- (1911) Stage: Wrote "Over Night", produced on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1912) Stage: Wrote / directed "Little Miss Brown" on Broadway. Comedy. 48th Street Theatre: 29 Aug 1912-Nov 1912 (closing date unknown/84 performances). Cast: Madge Kennedy (as "Miss Brown"), William Morris, Rae Bowdin, John Bowers, Terese Deagle, Mattie Ferguson, John F. Heins, Tom Lemonier, Sidney Macy, Ellen Mortimer, George Pauncefort, Ned Sparks (as "Hotel Clerk"), Charles Stanley, Richard Taber, Olive Harper Thorne. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1913) Stage: Wrote "When Dreams Come True", produced on Broadway. Musical comedy.
- (1913) Stage: Wrote / directed (w/E.M. Bostwick) / produced "Kiss Me Quick", produced on Broadway. 48th Street Theatre: 26 Aug 1913-Sep 1913 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: Charles Ashley, Arthur Aylesworth, Eugene Bottler, Emily Calloway, Louise Drew, Sadie Harris, Mary Hastings, Robert Kelly, Edward Kummerou, Laura Laird, Helen Lowell, Migno McGibeny, J.J. Sambrook, Fred Santley, Richard Taber.
- (1914) Stage: Wrote book for / lyrics for / produced ""Miss Daisy" on Broadway. Musical. Music by Silvio Hein. Musical Director: August Kleinecke. Staging by Jack Mason. Directed by James C. Huffman (as J.C. Huffman). Shubert Theatre (moved to The Lyric Theatre from 28 Sep 1914-close): 9 Sep 1914-3 Oct 1914 (29 performances). Cast: Rae Bowdin (as "Josie"), John Boyle (as "Billy"), Evelyn Carter Carrington (as "Mrs. Swigget"), Molly Chrysty (as "Edna Barber"), Claiborne Foster (as "Sally Smith"), Alice Hegeman (as "Anastasia"), Elsie Hitz (as "Fern Randolph"), Gwennllyan Jocelyn (as "Maisie Dearborn"), Allen Kearns (as "Frederic"), Helen Lee (as "Elvira Walsh"), Joseph Lertora (as "The Duke of Tormina"), Donald MacDonald (as "Walter Hollister"), Florence Mackie (as "Daisy Hollister"), Charles Murray (as "Joe"), Mae Murray (as "Pierrete"), Frank Parker (as "John"), Anna Wheaton (as "Elsie Swigget"), John E. Wheeler (as "Huggins"), Gladys Zell (as "Dolly Sweet").
- (1915) Stage: Wrote (w/Guy Bolton) book for "Very Good Eddie", produced on Broadway, based on his farce "Over Night". Musical. Music by Jerome Kern. Lyrics by Schuyler Green. Additional music by Henry Kailimai. Additional lyrics by Elsie Janis, Harry B. Smith, Herbert Reynolds and Jack E. Hazzard. Music orchestrated by Frank Saddler. Musical Director: Max Hirschfeld. Choreographed by David Bennett. Directed by Frank McCormack. Princess Theatre (moved to The Casino Theatre from 29 May-circa Sep 1916, then moved to The 39th Street Theatre from 11 Sep 1916-circa Oct 1916, then moved to The Princess Theatre from 2 Oct 1916-close): 23 Dec 1915-14 Oct 1916 (341 performances). Cast: Helen Bond (as "Flo Tide"), Arline Chase (as "Belle Fontaine"), Louise Cook (as "Miss Funnie Rekkod"), Alice Dovey (as "Mrs. Elsie Darling"), Sedgewick Draper (as "Mr. Rollo Munn"), Lew Fullerton (as "Purser"), Stuart Gilmore (as "Mr. Watt Pumkyns"), Jack E. Hazzard (as "Al Cleveland"), Herbert Hoey (as "Mr. Dyer Thurst"), Bessie Kelly (as "Miss Lily Pond"), Kuy Kendall (as "West Point Cadet"), Adah Lewis (as "Mme. Matroppo"), Dorothy Jane Londoner (as "Ensemble"), James Lounsbery (as "M. de Rougemont"), Tess Mayer (as "Miss Chrystal Poole"), Harry McKenna (as "Mr. Dustin Stacks"), Julia Mills (as "Victoria Lake"), Mary Louise Morrison (as "Miss Munnie Duzzyt"), Dorothy Nita (as "Miss Gay Ann Giddy"), Helen O'Day (as "Miss Alwys Innit"), Anna Orr (as "Miss Elsie Lilly"), Katherine Rahn (as "Miss E.Z. Morrels"), Helen Raymond (as "Mrs. Georgina Kettle"), Oscar Shaw (as "Mr. Dick Rivers"; Broadway debut), Dorothy Sylvia (as "Virginia Spring"), Ernest Truex (as "Mr. Eddie Kettle"), Carl Wadsworth (as "Mr. Tayleurs Dumme"), John Willard (as "Mr. Percy Darling"), Genevieve Willment (as "Miss Carrie Closewell"), Morton Wood (as "Mr. Fullern A. Goat"), Benjamin F. Wright (as "Steward"). Produced by Marbury-Comstock Co.
- (1917) Stage: "Over the Top", produced on Broadway. Musical revue. Music by Sigmund Romberg. Additional numbers by Herman Timberg. Lyrics by Matthew C. Woodward and Charles Manning. Musical Director: Frank Tours. Additional music by Frank Carter. Choreographed by Allan K. Foster. Directed by James C. Huffman. Lew Fields' 44th Street Roof Garden: 28 Nov 1917-2 Feb 1918 (78 performances). Cast: Miss Arnold, Adele Astaire, Fred Astaire, Anita Baldwin, Muriel Barnes, T. Roy Barnes, Anna Berg, Aleen Bronson, Bly Brown, Craig Campbell, Clara Carroll, Jean Carroll, Miss Cassidy, Florence Challenger, Kewpie Collier, Ray Conlin, Paul Cordes, Louise Dale, Harry Detlof, Mary Eaton, Miss Eden, Miss Edward, Miss Forbes, Aileen French, Ada Fuld, Justine Johnstone, Joe Laurie, Miss Levine, Beatrice Little, Martha Lorber, Ted Lorraine, Ma-Belle, Charles Mack, Molly Moore, Frank Murphy, Miss Murray, Dagmar Oakland [Broadway debut], Vivien Oakland [Broadway debut], Betty Pierce, Miss Powell, Phyllis Prince, Jean Rebera, Rose Rolanda, Miss Rook, F. Rowe, Edna Russell, Emma Sharrock, Harry Sharrock, Beatrice Sommers, Miss Sortelle, Flo Summerville, Hal Taggart, Miss Warwick, Nina Whittmore, Hilda Wright, Miss Youde. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1918) Stage: Wrote book for "Girl o' Mine", produced on Broadway. Musical comedy. Music by Frank Tours. Choreographed by Edward Hutchinson and Allan K. Foster. Scenic Design by Watson Barratt. Directed by Clifford Brooke and Edward P. Temple. Bijou Theatre: 28 Jan 1918-9 Mar 1918 (48 performances). Cast: Charles Burrows (as "A Waiter"), Irving Carter (as "Ensemble"), Robert H. Casey (as "Ensemble"), Sylvia Cassell (as "Ensemble"), Virginia Curtis (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Dickson (as "Betty"), Frank Ervin (as "Ensemble"), Frank Fay (as "Jack"; Broadway debut), Barrett Greenwood (as "Charlie"), Virginia Gunther (as "Ensemble"), Edna Wallace Hopper (as "Lulu"), Leo Howe (as "Ensemble"), Carl Hyson (as "Toby"), Helen Lee (as "Mildred"), James Lounsbery (as "Duc de Bouvais"), Carlton Macy (as "Greene"), Joseph McCallion (as "Ensemble"), Elizabeth Moffat (as "Ensemble"), Marie Nordstrom (as "Lily"), Carolyn Nunder (as "Ensemble"), Ernest Perrin (as "Chef de Gare, Maitre d'Hotel"), Kathleen Quain (as "Ensemble"), David Quixano (as "Teddy"), Kathryn Rahn (as "Ensemble"), Cynthia Randolph (as "Ensemble"), Stanley Rayburn (as "Ensemble"), Ruth Rollins (as "Ensemble"), Clarissa Stem (as "Ensemble"), Charlotte Stevenson (as "Ensemble"), Charlotte Wakefield (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Elisabeth Marbury. Produced in association with Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1919) Stage: Wrote (w/John Murray Anderson) book for / additional lyrics for "The Greenwich Village Follies", produced on Broadway. Musical revue. Lyrics by John Murray Anderson and Arthur Swanstrom [earliest Broadway credit]. Music by A. Baldwin Sloane. Musical Director / Music Orchestrated by Hilding Anderson. Featuring songs by Bill Munro, Jimmy Morgan, Ted Lewis, Byron Gay, Irving Berlin, Al Herman, A. Behr, Alex Gerber and Abner Silver. Featuring songs with lyrics by Edward Lewis, Andrew B. Sterling, Benny Davis, Byron Gay, Irving Berlin, Alex Gerber and Abner Silver. Greenwich Village Theatre (moved to The Nora Bayes Theatre from 9 Sep 1919-close): 15 Jul 1919-31 Jan 1920 (232 performances). Cast: Arjamand, Babette Busey, Jane Carroll, Dorothy Clay, Anna Mae Clift, Cecil Cunningham, Virginia Curtis, Bessie McCoy Davis, Jacqueline Delaine, Jere Delaney, Harry Delf, Charles Derickson, Gordon Drexel, Robert Edwards, Doris Faithful, William Foran, Ada Forman, Helen Frances, Warner Gault, Alden Gay, Al Herman, Virginia Lee, Ted Lewis, Edmund Makalif, Irene Marcellus, Rita Marshall, Irene Mathews, Susanne Morgan, Irene Olsen, Cynthia Perot, Homer Rosine, Rex Story, Edgar Thornton, Willard Ward, James Watts, Ruth Weeks, Billie Weston, Rita Zalmani, Olga Ziceva. Produced by The Bohemians Inc. and John Murray Anderson.
- (1921) Stage: Wrote (w/Guy Bolton) "Tangerine". Musical comedy/satire. Based on a play by Lawrence Langner and Philip Bartholomae. Lyrics by Howard Johnston. Music by Monte Carlo and Alma M. Sanders. Musical Director: Gus Kleinecke. Featuring songs by Dave Zoob. Staged by George F. Marion and Bert French. Scenic Design by Lee Simonson and P. Dodd Ackerman. Costume Design by Dorothy Armstrong, Mme. Francis and Pieter Mayer. Directed by Carle Carlton. Casino Theatre: 9 Aug 1921-26 Aug 1922 (361 performances/on hiatus from 28 May 1922-6 Aug 1922). Cast: Julia Sanderson (as "Shirley Dalton"), The California Four (as "Tangerine Police Force"), Becky Cauble (as "Elsie Loring"), Mary Collins (as "Akamai"), Frank Crumit (as "Dick Owens"), Grace De Carlton (as "Aoha Oe"), Helen Frances (as "Kulikuli"), Carolyn Hancock (as "Ukola"), Jack E. Hazzard (as "King Home-Brew" / "Joe Perkins" / "The Easy Boss"), Joseph Herbert Jr. (as "Fred Allen"), Frank Holbrook (as "Oro"), Brooke Johns (as "Kate Allen"), P.A. Leonard (as "A Warden"), Anna Ludmilla (as "Arameda"), Jeannetta Methven (as "Noa"), Victoria Miles (as "Huhu"), Wayne Nunn (as "Clarence"), Edna Pierre (as "Kate Allen"), Harry Puck (as "Jack Floyd"), Billy Rhodes (as "Lee Loring"), Ruth Rollins (as "Polihu"), Nerene Swinton (as "Pilikia"), Gladys Wilson (as "Mildred Floyd"), Hazel Wright (as "Aloha"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shube
- (1921) Stage: Wrote (w/Jasper Ewing Brady) "Personality", produced on Broadway. Comedy/drama. Directed by Frank Peck (also in cast as "Window Cleaner"). Playhouse Theatre: 27 Aug 1921-Sept 1921 (closing date unknown/9 performances). Cast: Louis Bennison (as "Robert Wainwright"), Dorothy Bernard (as "Ruth Kent"), John Cromwell (as "Simpson"), Henry E. Dixey (as "Leary"), William J. Florence (as "Franklin"), Freddie Lawshe (as "Dennis Hogan"), Dodson Mitchell (as "John C. Kent"), Eveta Nudsen (as "Mary Murdock"), Albert Sackett (as "Judge Lawton"), Robert Vivian (as "Jenkins"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1923) Stage: Wrote (w/John Meehan, also director) "Barnum Was Right", produced on Broadway. Farce. Frazee Theatre: 12 Mar 1923-May 1923 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Robert Adams (as "Seymour Standish"), Elwood Fleet Bostwick (as "Samuel Locke"), Donald Brian (as "Fred Farrell"), Marion Coakley (as "Miriam Locke"), Will Deming (as "Burke"), George E. Mack (as "Guiseppi Verdi"), Denman Maley (as "Harrison"), Enid Markey (as "Mrs. Tuttle"), Neil Martin (as "Mr. Tuttle"), William E. Morris (as "Felix Hammer"), Lilyan Tashman (as "Phoebe O'Dare"), Suzanne Willa (as "Sarah"), Arthur J. Wood (as "Pierre"). Produced by Louis F. Werba. NOTE: Filmed as Barnum Was Right (1926), Barnum Was Right (1929).
- (1926) Stage: Wrote (w/Otto A. Harbach) book for "Kitty's Kisses", produced on Broadway. Musical comedy. Music by Con Conrad. Lyrics by Gus Kahn. Featuring songs with lyrics by Otto A. Harbach. Featuring songs by Will Donaldson. Musical Director: John McManus. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh. Musical Staging by Bobby Connolly. Directed by John Cromwell. Playhouse Theatre: 6 May 1926-2 Oct 1926 (170 performances). Cast: Mildred Anders (as "Ensemble"), Pauline Bartlett (as "Ensemble"), Polly Blake (as "Ensemble"), John Boles (as "Robert Mason"), Billie Bostick (as "Ensemble"), Walter Bradbury (as "The Bell Boy" / "A Track Walker"), Frances Burke (as "Mrs. Dennison"), Emily Burton (as "Ensemble"), Mortimer Chadbourne (as "Brakeman"), Jane Corcoran (as "Mrs. Burke"), Warren Crosby (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Dilley (as "Kittie Brown"), Patsy Dunn (as "The Maid"), Lester Eldridge (as "Ensemble"), Paul Florence (as "Ensemble"), Jack Gargin (as "Ensemble"), Irene Hamlin (as "Ensemble"), Patty Hastings (as "Ensemble"), Frank Hatch (as "Mr. Burke"), Edna Hopper (as "Ensemble"), Mildred Keats (as "Miss Wendel"), Ruth Kelly (as "Ensemble"), Ruth Laird (as "Ensemble"), Arthur Lang (as "Dining Car Steward"), William Leith (as "The Night Clerk"), Nick Long Jr. (as "Philip Dennison"), Gene McVey (as "Ensemble"), Aileen Meehan (as "Lulu" / "Ensemble"), William Neeley (as "Ensemble"), Frances Nevins (as "Ensemble"), George O'Brien (as "Ensemble"), Cheri Pelham (as "Ensemble"), Joe Sargent (as "Ensemble"), Leonard Scott (as "Pullman Conductor"), Kenneth Shutts (as "Conductor"), Mark Smith (as "Richard Dennison"), Georgina Tilden (as "A Country Girl"), Ruth Warren (as "The Telephone Girl"), William Wayne (as "The Day Clerk"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1928) Stage: Directed "To-Morrow" on Broadway. Written by Hull Gould and Saxon Kling. Lyceum Theatre: 28 Dec 1928-Jan 1929 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: Walter Allen (as "Prof. Withers"), Margaret Arrow (as "Aunt Ada"), Carroll Ashburn (as "A Broker"), Jessie Busley (as "Grace"), Harold Elliott (as "Charles"), Bruce Evans (as "Tommy"), Clyde Fillmore (as "Herbert"), Fred Irving Lewis (as "Teddy"), Mary Loane (as "Helen"), Kathleen Mulqueen (as "Mary"), Joseph Parry (as "Radio Operator"), Joan Sudlow (as "Spanish Singer"). Produced by John Ashley.
- (1975) Stage: Wrote (w/Guy Bolton) book for "Very Good Eddie", produced on Broadway. Musical (revival). Music by Jerome Kern. Lyrics by Schuyler Green. Dances / musical numbers staged by Dan Siretta. Directed by Bill Gile. Booth Theatre: 21 Dec 1975-5 Sep 1976 (304 performances + 3 previews that began on 19 Dec 1975). Produced by David Merrick, Max Brown and Byron Goldman. Produced by arrangement with Tams-Witmark Music Library Inc.
- (19??). Story: "The Wolf's Claw" (filmed as The Serpent (1916))
- Playwright: "Daredevil Kate" (filmed as Daredevil Kate (1916)).
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