- (1904 - 1931) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1904) Stage Play: A Madcap Princess. Musical comedy/opera. Music by Ludwig Englander. Libretto by Harry B. Smith. From the novel "When Knighthood Was in Flower" by Charles Major. Musical Director: Antonio DeNovellis. Directed by Edward P. Temple. Knickerbocker Theatre: 5 Sep 1904- 22 Oct 1904 (48 performances). Cast: Beatrice Anderson (as "Chorus"), Charles B. Baker (as "Chorus"), Helen Bancroft (as "Chorus"), Reginald Barlow (as "Farmer Blake") [Broadway debut], Arthur Barry (as "Duke of Buckingham"), Vera Brewster (as "Chorus"), Peter Canova (as "Chorus"), Howard Chambers (as "Captain Bradhurst/Sir Adam Judson"), Mary Conwell (as "Lady Jane Bolingbroke"), Virginia Courtney (as "Chorus"), Olive Cox (as "Chorus"), Ambrose Daly (as "Chorus"), Rita Dean (as "Chorus"), Estelle deAngelis (as "Chorus"), Adam Dockray (as "Chorus"), E.F. Drew (as "Chorus"), Rose Earle (as "Mistress Annie Boleyn"), Herbert Freer (as "Landlord of The Bow & String Tavern"), Joseph Frohoff (as "Chorus"), Sadie Gerschoff (as "Chorus"), Lulu Glaser (as "Mary Tudor"), Kathryn Hale (as "Chorus"), Louis Helie (as "Chorus"), Guy B. Hoffman (as "Duke de Longueville"), E.J. Kloville (as "Chorus"), Katherine LaTour (as "Chorus"), Ralph Lewis (as "Cardinal Wolsey"), Lillian Lipyeat (as "A Page"), Donald McLaren (as "Sir Edwin Caskoden"), Joseph Miller (as "Chorus"), Elizabeth Murray (as "Chorus"), Miriam Norris (as "Chorus"), Estelle Peterson (as "Chorus"), William Pruette(as "Henry VIII"), Frank Reicher (as "Will Somers"), Ella Reichter (as "Chorus"), Maurice Robinson (as "Chorus"), Georgie Sage (as "Chorus"), Maurice Sims (as "A Friar"), Emma Spohr (as "Chorus"), Lucy Stone (as "Chorus"), Maude Ream Stover (as "Queen Katherine"), Elsie Thomas (as "Goody Blake/Chorus"), Gwendolyn Valentine (as "Mistress Jane Seymour"), Bertram Wallis (as "Charles Brandon"), Louise Wein (as "Chorus"), Ethel Wynne (as "Chorus"). Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1909) Stage Play: Votes for Women. Written by Elizabeth Robins. Wallack's Theatre: 15 Mar 1909- Mar 1909 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Martin Alsop, Gertrude Augarde, Reginald Barlow, Charles J.B. Bell, Kathryn Browne, Grace Griswold, Frank Hodge, Ashley Miller, Crosman Sedley-Brown, Mary Shaw, Carrie Lee Stoyle, Helen Strickland, Alice Washburn, Clare Weldon, Edna West, J. Wilberforce-Lee.
- (1909) Stage Play: The Sins of Society. Drama. Written by Cecil Raleigh and Henry Hamilton. Directed by Lawrence Marston and Ernest D'Auban. New York Theatre: 31 Aug 1909- Sep 1909 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: W.L. Abingdon, Reginald Barlow, Virginia Bell, Jessie Carbee, Louise Closser Hale, Rosalie De Vaux, Alice Dean, Florence Edney, W.A. Eustace, Charles Flemin, Marguerite Florence, Lillian Gurney, Laura Nelson Hall, Cooper Hamilton, Clifford Hipple, Anthony Jones, Louis Keller, Leslie Kenyon, Dodson Mitchell, Dell Pascatel, Mabel Pascel, Charles Rowan, Louise Rutter, Alice Seymour, Lucy Sibley, Conway Tearle, Grace Thorne, William Walkers, Malcolm Watson, Elmer Watts, C.P. Zell. Produced by Brooks & Dingwell.
- (1909) Stage Play: Antony and Cleopatra. Written by William Shakespeare. New Theatre: 6 Nov 1909- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Julia Marlowe (as "Cleopatra, Queen of Egypt"), E.H. Sothern (as "Antony/Triumvir"), A.E. Anson, Lee Baker, Charles Balsar, Reginald Barlow, Rowland Buckstone, Alfred Cross, Lawrence Eyre, Ferdinand Gottschalk, William Harris, Ben Johnson, Howard Kyle, William McVay, Henry Stanford, George Venning, Jacob Wendell. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1909) Stage Play: Strife. Written by John Galsworthy. New Theatre: 17 Nov 1909- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: A.E. Anson, Lee Baker, Reginald Barlow, Albert Bruning, Rowland Buckstone, Louis Calvert, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Robert E. Homans, Ben Johnson, William McVay, Harry Melick, Nat Nazarro Jr., Wilfred North, Henry Stanford, John Tansey, Jacob Wendell, Cecil Yapp. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1909) Stage Play: The Nigger. Melodrama. Written by Edward Sheldon. New Theatre: 4 Dec 1909- Dec 1909 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Lee Baker, Reginald Barlow, Pedro de Cordoba, Harriet Otis Dellenbaugh, Robert Homans, Ben Johnson, Howard Kyle, William McVay, Guy Bates Post (as "Philip Morrow"), Annie Russell, Beverly Sitgreaves, Robert Vivian, Jacob Wendell, Oswald Yorke.
- (1910) Stage Play: Twelfth Night. Comedy (revival). New Theatre: 26 Jan 1910- unknown (closing date unknown).
- (1910) Stage Play: The Winter's Tale. Comedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. New Theatre: 28 Mar 1910- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Lee Baker, Reginald Barlow, Leah Bateman-Hunter, Albert Bruning (as "Autolycus"), Jessie Busley, Rose Coghlan, Alfred Cross, Pedro de Cordoba, Ferdinand Gottschalk (as "Clown"), E.M. Holland (as "Old Shepherd"), Robert E. Homans, Ben Johnson, Henry Kolker, Edith Wynne Matthison, Henry Stanford, Vida Sutton, John Tansey. Produced by Lee Schubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1910) Stage Play: The Blue Bird. Written by Maurice Maeterlinck. New Theatre (moved to The Majestic Theatre from 8 Nov 1910- close): 1 Oct 1910- 21 Jan 1911 (unknown performances). Cast: Reginald Barlow (as "Daddy Tyl"), Ethel Brandon, Irene Brown, Claribel Campbell, Eleanor Carey, Louise Closser Hale (as "Fairy Berylune"), Pedro de Cordoba (as "Fire"), Bertha Donn (as "Cold-in-the-Head"), Claiborne Foster (as "The Girl Lover"), Emmett Hampton, Robert E. Homans, Gladys Hulette, George Majeroni (as "Sugar"), Martha McGraw, Robert McWade (as "Gaffer Tyl"), Eleanor Moretti (as "Night"), Nat Nazarro Jr., Gwendolyn Valentine, Elizabeth H. Von Sell, Jacob Wendell, Margaret Wycherly (as "Light"), Cecil Yapp. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1911) Stage Play: The Arrow Maker. Written by Mary Austin. New Theatre: 27 Feb 1911- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Stewart Baird, Reginald Barlow, Leah Bateman-Hunter, Ethel Brandon, 'Edwin Cushman, 'Pedro De Cordoba', Albert Easdale, Frank Gilmore (as "Simwa"), Elsie Herndon Kearns, Barbara King, Edith Wynne Matthison (as "Chisera"), Olive Oliver, Helen Reimer, Lewise Seymour, John Sutherland. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1911) Stage Play: Noah's Flood/Nice Wanton. New Theatre: 27 Mar 1911 (1 performance). Cast included: Reginald Barlow (appeared in both productions), Pedro de Cordoba, Edwin Cushman, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Cecil Yapp.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Pigeon. Written by John Galsworthy. Little Theatre: 12 Mar 1912- May 1912 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Reginald Barlow (as "First Humble Man"), Arthur Barry (as "Sir Thomas Hoxton"), A.M. Botsford (as "Rory Megan"), Albert Easdale (as "Second Humble Man"), Pamela Gaythorne (as "Guinevere Megan"), Walter Howe (as "Edward Bertley"), Thomas Louden (as "Alfred Calway") [Broadway debut], Wilfred North (as "A Police Constable"), Frank Reicher (as "Ferrand"), Louise Seymour (as "Ann Wellwyn"), Sidney Valentine (as "Timson"), Russ Whytal (as "Cristopher Wellwyn"). Produced by Winthrop Ames. Note: First production to be performed in Ames' new 300-seat theatre. Over the years it has been expanded to 597 seats and is now known as The Helen Hayes Theatre.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Terrible Meek. Written by Charles Kennedy. Little Theatre: 19 Mar 1912- Apr 1912 (closing date unknown/39 performances). Cast: Reginald Barlow, Edith Wynne Matthison, Sidney Valentine. Note: produced in repertory with "The Flower in the Palace of Han." Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Flower of the Palace of Han. Written by Louis Laloy and Charles Kennedy. Little Theatre: 19 Mar 1912- Apr 1912 (closing date unknown/39 performances). Cast: Reginald Barlow, Arthur Barry, A.M. Botsford, Albert Easdale, Louise Fredericks, Walter Howe, Edith Wynne Matthison, Wilfred North, Frank Reicher, Louis Seymour. Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Yellow Jacket. Drama. Written by George Cochran Hazelton and J.H. Benrimo. Directed by J.H. Benrimo. Fulton Theatre: 4 Nov 1912- Jan 1913 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: Grace Valentine, Grace A. Barbour, Reginald Barlow (as "Purveyor of Hearts"), Betty Brewster, Chamberlain Brown, Margaret Calvert, E. Colebrook, Juliette Day, Roy Gordon, Thomas Jackson, Schuyler Ladd, Saxone Morland, Albert Perry, Signor Perugini, George Relph, Arthur Shaw, Antionette Walker. Produced by Harris & Selwyn.
- (1914) Stage Play: What Happened at 22. Written by Paul Wilstach. Directed by Eugene B. Sanger. Harris Theatre: 21 Aug 1914- Sep 1914 (closing date unknown/19 performances). Cast included: Charles S. Abbe, Reginald Barlow, Malcolm Duncan, Wadsworth Harris.
- (1914) Stage Play: Milady's Boudoir. Written by John C. Drum. Director. Garrick Theatre: 29 Oct 1914- Nov 1914 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Henry Bergman, Adele Blood, Everett Butterfield, Mrs. Charles G. Craig, William Riley Hatch, Jack Keane, Edward Lynch, Mark Smith, Dallas Tyler.
- (1915) Stage Play: Children of Earth. Written by Alice Brown. Booth Theatre: 12 Jan 1915- Feb 1915 (closing date unknown/39 performances). Cast: A.E. Anson, Reginald Barlow, Kate Jepson, Herbert Kelcey, Effie Shannon, Gilda Varesi Archibald, Theodor Von Eltz, Olive Wyndham, Cecil Yapp. Produced by Winthrop Ames. Note: This production was the result of a $10,000 contest Ames posted in search of the best new American play.
- (1915) Stage Play: Cock o' the Walk. Written by Henry Arthur Jones. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 27 Dec 1915- Feb 1916 (closing date unknown/72 performances). Cast: Reginald Barlow, Enid Bennett, Frederick M. Conklin, Harry Dodd, Janet Dunbar, Ernest A. Elton, John Gibbs, Walter Gibbs, Kenyon Musgrove, Rita Otway [final Broadway role], John Rogers, Harry Scarborough, Walter F. Scott, Otis Skinner, Vernon Steele, Richard Webster. Produced by Charles Frohman Inc.
- (1916) Stage Play: The Tempest.
- (1916) Stage Play: Old Lady 31.
- (1920) Stage Play: Big Game. Drama.
- (1920) Stage Play: The Piper. Drama.
- (1920) Stage Play: The Prince and the Pauper.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Six-Fifty. Comedy/drama. Written by Kate L. McLaurin. Hudson Theatre: 24 Oct 1921- Nov 1921 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Lillian Albertson (as "Hester"), Reginald Barlow (as "Gramp"), Wilbur Cox (as "Walter"), William T. Hayes [credited as William T. Hays] (as "Gaston Hedges"), Harold Healy (as "Steward"), Harry Knapp (as "Bob Marshall") [Broadway debut], John Merkyl (as "Mark Rutherford"), Lolita Robertson (as "Christine Palmer"), Lillian Ross (as "Marie Louise Hall"), Maxwell Selser (as "Jim Armstrong"), Hazel Turney (as "Ann Seymour"), Leonard Willey (as "Dan Taylor"). Produced by Lee Kugel.
- (1922) Stage Play: Your Woman and Mine. Drama. Written by Cleves Kinkead. Directed by Daniel Pennell. Klaw Theatre: 27 Feb 1922- Apr 1922 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Reginald Barlow (as "Clem Prewitt"), Byron Beasley (as "Governor Gilbert Moreland"), George Stuart Christie, Malcolm Duncan, Minnie Dupree (as "Abby Prewitt, the Wife of Clem"), Fred Eckhard, Louis Fierce, Helen Gill, James L. Kearney, Bertram Marburgh, Henry Mortimer, Dan Pennell (as "The Speaker of The House"), Royal C. Stout, Regina Wallace (as "Sally Jackson"). Produced by Lee Kugel.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Drums of Jeopardy. Melodrama/mystery. Written by Howard Herrick and Harold McGrath [credited as Harold MacGrath]. Directed by Ira Hards. Gaiety Theatre: 29 May 1922- Jun 1922 (closing date unknown/8 performances. Cast: Reginald Barlow (as "Stepan Gregory"), Marion Coakley (as "Kitty Conover"), John Colvin (as "Stemmler"), William Courtleigh (as "Cutty"), Paul Everton (qv (as "Boris Karlov"), George Frenger (as "Antonio Bernini"), George Golden (as "Chauffeur"), C. Henry Gordon (as "John Hawksley") [Broadway debut], Victor Harrison (as "Dr. Richard Harrison"), Emmet O'Reilly (as "Kuroki"), Bernard A. Reinold (as "Edward Burlingame"), M. Tello Webb (as "Patrick Conroy"). Produced by Alfred E. Aarons. Note: Considering this play was a huge flop, it's remarkable that it enjoyed two film adaptations, albeit produced by second-rung studios. It was filmed by M.H. Hoffman Inc. [distributed by Truart Film Co.] as The Drums of Jeopardy (1923), and by Tiffany Productions as The Drums of Jeopardy (1931). Oddly, neither film version credited Howard Herrick's contribution to the story.
- (1922) Stage Play: Shore Leave. Comedy. Written by Hubert Osborne. Directed by David Belasco. Lyceum Theatre: 8 Aug 1922- Dec 1922 (closing date unknown/151 performances). Cast: Betty Alden, Audrey Baird, Reginald Barlow (as "Cap'n Martin"), Marjorie Booth, Evelyn Carter Carrington, Kenneth Diven, John F. Hamilton, Samuel S. Hinds (as "Smith"), Thomas E. Jackson (as "Bat Smith"), Stanley Jessup (as "Rear Admiral Smith"), Schuyler Ladd, Nick Long, Teris Loring, Mrs. Jacques Martin, James Rennie (as "Bilge Smith, U.S.N."), Ellen Southbrook, Frances Starr, Bernard Sussman, Jose Torres, Paul E. Wilson, H. Percy Woodley, Devah Worrell, Jose Yovin. Produced by David Belasco. Note: Filmed by Inspiration Pictures (distributed by First National Pictures) as Shore Leave (1925).
- (1923) Stage Play: The Breaking Point.
- (1923) Stage Play: Go West, Young Man. Comedy.
- (1923) Stage Play: The Blue Bird. Fantasy.
- (1925) Stage Play: Outside Looking In. Comedy. Written by Maxwell Anderson. Based on the autobiography "Beggars of Life" by Jim Tully. Directed by Augustin Duncan. Greenwich Village Theatre (moved to The 39th Street Theatre from Nov 1925- close): 7 Sep 1925- Dec 1925 (closing date unknown/113 performances). Cast: Reginald Barlow (as "Baldy"), Charles Bickford (as "Oklahoma Red"), Harry Blakemore (as "Mose"), Raphael Byrnes (as "Bill"), James Cagney (as "Little Red"), Blythe Daly (as "Edna"), Wallace House (as "Skelly"), David A. Leonard (as "Arkansas Snake"), Sidney Machat (as "Ukie"), Barry Macollum (as "Hopper"), James Martin (as "Rubin"), Richard Sullivan (as "Blind Sims"). Replacement actors: Morris Armor (as "Deputy"), Walter Downing (as "Chief of Police"), John C. Hickey (as "Sheriff"), Frederick C. Packard (as "Brakeman"), G.O. Taylor (as "Deputy"), George Westlake (as "Railroad Detective"). Produced by Kenneth MacGowan, Robert Edmond Jones and Eugene O'Neill.
- (1926) Stage Play: Number 7. Drama. Written by Joseph Jefferson Farjeon. Directed by Earl Carroll and Henry Stillman. Times Square Theatre: 8 Sep 1926- Oct 1926 (closing date unknown/37 performances). Cast: J.W. Austin (as "Gilbert Fordyce"), Reginald Barlow (as "Brant"), Fred Eric (as "Smith"), Austin Fairman (as "Henry"), Eden Gray (as "Nora"), William Gregory (as "Eddie Scott"), Harry McNaughton (as "Ben"), Lois Meredith (as "Rose Ackroyd"), Marshall Vincent (as "Ackroyd"). Produced by Earl Carroll.
- (1927) Stage Play: Damn the Tears. Written by William Gaston. Directed by Sigourney Thayer. Garrick Theatre: 21 Jan 1927- Feb 1927 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: Reginald Barlow (as "Mr. Steele/Mr. Street"), Joyce Benner (as "Stenographer"), Hallam Bosworth (as "Clerk/Jean Bourdelle May"), Frederick Bryan (as "Manager/Judge"), Elmer Cornell (as "Johnny O'Shay"), Virginia Farmer (as "Palmira"), Eleanor Griffith (as "Odile"), Seth Kendall (as "Secretary"), Hugh Kidder (as "Attendant"), James Martin (as "Officer"), Ralph Morgan (as "Buckland Steele"), Edwin Phillips (as "Buck as a Boy"), William Rainey (as "Pete"), Florence Rylander (as "Mrs. Steele"), Joan Storm (as "Lilian/Landlady"), John Washburn (as "Hon. Timothy Mulvahey"), Harry Winston (as "Bill Vincent"). Produced by Alexander McKaig.
- (1927) Stage Play: The Heaven Tappers. Written by George Scarborough and Annette Westbay. Directed by Edwin Carewe. Forrest Theatre: 8 Mar 1927- Mar 1927 (closing date unknown/9 performances). Cast: Charles S. Abbe (as "Lafe Ketcham"), Joseph Allen, Reginald Barlow (as "Kent Hardy"), Louis Bennison, John Benson, Thomas Chalmers (as "Bud Ketcham"), Harry Clarens, Florence Gerald, Thomas Gunn, John M. Kline, Margaret Lawrence, Frank Marlowe, Charles Waldron (as "David Calvin, alias "The Parson"), Lule Warrenton, Frank Williams. Produced by Lee Shubert. Produced in association with Edwin Carewe.
- (1927) Stage Play: Blood Money. Melodrama. Written by George Middleton, from a story by H.H. Van Loan. Directed by Ira Hards. Hudson Theatre: 22 Aug 1927- Oct 1927 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Reginald Barlow (as "Captain Harry Dark"), Robert Brister (as "Ned Timmins"), Lawrence Cecil (as "Smith"), Malcolm Cuncan (as "Tom Jefferson"), Harold De Becker (as "Wu Fang"), Kate McComb (as "Nellie McKenna"), Thomas Mitchell (as "James Bolton"), Beatrice Nichols (as "Mary Jefferson"), Phyllis Povah (as "Julia Jones"), John Davenport Seymour (as "Passenger"). Produced by Mrs. Henry B. Harris.
- (1928) Stage Play: The Queen's Husband. Written by Robert E. Sherwood. Directed by John Cromwell. Playhouse Theatre: 25 Jan 1928- May 1928 (closing date unknown/125 performances). Cast: Katharine Alexander (as "Princess Anne"), Reginald Barlow (as "Gen. Northrup"), William Boren (as "Maj. Blent"), Helen Cromwell (as "Another Lady-in-Waiting"), Dwight Frye (as "Prince William"), Gladys Hanson (as "Queen Martha"), Arthur Hughes (as "Dr. Fellman"), Gyles Isham (as "Frederick Granton"), John M. James (as "Sergeant"), Benedict MacQuarrie (as "Laker"), James H. Morrison (as "Petley"), Edward Rigby (as "Phipps"), Marguerite Taylor (as "Lady-in-Waiting"), Wallace Widdecombe (as "Lord Birten"), Roland Young (as "King Eric VIII"). Produced by William A. Brady and Dwight Wiman. Note: Filmed by Radio Pictures [later known as RKO Radio Pictures] as The Royal Bed (1931).
- (1927) Stage Play: Out of the Sea.
- (1931) Stage Play: The Silent Witness. Drama (revival). Written by Jack DeLeon and Jack Celestin. Directed by Harry Wagstaff Gribble. Morosco Theatre: 23 Mar 1931- Jun 1931 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: Lionel Atwill (as "Sir Austin Howard") [final Broadway role], Reginald Barlow (as "Inspector Robins") [final Broadway role], Thurlow Bergen (as "Mr. Justice Bond"), Fortunio Bonanova, Francis Compton (as "Clerk of the Court"), Harold De Becker (as "Henry Hammer"), George Graham, Geoffrey Harwood, Anthony Kemble-Cooper, T. Jerome Lawler, Kathleen Lowry, Thomas Wigney Percyval (as "Sir John Lawson, K.C."), Ann Shoemaker, Herbert Standing (as "Augustus Percy Carlton"), Kay Strozzi (as "Doreen Smith"), Milano Tilden. Produced by Lee Schubert. Note: Filmed as The Silent Witness (1932).
- (September 1934) Stage play: "Blood on the Moon" by Claire and Paul Sifton, produced by Lucille Ryson and Louis Macloon, at the Mayan Theatre in Los Angeles
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