Anita Wilson (as "Maud, The Major's daughter"), Nellie Wilson (as "Rose, The Major's daughter").
- (1900) Stage Play: Mam'selle 'Awkins. Musical comedy. Music by Herman Perlot and Alfred E. Aarons. Material by Richard Carle. Lyrics by Richard Carle. Featuring songs with lyrics by Rose Beaumont, Nellie Beaumont and Matt C. Woodward. Featuring songs by Rose Beaumont, Nellie Beaumont and Ben M. Jerome. Musical Direction by Frank Gabriel. Directed by Frank Smithson. Victoria Theatre: 26 Feb 1900- 31 Mar 1900 (35 performances). Cast: Will Armstrong, Nellie Beaumont, Rose Beaumont, George C. Boniface, Georgiana Carhart, Richard Carle, Jeanne Caskie, Rose Clark, Maude Creighton, Charles Danby, Madge Dean, Hattie Delaro, Snitz Edwards (as "Julius Ippic"), Elfie Fay, Mamie Gilroy, Etienne Girardot (as "Fitzroy Cavendish"), Josephine Hall, Ethel Moore, Mrs. McKee Rankin, Marjorie Relyea, Elaine Selover, Marguerite Sylva, Lucille Verna, Larry Wheat. Produced by Alfred E. Aarons.
- (1900) Stage Play: A Million Dollars. Musical comedy. Music by A. Baldwin Sloane. Book by Louis Harrison and George V. Hobart. Lyrics by George V. Hobart. Musical Director: Jose Vandenberg. Choreographed by Carl Marwig. Directed by Frank Smithson. New York Theatre: 27 Sep 1900- 20 Oct 1900 (28 performances). Cast: Grafton Baker (as "Harold Spotwood"), Virginia Barnes, Zaza Belasco, Lillie Brink, Gilbert Clayton, Rita Dean, Fanny Dudley, Ethel Everton, Bessie Fennell, Harry Fitch, Lillian Florence, Mabel Florence, L.B. (Louis) Foley, Maud Francis, Archie Gillies, Ethel Goodyear, Maude Harlow, Ida Hawley (as "Phyllis Vandergold"), Ethel Kelly, Georgie Kelly, Ernestine Kingston, Marie Lachere, Lee Leontine, Lillie Leslie, Ignacio Martinetti, John Mayon, Lottie Medley, Jane Morrison, Joe Ott (as "Prince Punxatawney"), Charles H. Prince, Pat Rooney (as "Bazazza/Slats"), Maud Rose, Leonora Ruiz, Josie Sadler, Blanche Sherwood, Lew Simmons, Anna Snyder, Joseph Sparks, Cora Tanner, Agnes Vars, Cornell Williams, Nat M. Wills. Produced by Henry B. Sire and Meyer L. Sire.
- (1900) Stage Play: The Giddy Throng. Musical/burlesque. Music by A. Baldwin Sloane Book by Sydney Rosenfeld. Lyrics by Sydney Rosenfeld. Featuring songs by Ivan Caryll and Mike Bernard. Featuring songs with lyrics by Vincent Bryan. Vaudeville staged by Lionel Lawrence. Choreographed by Carl Marwig. Directed by Frank Smithson. New York Theatre: 24 Dec 1900- 11 May 1901 (164 performances). Cast: Grafton Baker (as "A Tenor Hero/Yhe Doctor/Vaudeville Performer"), Marie Baldwin (as "Ensemble"), Marguerite Binford (as "A Typical Tenderloiner"), Lilly Brink (as "Ensemble"), Emma Carus (as "Lady Francis Hope/Vaudeville Performer"), Mattie Chapin (as "Ensemble"), Attalie Claire (as "Ensemble"), Frank Doane (as "Richard Carvel"), Mabel Fenton (as "Sophy Fulgarney"), Charles Fitz (as "A Noted Chief"), L.B. (Louis) Foley (as "A Noted President"), Mayme Gehrue (as "The Drummer Boy's Sweetheart"), Mamie Gilroy (as "Dorothy Manners"), Ethel Goodyear (as "Ensemble"), William Gould (as "David Harum"), Joseph Harrington (as "Mr. Noble Rohman"), Louis Harrison (as "Lord Quex"), Georgia Kelly (as "Ensemble"), Daniel MacAvoy (as "Flambeau"), Inez Marcel (as "Ensemble"), Jessie May (as "Vaudeville Performer"), John Mayon, Muriel Milton (as "Ensemble"), Beula Montroise (as "Ensemble"), Vera Morris (as "Lady Allover"), Fred Niblo (as "Vaudeville Performer"), Theodore S. Peters (as "A New Reformer"), Charles H. Prince (as "Foxy Quiller"), Pat Rooney (as "An Office Boy/A Drummer Boy"), Leonora Ruiz (as "Ensemble"), Pearl Stilson (as "Ensemble"), Amelia Summerville (as "The Duchess of Sirood"), Torcat the Musical Eccentric (as "Vaudeville Performer"), May Yohe (as "Lady Muriel Despair"), Ethel York (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Henry B. Sire and Meyer L. Sire.
- (1901) Stage Play: The King's Carnival. Musical/burlesque. Music by A. Baldwin Sloane. Book by Sydney Rosenfeld. Lyrics by Sydney Rosenfeld. Additional lyrics by George V. Hobart and William Jerome. Featuring "My Evaline' with words and music by Mae Anwerda Sloane. Musical Director: J. Sebastian Hiller. Additional music by Jean Schwartz. Directed by Frank Smithson. New York Theatre: 13 May 1901- 6 Jun 1901 (64 performances). Cast: Lilly Brink, Harry Bulger, Laura Burt (as "Dolores de Mendoza"), Emma Carus, Frank Doane, Marie Dressler (as "Anne"), Ethel Elberton, Nina Farrington, John Ford, Mayme Gehrue, Edgar Halstead, Louis Harrison, Georgia Kelly, William Link, Jessie May, Daniel McAvoy, Vera Morris, Charles Prince, Adele Ritchie. Produced by Sydney Rosenfeld.
- (1901) Stage Play: The King's Carnival. Musical/burlesque [return engagement]. Music by A. Baldwin Sloane. Book by Sydney Rosenfeld. Lyrics by Sydney Rosenfeld. Additional lyrics by George V. Hobart and William Jerome. Featuring "My Evaline" with words and music by Mae Anwerda Sloane. Musical Director: J. Sebastian Hiller. Additional music by Jean Schwartz. Directed by Frank Smithson. New York Theatre: 9 Sep 1901- 12 Oct 1901 (38 performances). Cast: Lilly Brink, Laura Burt (as "Dolores de Mendoza"), Emma Carus, Tobie Craig, Frank Doane (as "Adonis"), Marie Dressler (as "Anne"), Ethel Elberton, Nina Farrington, John Ford, Mabel Gilman, Edgar Halstead, Louis Harrison, Georgia Kelly, William Link, Jessie May, Daniel McAvoy, Junie McCree, Vera Morris, Charles Prince, Amelia Summerville, Marion Winchester. Produced by Sydney Rosenfeld.
- (1902) Stage Play: The Defender. Musical. Music by Charles Dennee. Lyrics by Allen Lowe. Based on material by Allen Lowe. Musical Director: George P. Towle. Additional music by Andy Louis and George Evans. Featuring songs with lyrics by Ren Shields. Directed by Frank Smithson. Herald Square Theatre: 3 Jul 1902- 23 Aug 1902 (60 performances). Cast: George Alison, Aimee Ashmore, Florence Averell, Emma Carus, Alexander Clark, Gilbert Clayton, Harry Davenport, Paula Edwardes, Peggy Edwardes, Edith Eldridge, Effie Halsey, Mayme Kelso, Norma Lille, Richie Ling, Sandol Milliken, Harry Murray, Kitty Pope, Blanche Ring, Grace Spencer, Violet Staley, Eleanore Telford, Gordon Tomkins, Charles Wayne, Joe Worthington. Produced by A.H. Chamberlyn.
- (1903) Stage Play: Nancy Brown. Musical comedy. Music by Henry K. Hadley. Book by George Broadhurst [credited as George H. Broadhurst] and Frederic Ranken. Lyrics by George Broadhurst and Frederic Ranken. Musical Director: George P. Towle. Featuring songs by Max S. Witte, J. Rosamond Johnson, Louis G. Munz and Eugene Ellsworth. Featuring songs with lyrics by Eugene Ellsworth, Bob Cole, James Weldon Johnson and Aaron Hoffman [earliest Broadway credit]. Directed by Frank Smithson. Bijou Theatre (moved to The Grand Opera House from 26 Oct 1903- close): 16 Feb 1903- Nov 1903 (closing date unknown/112 performances). Cast: Adele Archer (as "Maud"), Ada Bartlett (as "Ensemble"), George Beban (as "Count Fromage de Brie"), Anna Bennett (as "Ensemble"), Judith Berolde (as "The Princess Barboo"), Minna Blackman (as "Ensemble"), Henry Borden (as "Ensemble"), May Bordley (as "Ensemble"), Evelyn Botsford (as "Strolling Minstrel"), Aline Boyd (as "Nara"), Alice Brown (as "Ensemble"), Harry Brown (as "Socrates Finis"), Harry Burgess (as "Strolling Minstrel), Marie Cahill (as "Nancy Brown"), Grace Cameron (as "Muriel"), Ethel Carroll (as "Ensemble"), Lita Castello (as "Zuzu"), Gertrude Cochrane (as "Ensemble"), Daniel Corse (as "Ensemble"), Elizabeth Cumming (as "Ensemble"), Helen Curzon (as "Rena"), Philip Dale (as "Ensemble"), Frank Dearduff (as "The Grand Duke of Drinkamutchsky"), Gertrude Doremus (as "Ensemble"), Gladys Earlcott (as "Ensemble"), Louise Egener (as "Ensemble"), Julie Fenton (as "Ensemble"), Maud Francis (as "Gwendolen"), Florence French (as "Ensemble"), Mabel Gardner (as "Ensemble"), Al Grant (as "Noah Little"), Farron Gray (as "Ensemble"), Jennie Hardy (as "Ensemble"), Sadie Harris (as "Ensemble"), John Havens (as "Lord Worcestershire"), Alfred Hickman (as "Venderhyphen Jenks"), Agnes Hinton (as "Ensemble"), Adelaide Howland (as "Ensemble"), Margaret Johnson (as "Ensemble"), Elizabeth King (as "Ensemble"), Alice Knowlton (as "Tutu"), Helen Lathrop (as "Tulu"), Eva Lewis (as "Ensemble"), Ella Mann (as "Ensemble"), Leslie Mayo (as "Sally"), W.W. Meehan (as "Ensemble"), Edythe Moyer (as "Alice"), Jean Newcombe (as "Mrs. John Jenks"), T.R. O'Brian (as "Ensemble"), Ruby Paine (as "Gracie"), Albert Parr (as "Mara Mustapha"), Mlle. Proto (as "The Dancer"), Estelle Rogers (as "Ensemble"), V.A. Rose (as "Ensemble"), Maud Sloane (as "Sadie"), Madison Smith (as "Hullybaloo"), Mason Smith (as "Ensemble"), Edwin Stevens (as "Muley Mustapha"), Rose Stevens (as "Ensemble"), Maude Stillman (as "Ensemble"), Isabelle Stuart (as "Ensemble"), Beth Titus (as "Ensemble"), G.M. Vale (as "Ensemble"), Henry Vogel (as "Baron Sauerbraten"). Produced by Daniel V. Arthur.
- (1903) Stage Play: Winsome Winnie. Musical comedy. Book by Ed Jacobowski. Lyrics by Ed Jacobowski and Frederic Ranken. Additional music by Gustav Kerker, Ed Jacobowski, Gus Edwards and Dick Temple. Additional lyrics by Harry Paulton, Gus Edwards and Dick Temple. Stage Director: Frank Smithson. Costume Design by Caroline Seidle. Scenic Design by D. Frank Dodge. Conducted by Gustav Kerker. Directed by R.H. Burnside. Casino Theatre: 1 Dec 1903- 16 Jan 1904 (56 performances). Cast: Fred Bishop (as "Male Octette"), Dollie Bonner (as "Pepe"), May Bonner (as "Mourico"), W.C. Brockmeyer (as "Male Octette"), Carla Byron (as "Rose"), Jennie Calducci (as "Ayali"), Annie Cameron (as "Zora"), William P. Carleton (as "Desmond Poverish"), Cordelia L. Carron (as "Zametta"), Alice Coleman (as "Zumra"), Carlotta Coleman (as "Lira"), C. Comersford (as "Male Octette"), William S. Corliss (as "Demetrius"), W.B. Daly (as "Male Octette"), Louise De Rigney (as "Lady Frances"), A.A. Densmore (as "Male Octette"), Carlton Dudley (as "Murali"), Paula Edwardes (as "Winnie Walker"), Mazie Follette (as "Lady Eudora"), Edna Gatecher (as "Pansy"), Daisy Green (as "Henrietta"), Helen Hahn (as "Maru"), Isobel Hall (as "Marjorie Bell"), Stella Hammerstein (as "Lady Clare"), Olive Haskell (as "Alex"), H. Haynes (as "Male Octette"), M. Hood (as "Male Octette"), May Hopkins (as "Lady Gracia"), Jobyna Howland (as "Lady Arabella"), Laura Hyland (as "Lily"), Ita Kamph (as "Tutu"), Mildred Kearney (as "Honoria"), William Leonard (as "James"), Alice Mark (as "Alisett"), Bessie Merrill (as "Dudu"), Joseph C. Miron (as "Pericles"), L. Parmet (as "Male Octette"), William E. Philip (as "Captain Cotterill"), Clara Pitt (as "Lady Dorcas"), Helen Redmond (as "Aileen Poverish"), Cecilia Rhode (as "Lady Loona"), Ruth Russell (as "Mirza"), Edith Sanders (as "Sereza"), Julia Sanderson (as "Lady Mabel") [Broadway debut], Martha Seborn Jones (as "Salili"), Edna Sidney (as "Lady Maude"), Grace Spencer (as "Lady Angela"), James E. Sullivan (as "Dr. Krause"), Marcella Tasche (as "Marco"), Dick Temple (as "Lord Poverish"), Mildred Thornwall (as "Lady Vivian"), Marjorie Walton (as "Daisy"). Produced by Sam S. Shubert, Sam Nixon and J. Fred Zimmerman.
- (1904) Stage Play: The Good Old Summertime. Musical/farce. Based on material by Ren Shields. Lyrics by Ren Shields. Music by George Evans. Directed by Frank Smithson. Haverly's 14th Street Theatre: 8 Feb 1904- 20 Feb 1904 (17 performances).
- (1904) Stage Play: The Royal Chef. Musical comedy/opera. Music by Ben M. Jerome. Lyrics by Charles S. Taylor. Book by G.E. Stoddard [credited as George E. Stoddard]. Musical Director: Ben M. Jerome. Directed by Frank Smithson. Lyric Theatre: 1 Sep 1904- 17 Sep 1904 (17 performances). Cast: Joseph Allen (as "Badso/Admiral Noble"), Bertha Blake (as "Triko"), Nena Blake (as "Court Page"), Helen Cheston (as "Court Page"), Marie Glazier (as "Kavat"), Blanche Lemasney (as "Court Page"), Harry Leonard (as "Midshipman"), Henry Leone (as "The Rajah of Oolong"), Dave Lewis (as "Heinrich Lempauser"), Estelle Libert (as "Salamo"), June Lowry (as "Kamo"), Gertrude Millington (as "Mabel Noble"), Joseph C. Miron (as "Lord Mito"), John Park (as "Lieutenant Harry Parkes"), Daisy Reed (as "Mariat"), Ida Renee (as "Specialty"), Harry Scott (as "Fifer"), George Stevens (as "Veteran Drummer/Midshipman"), Amelia Stone (as "Princess Teto"), Caroline Sylvester (as "Mohat"), Ursula Thompson (as "Tomo"), Florence Townshend (as "Court Page/Drummer Boy"), Stella Tracy (as "Kitty O'Reilly"), Dollie Williams (as "Bomat"). Produced by La Salle Theatre Company.
- (1905) Stage Play: The Press Agent. Musical comedy. Music by William Lorraine. Book by Mark Swan [credited as Mark E. Swan] and John P. Wilson. Lyrics by John P. Wilson. Revised by R.H. Burnside. Directed by Frank Smithson. Lew M. Fields Theatre: 27 Nov 1905- 30 Dec 1905 (40 performances). Cast: Charles Chappelle (as "Bitter Creek Benson"), Kate Condon (as "Dolores Yznaga"), Peter F. Dailey (as "Benton Scoops"), Adam Dockery (as "Bolivar"), Theodore Friebus (as "General Bustamento Y. Cabrillo Y. Gonzales") [Broadway debut], Albert Froom [credited as Albert Froome], (as "Captain Gattling"), Carrie Graham (as "Bouncing Betty"), Isobel Hall (as "Dolly Dashington"), Jeanne La Crosse (as "Celia Courtney"), Frank Lalor (as "Bunny Hare/Sangrez"), C.R. Larkin (as "Landlord"), Walter Neale (as "Salvador Garcia"), A.M. Pollock (as "Enchilada"), Almeda Potter (as "Yvonne"), John P. Pursell (as "Bill Bobstay"), T.F. Reynolds (as "Pedrillo"), W.F. Rochester (as "Silas Fosdick"), Norma Seymour (as "Rosalie"), Fred Sherman (as "Adams"), Charles Sitgreaves (as "Joseph Rutherford"), Vera Stanley (as "Pepita"), Bertram Wallace (as "Francis Seabrooke"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1906) Stage Play: The Blue Moon. Musical comedy. Music by Howard Talbot and Paul Rubens. Interpolated songs by Addison Burkhard and Gus Edwards. Book by Harold Ellis. Lyrics by Percy Greenbank and Paul A.N. Rubens. Musical Direction by Albert Krausse. Directed by Frank Smithson. Casino Theatre: 3 Nov 1906- 5 Jan 1907 (76 performances). Cast: La Petite Adelaide (as "Tootsa"), Donald Archer (as "Abdul"), Gertrude Barnes (as "Dancer"), Arthur Bell (as "Clive Mansfield"), Lillian Boardman (as "Dancer"), Loreen Bordman (as "Dancer"), Virginia Cameron (as "Dancer"), Maude Carey (as "Dancer"), Arthur Donaldson (as "The Prince Badahur Sanatsinjhi"), Edward M. Favor (as "Major Vivian Callabone") [Broadway debut], Louis Franklin (as "Hon. Archie May"), Ada Gordon (as "Bingo"), Elizabeth Hawman (as "Dancer"), Dolly Honey (as "Dancer"), Ethel Jackson (as "Chandra Nil"), Lucy Jane Johnstone (as "Chua"), Ruth Julien (as "Dancer"), Richard Knollenberg (as "Hafiz"), John Kuester (as "Mail Carrier"), Grace La Rue (as "Evelyn Ormsby"), Effie LaVarre (as "Dancer"), Lillian Leon (as "Miss Lillian Moore"), Ethel Mostyn (as "Dancer"), Marjorie Nevin (as "Oma"), Clara Palmer (as "Millicent Leroy"), James T. Powers (as "Private Charlie Taylor"), Lillian Rice (as "Dancing Girl/Dancer"), O.W. Risley (as "Beggarman"), Kathryn Robinson (as "Miss Lovehill"), Phil Ryley (as "Moolraj"), Clarence Satchell (as "Private Atkins"), Templar Saxe (as "Captain Jack Ormsby"), Max Sharpe (as "Beggarman"), Edith Sinclair (as "Lady Brabasham"), Dick Temple (as "Bobbie Scott"), Angie Weimers (as "Dancing Girl/Dancer"), Joseph West (as "Leslie Arbuthnot"), Blanche Wilmot (as "Dancer"). Produced by The Shubert Theatrical Company.
- (1907) Stage Play: Princess Beggar. Opera/fantasy.
- (1907) Stage Play: The Orchid. Muscial comedy. Music by Ivan Caryll and Lionel Monckton. Material by James T. Tanner and Joseph W. Herbert. Lyrics by Adrian Ross and Percy Greenbank. Musical Director: Alexander Spencer. Featuring songs by Hugo Frey, Seymour Furth, Jerome Kern, E. Ray Goetz and Paul Rubens. Featuring songs with lyrics by Paul Rubens, Leslie Mayne, Edward P Moran, Harold Atteridge, Will Heelan and Vincent Bryan. Choreographed by William Rock. Directed by Frank Smithson. Herald Square Theatre (moved to The Casino Theatre from 2 Sep 1907 to 14 Sep 1907 then moved to The Academy of Music from 2 Mar 1908 to close): 8 Apr 1907- Mar 1908 (closing date unknown/194 performances).
- (1907) Stage Play: The Top o' th' World. Musical. Music by Manuel Klein and Anne Caldwell. Book by Mark Swan. Lyrics by James O'Dea. Featuring songs with lyrics by Joseph Herbert. Musical Direction by Albert Krausse. Choreographed by William Rock and Signor Luigi Albertieri. Directed by Frank Smithson. Majestic Theatre (moved to The Casino Theatre from 3 Feb 1908 to close): 19 Oct 1907- 22 Feb 1908 (156 performances). Cast: Harry Fairleigh, Anna Laughlin, George Majeroni, John McVeigh, George W. Monroe, Nell Adams, Julian Alfred, Harry Ali, Rudolph Allen, Ralph Austin, Fred Bailey, Carolyn Barber, Jean Barnette, Russell Bassett, Susanne Boyd, Jud. Brady, Virginia Calvert, George Campbell, Kathleen Clifford, Dorothy Cooper, Wellington Cross, Vivian Danvers, Margaret DeBohmar, Nita Dermond, Helen Desmond, Sam Diamond, Roger Dolan, Tempe Evans, Anna Ford, Bessie Franklin, John Gibbons, Elsie Gilbert, Virginia Guest, Ruth Hartman, Henriette Herbert, Arthur Hill, Dorothy Honey, Marjorie Jordan, Dixie Kirtland, Aida Klein, Jane Loras, Alice Mark, Robert Merriman, Lucille Monroe, Helene Montrose, Mary Mooney, Ida Mordaunt, Mabel Mordaunt, Edith Newman, Bobbie Nolan, Artie Pratt, Jane Quirk, Florrie Royce, Fred Steinman, Carl Taxwood, Benjamin Tieman, Simeon Tomars, Nettie Uart, Daisy Virginia, Jane Ward, Blanche Wayne, Grace Whiteley, Madora Williams. Produced by J.M. Allison.
- (1907) Stage Play: The Lancers. Musical. Music by Cecilia Loftus and George Spink. Lyrics by Cecilia Loftus and George Spink. Written by Rida Johnson Young and J. Hartley Manners. From the German of Homer Von Moser and Fritz Von Schoenthan. Featuring "Any Little Girl" by Milton Lusk and H.A. Evans. Featuring "Twinkling Star" by C.P. McDonald and Arthur Gumble. Musical Direction by George Martens. Directed by Frank Smithson. Daly's Theatre: 5 Dec 1907- 14 Dec 1907 (12 performances). Cast: Eileen Anglin, Henry Coote, Phoebe Coyne, Lawrence D'Orsay (as "Captain Cecil Fitzherbert"), Ben Field, Grace Fisher, Cecilia Loftus (as "Marcia Tremaine"), A.H. Van Buren (as "Lieutenant Gordon Willoughby of the 17th Lancers"), Bertram Allen, Leon Bailey, Jane Brown, Theresa Bryant, Doris Cameron, Cyril Chadwick (as "Lieutenant Neville of the 17th Lancers"), Margaret Cobb, Violet Curtis, H.B. Eirick, William J. Ellis, J.F. Fitzgerald, Mollie Hall, Hubert Harben, George Hollis, Evelyn Honohan, Harold Kehoe, Stapleton Kent [Broadway debut], Arthur R. Lawrence, Edna Merrill, Anna Millward, Percival Norton, Ethel Peyton, Maud Rowland, Suzanne Rusholme, Cyril Sully, Roma Thorne, Fred Tyler, Stella Warner, Lillias Wilde. Produced by Lee Shubert and Sam Shubert). Produced by arrangement with The Augustin Daly Estate.
- (1908) Stage Play: Lonesome Town. Musical comedy. Music by J.A. Raynes. Book by Judson D. Brusie. Lyrics by Judson D. Brusie. Additional numbers by Witmark and Sons. Featuring "Gee! But This Is a Lonesome Town" by Billy Gaston. Featuring "The Lanky, Yankee Boys in Blue" by Edward Madden and Theodore M. Morse. Featuring "Just Some One" by Will R. Anderson. Musical Direction by J.A. Raynes. Dances arranged by Kolb and Dill. Directed by Frank Smithson. Circle Theatre: 20 Jan 1908- 4 Apr 1908 (88 performances). Cast: Wilmer Bentley (as "Hip, promoter/Lounnie Dippe, a proprietor of Hotel Watts"), Max M. Dill (as "Bakersfield Bill, a tramp"), Ben T. Dillon (as "Fresno Phil, a tramp"), C. William Kolb (as "Chico Charlie, tramping for his health"), Georgia O'Ramey (as "Hazy Fogg, a native daughter of Watts"), Robert G. Pitkin (as "Wise, a promoter"), Clyde Allen (as "Golf Boy"), R.J. Bellaire (as "Golf Boy"), B. Case (as "Golf Boy"), Irma Croft (as "Anne Nother"), Myrtle DeSota (as "Summer Girl"), Rhoda DeVourney (as "Summer Girl"), Evangeline Dixie (as "Summer Girl"), Edna Dorman (as "Ima Peach, a product of San Francisco"), Louis Fletcher (as "Golf Boy"), Marie Lamar (as "Summer Girl"), Maude Lambert (as "Mrs. A. Marvellous Wonder, a New York widow"), Herbert Lancaster (as "Golf Boy"), L. Lawson (as "Golf Boy"), Marion Lewis (as "Summer Girl"), Austina Mason (as "Summer Girl"), Charles McCaffrey (as "Golf Boy"), Lottie McCree (as "Summer Girl"), Charles McGaffney (as "Cow"), Marion Miller (as "Summer Girl"), Julie Newell (as "Summer Girl"), Lillian Norton (as "Summer Girl"), Jennie E. Orr (as "Summer Girl"), Mabel Orr (as "Summer Girl"), Frances Paon (as "Summer Girl"), Marie Propp (as "Summer Girl"), Carlita Ricard (as "Summer Girl"), Elenore Russell (as "Summer Girl"), Faye Stewart (as "Summer Girl"), Arthur Van (as "Eazy, a native son of Watts"), Graham Velsey (as "Golf Boy"), Marion Vose (as "Summer Girl"), Alice Willard (as "Summer Girl"), Anna Wilson (as "Summer Girl"), Loretta Wilson (as "Summer Girl"), George Wright Sr. (as "Hiram Diggs, a constable of Watts"). Produced by Kolb and Dill.
- (1908) Stage Play: Marcelle. Musical/operetta. Material by Frank Pixley. Music by Gustave Luders. Lyrics by Frank Pixley. Musical Direction by Clarence Rogerson. Dances directed by David Bennett. Directed by Frank Smithson. Casino Theatre: 1 Oct 1908- 28 Nov 1908 (68 performances). Cast: George Boniface Jr., Herbert Cawthorne, Jess Dandy, Louise Gunning, Henry Norman, Frank Rushworth, Lawrence Wheat, Mae Allen, Leona Anderson, Florence Arkell, David Bennett, Nettie Black, Bessie Carrette, Della Connor, Marion Ford, Edith Girvan, Lucille Jardon, Eileen Kearney, Margarite McDonald, Robert Emmett O'Connor (as "Pierre, a Parisian painter"), Nan Parkhurst, Bertha Perl, George Reed, Mae Rollins, Elsa Ryan, Bessie Skeer, Irene Spencer, Ollie Stewart, Louise Tozier. Produced by Sam and Lee Shubert, Inc.
- (1908) Stage Play: The Queen of the Moulin Rouge. Musical comedy/drama. Music by John T. Hall. Material by Paul M. Potter. Lyrics by Vincent Bryan. Musical Direction by Charles Zimmerman. Dances arranged by Joseph C. Smith. Directed by Frank Smithson. Circle Theatre: 7 Dec 1908- 24 Apr 1909 (160 performances). Cast: Richard Field Carroll (as "Sergius"), Carter DeHaven, Edward M. Favor (as "Savourette, art teacher"), Fletcher Norton, Flora Parker, Veola Adams, Frances Alain, Louise Alexander, Rudolph Allen, George Anderson, Odette Auber, Albert Barlow, Inez Blair, Horace Blankinship, Francis X. Bushman (as "Durand, a citizen") [credited as Frank X. Bushman] (only Broadway role), Doris Cameron, A. Alan Campbell, Patricia Collinge, Regina Connelly, Gail Crandall, Edward Crawford, Billee Cuppia, Charles Dalton, Ethel Davis, Thomas De Vassey, Reginald DeVeulle, Harry Dee, Juliette Dika, Lillian Dowd, Hattie Forsythe, Irene George, Stephen Haggery, John Hamilton, Stella Hansen, Trudie Hatch, Waldo Heinemann, Jeanette Horton, Harry Humphreys, Joel Johnson, Eileen Kearney, Al LaCroix, Grace Lester, May Maloney, Adele Marie, Lotta McCree, Berta Mills, Ethel Mostyn, Leila Parker, Anita Pollock, Charles Price, Russell Price, Eloise Reed, Genevieve Reed, P.H. Riblet, Fred Rivenhall, Grace Russell, Madeline Seville, Frank Sherlock, Joseph C. Smith, Marguerite St. Clair, Eleanor Thorne, Florence Townshend, Joseph V. Tullar, George Wharnock, Elizabeth Whitney, Edward Wilson, Violet Zell. Produced by Thomas W. Ryley. Note: Produced on film as Queen of the Moulin Rouge (1922) by Pyramid Pictures [film is presumed lost as of 2011].
- (1909) Stage Play: The Motor Girl. Musical comedy. Music by Julian Edwards. Material by Charles J. Campbell and Ralph M. Skinner. Lyrics by Charles J. Campbell and Ralph M. Skinner. Musical Direction by Ben M. Jerome. Choreographed by Wellington Cross. Directed by Frank Smithson. Lyric Theatre (moved to The West End Theatre from 13 Sep 1909 to late Sep 1909 then moved to The Lincoln Square Theatre from 27 Sep 1909 to close): 15 Jun 1909- Oct 1909 (closing date unknown/111 performances). Cast: Helen Adair, Fred Bates, Marie Baxter, Stella Bowe, May Brennan, Elizabeth Brice, Martin Brown, Georgia Caine, George Callahan, James B. Carson, Anita Claire, Alice Clayton, James F. Cook, Flora Crosbie, Elinor Dayne, Mildred DeSilva, Mayme Dupont, Sue Duval, Lillian Foster, Bessie Franklin, Ross Harvey, Leota Hingston, Valentine Homan, Ned Joyce, Jackson Karlyle, George Lanning, Jack Laughlin, Charles Leach, John Lorenz, Ted Lorraine, Carroll C. Lucas, George Lyman, Giorgio Majeroni, Minnesota Martrit, Thomas B. McCormick, Edward McNulty, Sadie Melles, Evelyn Meredith, Julia Meredith, Bessilee Merrill, Alvin Morton, Ethel Mostyn, Nancy Newell, Robert Emmett O'Connor (as "Felix"), George O'Rourke, George Pauncefort, Anita Pollock, Nancy Poole, Homer Potts, Katherine Robertson, Helen Scotten, John Shaddick, Adelaide Sharp, Frank Shea, Bert Smith, Ethel Tanguay, Mattie Ten Eyck, Harry Thornell, Corene Uzzell, Katherine Walden, Katherine Warren, Dorothy Warrington, Laura Wentworth, Elizabeth Young. Produced by Frank Hennessy.
- (1909) Stage Play: The Belle of Brittany. Musical. Music by Howard Talbot and Marie Horne. Material by Leedham Bantock and P.J. Barrow. Lyrics by Percy Greenbank. Musical Director: Clarence Rogerson. Additional music by Walter Davidson and William Hargreaves. Additional lyrics by Walter Davidson, T.H. Read, William Hargreaves and P.J. Barrow. Directed by Frank Smithson. Daly's Theatre: 8 Nov 1909- 8 Jan 1910 (72 performances). Cast: Joseph A. Bingham, Josephine Brandell, Martin Brown, Story Chipman, Dixie Compton, Frank Daniels, Gertrude Douglas, Daisy Dumont, Tracy Elbert, Louise Elton, Edward Garvie, George M. Graham, Mudge Harman, May Hopkins, Blanche Huntington, Sidney Jacouver, Eileen Kearney, Frances Kennedy, Jack Laughlin, Helen Mackey, Evelyn Mitchell, Hubert Neville, J. Arthur O'Brien, Winnie O'Conner, Dorothy Perry, Aline Redmond, Ethel Rose, Frank Rushworth, Elsa Ryan, Harry Steeves, Hazel Troutman, Camille Truesdale. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1911) Stage Play: Dr. De Luxe. Musical. Music by Karl Hoschna. Book and lyrics by Otto A. Harbach. Musical Director: Gustave Salzer. Featuring songs with lyrics by Edward Laska. Directed by Frank Smithson. Knickerbocker Theatre: 17 Apr 1911- 13 May 1911 (32 performances). Cast: Jeannette Alpine, Marion Ballou, Lillian Berry, Florence Campbell, Jeanette Childs, Dixie Costelo, Verna Dalton, Ethel Green, Anna Hall, Ralph Herz (as "John Truesdale"), Georgie Kelly, Albert Lamson, Evelyn Lancer, Helen Larkins, Anna Lichter, Ethel Millard, Julia Mills, Ada Mitchell, Bessie Muller, Edward Nicander, Polly Prim, William Pruette, Cecelia Renard, Helen Robertson, Rena Santos, Anna Sheldon, Kathryn Sinclair, Harry Stone, Ernest Truex (as "Dennis"), Taylor Williams (as "Dr. DePaw"). Produced by Joseph M. Gaites.
- (1911) Stage Play: The Girl of My Dreams. Musical. Music by Karl Hoschna. Book by Wilbur D. Nesbit and Otto A. Harbach. Lyrics by Otto Hauerbach. Musical Director: C.E. Mac Arthur. Scenic Design by P. Dodd Ackerman. Directed by Frank Smithson. Criterion Theatre: 7 Aug 1911- 9 Sep 1911 (40 performances). Cast: Percival Aylmer (as "Socrates Primmer"), Blanche Barnes (as "Margery Towne"), Blanche Benton (as "Vivian Darling/Dollie Cushing"), Adele Boulais (as "Amy Frank"), Carrie Bowman (as "Carolyn Swifton"), Anna Breucher (as "Grace Newton/Ethel Winsor"), Irving Brooke (as "Count von Schnigglefits"), Robert Brown (as "Steve Hexter"), James Clay (as "Moatz Rotewall"), Ida Dahl (as "Josie Griggs"), Charles Diamond (as "Claudie Robinson"), Evelyn Downer (as "May Hayden"), Edouard Durand (as "Generalissimo Bombastino"), Anna Engel (as "Daisy Farnes/Mildred St. Clair"), Harold Forbes (as "Pigeon Williams"), Joseph Harris (as "Dan England/Tucker"), Alice Hills (as "Daphne Daffington"), Dorothy Honey (as "Bessie Quicksee/Blanche Jerome"), Harry Humphreys (as "Bob Chase"), John Hyams (as "Harry Swifton"), Harry Hynes (as "Will Anderson"), Henrietta Lee (as "Helen Bombastino"), Ethel Marston (as "Violet Merriam/Violet Newman"), W.C. Mason (as "Harry Luckenbach"), Frank McEwen (as "King Bingham"), Harry McIntyre (as "Fred Jackson"), Leila McIntyre (as "Lucy Medders"), Bessie Miller (as "Hazel Hartman/Frances St. Cloud"), Dot Miller (as "Anna Dawson"), Gus Monte (as "Doc Hoffman"), Helen Pierson (as "Edna May"), Ray L. Royce (as "Phineas Medders"), Gertrude Rutledge (as "Ursula Farnum"), Edward Swartz (as "Vic Sincere/Messenger Boy"), Lyle Tayo (as "Perla Little/Ruth Stone"), Lynne Thomas (as "Tillie Cox"), Frank Timberg (as "Warrie Cahnson"), Dorothy Wilcox (as "Charlotte/Hortense Lang/Gladys Wilbur"). Produced by Joseph M. Gaites. Note: Filmed by National Film Corporation of America [distributed by Exhibitors Mutual Distributing Company and Robertson-Cole Distributing Corporation] as The Girl of My Dreams (1918).
- (1911) Stage Play: Little Boy Blue. Musical/operetta. Music by Henri Bereny. Original Viennese libretto by Rudolph Schanzer and Carl Lindau. Material adapted by Augustus Thomas and Edward A. Paulton. Additional lyrics by Carolyn Wells, Grant Stewart, Edward Madden and William F. Kirk. Featuring songs by Paul Rubens, Arthur Weld and Edward Paulton. Musical Direction by Arthur Weld. Choreography by Jack Mason. Directed by Frank Smithson. Lyric Theatre (moved to Grand Opera House from 21 Apr 1913 to close): 27 Nov 1911- Apr 1913 (closing date unknown/184 performances). Cast: Gloria Alba, Gertie Barreto, Anita Barretto, F. Bowen, Gertrude Bryan, Charlotte Burt, Billie Busch, Gwendolyn Canfield, Margaret Cecil, Samuel Chadwick, James Cooper, John Cowle, John Dunsmure, Lutie Evans, Crystal Everett, Mr. Fletcher, Marie Fredriks, Shephard Garretson, Mabel Gebeau, Mr. Golden, Flora Gould, C. Grosskopf, Harry Hamilton, J.R. Hamilton, Mary Hamilton, Otis Harlan, Adele Harrison, Albert Hedge, Fern Hollis, Valentine Homan, C. Morton Horne, Agnes Jepson, Mr. Jesson, Victor Kahn, Marie Kavenaugh, Maxwell Kennedy, Edith Langdon, Lea Leature, Antoinette LeComte, Neil McNeil, Charles Meakins, Alma Morrison, Benjamin Mulvey, Ivan Murchison, Emma Nagel, Viola Napp, Beatrice North, Maude Odell, Anita Pollock, Charles Rankin, Ada Ripel, F. Roberts, Mr. Roger, Jack Rowe, Mr. Sansifer, Anna Sayce, Katheryn Stevenson, Antoinette Stone, Helen Summers, Mr. Sutton, Florence Taylor, Edith Warren, Jane Warrington, Lillian West, Marion Wilson, Loretta Wright, Mary Young. Produced by Henry W. Savage.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Rose of Panama. Musical comedy/opera. Music by Heinrich Berte. Libretto by John L. Shine and Sydney Rosenfeld. Based on the German original by Ignaz Schneitzer and Emerich Von Gatti. Musical Direction by Theodore Bendix. Featuring songs by Theodore Norman and Herman Finck. Featuring songs with lyrics by Arthur Gillespie and H. S. Krouse. Directed by Frank Smithson. Daly's Theatre: 22 Jan 1912- 10 Feb 1912 (24 performances). Cast: Fay Bainter [Broadway debut] (as "Celine Marinter a stenographer and typist"), Anna Bussert, Chapine, Gerald Gordon, Tom Hadaway, Forrest Huff, Reina Lazar, Teddy Le Duc, Carrick Major, John J. McGowen, Joseph Parsons, Will Phillips, William C. Reed, William R. Reed, Mortimer Weldon, John L. Wheeler. Produced by John Cort.
- (1913) Stage Play: Somewhere Else. Musical/fantasy. Music by Gustav Luders. Book by Avery Hopwood. Lyrics by Avery Hopwood. Choreographed by Dave Marion. Directed by Frank Smithson. Broadway Theatre: 20 Jan 1913- 25 Jan 1913 (8 performances). Cast: Devor Alvarez, Perry Alvarez, Melville Anderson, Alys Baldwin, Florida Bellaire, Rita Bellaire, Sally Berch, Ednah Bernard, Mabel Callon, Dorothy Carrigne, Donald Chalmers, Martin Conroy, Cecil Cunningham [Broadway debut], Helene Davis, Violet De Biccari, Ellen Evans, Franklyn Farnum (as "Rocky Rixon, Cousin of Getaway") [Broadway debut], Doris Ferges, Fred M. Fisher, Estelle Francesca, Briggs French, Shephard Garretson, Mabel Gebeau, Monte Grayce, Richard Hall, H.R. Haskell, Catherine Hayes, W.A. Healey, George Healy, Taylor Holmes, Maxwell Kennedy, Helen Kent, Mildred Lawrence, Burton Lenihan, Elene Leska, Susie McChroan, H.T. McCoy, Daisy McNally, Blixie Murrie, Naidene Parker, Hilda Peters, Will Philbrick, Billie St. Clair, W.C. Stanley, Dick Stewart, Cecil Thackara, Edith Thayer, H.P. Wagner, Edith Warren, Frank Wayne, Ethel West, Marion Whitney, Leslie Wilson, Pauline Winters. Produced by Henry W. Savage.
- (1913) Stage Play: When Dreams Come True. Musical comedy. Music by Silvio Hein. Material adapted and production supervised by Philip Bartholomae. Lyrics by Philip Bartholomae. Musical Direction by Hilding Andersson. Additional music by Roy Webb. Directed by Frank Smithson. Lyric Theatre (moved to The 44th Street Theatre from 15 Sep 1913 to close): 18 Aug 1913- 11 Oct 1913 (64 performances). Cast: Thomas Aiken, Frazer Coulter (as "Jerome K. Hodges"), Marie Flynn, Edward Garvie, Clyde Hunnewell, Donald MacDonald, Ann Mooney, Joseph Santley (as "Kean Hedges"), Saranoff, Otto Shreader, Amelia Summerville, May Vokes (as "Matilda"), Anna Wheaton. Produced by Philip Bartholomae.
- (1913) Stage Play: High Jinks. Musical comedy. Music by Rudolf Friml. Lyrics by Otto Hauerbach. Material adapted for the stage by Leo Ditrichstein and Otto A. Harbach. Based on a farce by Leo Ditrichstein. Adapted from a French farce by Maurice Hennequin and Paul Bilhaud. Musical Direction by Paul Schindler. Featuring songs by George L. Cobb. Featuring songs with lyrics by Jack Yellen. Directed by Frank Smithson. Lyric Theatre (moved to The Casino Theatre from 12 Jan 1914 to close): 10 Dec 1913- 13 Jun 1914 (213 performances). Cast: Violette Armstrong, Burrell Barbaretto, Billy Blane, Bessie Brown, Marion Brown, Mr. Cantry, Mr. Clifford, Mr. Cooper, Naomi Dale, Valla Dares, Mr. Davis, Alberta DeVere, Marie DeVoe, May Dougherty, Lola Edwards, Snitz Edwards, Gladys Feldman, Blanche Field, Yewell Fields, Mr. Forbes, Edith Gardner, Eileen Gerald, Elsie Gergley, Greta Gleason, Elaine Hammerstein (as "Florence"), Frank G. Harley, Mazie Hartford, Grace Hoey, Henrietta Hosford, Fern Kenney, Emilie Lea, Florence Lee, M. Levine, Tom Lewis, Ignatti Martinetti, Anna McConville, Ada Meade, Miss Melville, Maggie Melvin, Miss Morgan, Hulda Morton, Elizabeth Murray, Siegrid Oleson, Mr. Page, Robert Pitkin, Ethel Powell, Mr. Protas, Augustus Schultz, Mr. Sharp, Helen Sinclair, Bessie Skeet, Edna St. Claire, Mr. Vessey, Mr. Watson, Mr. Wise, Mana Zucca. Produced by Arthur Hammerstein.
- (1913) Stage Play: Anna Held's All Star Variete Jubilee. Special/musical revue/vaudeville. Book by Stanley Murphy. Music by Henry I. Marshall; Lyrics by Stanley Murphy. Directed by Frank Smithson. Casino Theatre: 29 Dec 1913- 3 Jan 1914 (8 performances). Cast: Eileen Adaire, Charles Ahearn, Richard Bartlett, George Beban, Harry T. Belmont, Roland Bottomley, Sadie Carr, Pearl Cook, Nellie Crawford, Florence Daniels, Gladys Fox, Francis & Florette, Anna Held, Hirschel Hendler, The Imperial Pekinese Acrobats (as "6 Mongolian Gymnasts"), Leslie Jones, Charles Judels, Jean L'Estrange, Frank Lynch, Edith MacBride, Felix McCabe, Samuel J. Murphy, Leslie Raleigh, Marion Roth, Victor Snyder, Julia Sullivan, Ward and Curran, Charles H. Yorkshire. Produced by John Cort.
- (1915) Stage Play: Katinka. Musical.
- (1916) Stage Play: Go to It. Musical.
- (1918) Stage Play: Ladies First. Musical. Music by A. Baldwin Sloane. Book by Harry B. Smith. Lyrics by Harry B. Smith. Based on a play by Charles H. Hoyt. Musical Direction by Oscar Radin. Additional music by Nora Bayes, Seymour Simons, George Gershwin [earliest Broadway credit], Harry Clarke and Harry Akst. Additional lyrics by Irving Fisher, Seymour Simons, Ira Gershwin [earliest Broadway credit], Schuyler Greene and Harry Clarke. Featuring songs by James Brockmann and James Kendl. Scenic Design by D. Frank Dodge and William Castle. Directed by Frank Smithson. Broadhurst Theatre (moved to The Nora Bayes Theatre from 30 Dec 1918- close): 24 Oct 1918- 15 Mar 1919 (164 performances). Cast: Nora Bayes (as "Betty Burt"), May Brooks (as "Hattie"), Paul E. Burns (as "Lefty McGuirk"), Jane Conrad (as "Belle"), Lew Cooper (as "D.C. Washington"), Martha Dean (as "Martha"), Elma Decker (as "Stella"), Jane Elliott (as "Mrs. Ebbsmith"), Irving Fisher (as "Benton Holmes"), Stanley Forde (as "Brighton Betts"), William Kent (as "Uncle Tody"), Florence Lee (as "Edith"), Florence Morrison (as "Aunt Jim"), Clarence Nordstrom (as "Little Jack"), Charles Olcott (as "Larry Burt"), Elsie Shaw (as "Jane"), Doris Sheerin (as "Kate"), A. Twitchell, Lottie Tyler (as "Ada"), Henriette Wilson (as "Laura"). Produced by H.H. Frazee.
- (1919) Stage Play: The Lady in Red. Musical comedy. Music by Robert Winterberg. Book by Anne Caldwell. Lyrics by Anne Caldwell. Adapted from the German of Julius Brammer and Alfred Grunwald. Musical Director: J. Albert Brown. Featuring songs by Walter Donaldson [earliest Broadway credit] and George Gershwin. Featuring songs with lyrics by Irving Caesar and Lou Paley. Directed by Frank Smithson. Lyric Theatre: 12 May 1919- 21 Jun 1919 (48 performances). Cast: Franklyn Ardell, Bertee Beaumont, Audrey Burton, Robert Casey, Louis Christy, Helen Coles, Irene Corlett, Walter Croft, Francesca Devens, Dora Duby, George Elsing, The Glorias, Dorothy Godfrey, Alice Gordon, Jean Hamilton, Lucie Inge, John Kenyon, Donald MacDonald, Ruth MacTammany, Edmund Makalif, Vonda Marine, Dana Mayo, Gladys Miller, Ruth Mitchell, Neil Moore, Tom Richards, Donald Roberts, Adele Rowland, May Sheldon, Selwa Sheldon, Lillian Stewart, Marcella Swanson, Harry Turpin, William Warren, Harry Williams. Produced by John P. Slocum.
- (1921) Stage Play: Love Birds. Musical comedy. Music by Sigmund Romberg. Book by Edgar Allan Woolf [final Broadway credit]. Additional lyrics by Edgar Allan Woolf, Clarence Marks, Jack Stern, Pat Rooney, James Kendis and A. Brockman. Lyrics by Ballard MacDonald. Additional music by Pat Rooney, James Kendis and A. Brockman. Musical Director: Frank Cork. Scenic Design by P. Dodd Ackerman. Lighting Design by P. Dodd Ackerman. Costume Design by Mme. Gilman. Directed by Edgar J. MacGregor, Julian Alfred and Frank Smithson. Apollo Theatre: 15 Mar 1921- 11 Jun 1921 (103 performances). Cast: Marion Bent, Richard Bold, Marie Cattell, Evelyn Cavanaugh, Edna Coigne, Irma Coigne, Celene Craven, Eva Davenport, Ramsey De Mar, Patsy Delaney, Rose Desmon, Tom Dingle, Peggy Dolan, Wayne Dorel, Grace Ellsworth, Sylvia Ford, Harold Gieser, Lucille Gordon, Tom Gott, Barrett Greenwood, Betty Hamilton, Bill Hamilton, Elizabeth Hines, Anna Hunkle, Helen Johnson, Emilie Lea, Vincent Lopez (as "Mr. Johnson/Ensemble"), Edna Luce, Betty Mack, Beverly Maude, Harry Mayo, Elizabeth Murray, Lucille Prather, Bobbie Reed, Pat Rooney, Louise Segal, James E. Sullivan, Nerene Swinton, Betty Warlow, Tom White. Produced by Wilner & Romberg.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Last Waltz. Musical/operetta.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Blushing Bride. Musical comedy. Book by Cyrus Wood. Lyrics by Cyrus Wood. Based on a libretto by Edward Clark. Music by Sigmund Romberg. Based on a play by Jocelyn Brandon and Frederick Arthur. Based on a play adapted by Mark Swan. Musical Direction by George A. Nichols. Musical Staging by Jack Mason. Production Supervised by J.J. Shubert. Directed by Frank Smithson. Astor Theatre (moved to The 44th Street Theatre from 24 Apr 1922 to close): 4 Feb 1922- 10 Jun 1922 (144 performances). Cast: Edythe Baker, John Barrott, David Belbridge, Mabel Blake, Fred Blyler, Alice Brady (as "Ensemble"), Virginia Calmer, Clara Carroll, Jane Carroll, Eva Cassanova, Harry Corson Clarke, George Craig, Adelaide DiNovaloff, Albert DiNovaloff, Georgia Empey, Kitty Flynn, The Glorias, Gene Gray, Harold Gwynne, William Holbrooke, Claire Hooper, Charles Layton, Cecil Lean, Anabelle Lewis, Tom Lewis, George Luman, Ma-Belle, Rena Manning, Cleo Mayfield, Margaret Morris, John Muccio, Gertrude Mudge, Clarence Nordstrom, Robert Emmett O'Connor (as "Paul Kominski"), Thelma Percy, Betty Ross, Miss Stoneburne, Violette Strathmore, Louise Strong, Beatrice Swanson, Marcella Swanson, Jean Woods. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1924) Stage Play: Red Pepper. Musical comedy.
- (1922) Stage Play: Sally, Irene and Mary. Musical comedy.
- (1924) Stage Play: Vogues of 1924. Musical revue.
- (1924) Stage Play: Innocent Eyes. Musical revue. Music by Sigmund Romberg and Jean Schwartz. Book by Harold Atteridge. Lyrics by Harold Atteridge and Tot Seymour. Musical Director: Alfred Goodman. Music orchestrated by Alfred Goodman. Additional music by J. Fred Coots and James F. Hanley. Additional lyrics by Henry Creamer and McElbert Moore. Choreographed by Jack Mason and Francis Weldon. Production Supervised by J.J. Shubert. Directed by Frank Smithson. Winter Garden Theatre: 20 May 1924- 30 Aug 1924 (126 performances). Cast: Maud Allen, Devera Anguillar, Arthur Appel, Pepita Armadilla, Violet Bache, Edythe Baker, Gordon Baker, Suzanne Bennett, Gaile Beverly, Alice Boulden, Grace Bowman, William Brainerd, Babette Brigon, Frank Byron, Mae Cairns, Mabel Carruthers, Betty Castle, Bebe Cliquot, Florence Courtney, Helene Dahlia, Frank Dobson, Ann Dolores, Ted Doner, Lillian Dunning, Ninon Elysees, Jack de Fay, Jeanette Fleury, Nadjy Gallier, Peggy Gillespie, Norma Gould, Ruth Hamilton, Violet Hayes, Lew Hearn, Leonra Hellekson, Bella Heyman, Katherine Hill, Marjory Himes, Charles Howard, Joseph Hughes, Ruby La Croix, Vera Lavrova, Joan Crawford (credited as Lucille Le Sueur) [Broadway debut], Marjorie Leach, Cecil Lean, Earl Leslie, Peggy Lockwood, Gaby Lorette, Ruby Lorraine, Charles Mac, Mildred Manley, Dorothy Mantell, Martin Mason, Cleo Mayfield, Peggy Mermont, Carol Miller, Mistinguett, Peggy Neil, Jack Oakie, Pauline Pettibois, James E. Phillips, Zuzu Raymonne, Ralph Reader, Victoria Reigel, Carmen Rosella, Irene Sharpe, Loretta Sharpe, Flo Sheppard, Gladys Smith, Lillian Stone, Flo Summerville, Tamara, Myrtle Thompson, Olga Treskoff, Clinton Tustin, Vanessi, Frank Wallace, Marie Warner, Viola Watson, Harry A. White, Billie Williams, Frances Williams [Broadway debut]. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1925) Stage Play: Sally, Irene and Mary. Musical comedy.
- (1926) Stage Play: Honest Liars. Comedy/farce. Written by Robert Weenolsen and Sherrill Webb. Directed by Frank Smithson. Sam H. Harris Theatre: 19 Jul 1926- Oct 1926 (closing date unknown/96 performances). Cast: Ainsworth Arnold (as "Dr. Sherwood"), Harriet Harbaugh, Alfred Kappeler (as "Dr. Harold Stoddard"), Kathleen Lowry, Neil Pratt, Adelaide Rondelle, Vincent Strain, Margaret Walker, Ralph Whittleweed, Jay Wilson, Robert Woolsey (as "Dickie Chambers"). Produced by George MacFarlane.
- (1930) Stage Play: Artists and Models. Musical revue.
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