- (1887 - 1930) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1889) Stage Play: Shenandoah. Written by Bronson Howard. Star Theatre (moved to Proctor's Theatre from 21 Oct 1889- close): 9 Sep 1889-19 Apr 1890 (250 performances). Cast: Viola Allen (as "Gertrude Ellingham"), G.W. Bailey, William Barnes, J.O. Barrows, C.C. Brandt, Nanette Comstock, W.J. Cummings, W.L. Dennison, Dorothy Dorr, Esther Drew, Alice B. Haines, Harry Harwood, Mrs. C.A. Haslam, Lucius Henderson (as "Robert Ellingham"), John E. Kellerd (as "Capt. Thornton"), Wilton Lackaye (as Gen. Haverhill"), G. Maxwell, Rube Miller (as "Kerchival West"), Morton Selten (as "Capt. Heartsease"), Effie Shannon (as "Jenny Buckthorn"), W.H. Thorn. Replacement actors: 'Joseph Adelman (as "Capt. Thornton") [Broadway debut], Mary Breyer (as "Old Margery"), Frann Dayton (as "Robert Ellingham"), Louis Hendricks (as "Capt. Lockwood"), Joseph Holland (as "Gen. Haverhill"). Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1890) Stage Play: Nero. Written by Max Freeman. Based on the novel by Ernest Erkstein. Niblo's Garden: 20 Oct 1890- unknown (unknown performances).
- (1894) Stage Play: New Blood. Written by Augustus Thomas. Palmer's Theatre: 19 Sep 1894- unknown (unknown closing date). Cast: Maurice Barrymore, E.M. Holland, Wilton Lackaye (as "Van Buren"). Produced by A.M. Palmer.
- (1894) Stage Play: The Transgressor. Written by A.W. Gattie. Palmer's Theatre: 15 Oct 1894-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Maurice Barrymore, Wilton Lackaye, Olga Nethersole.
- (1894) Stage Play: The New Woman. Written by Sydney Grundy. Palmer's Theatre: 12 Nov 1894-19 Dec 1894 (unknown performances). Cast [as known]: Virginia Harned, Wilton Lackaye, Annie Russell.
- (1895) Stage Play: The District Attorney. Melodrama. Written by Charles Klein and Harrison Grey Fiske [earliest Broadway credit]. Directed by Minnie Maddern Fiske [credited as Mrs. Fiske]. American Theatre: 21 Jan 1895- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Annie Irish (as "Grace"), Wilton Lackaye (as "John Stratton"), Frank Mordaunt (as "Matthew Brainerd"). Note: Filmed by The Lubin Manufacturing Company [distributed by V-L-S-E] as The District Attorney (1915).
- (1895) Stage Play: Trilby. Comedy. Written by Paul M. Potter, from the novel by George L. Du Maurier. Garden Theatre: 15 Apr 1895- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Mathilde Cottrelly (as "Mme. Vinard"), Leo Ditrichstein (as "Zou Zou"), John Glendinning (as "Alexander McAllister, the Laird"), Virginia Harned, Alfred Hickman, Wilton Lackaye (as "Svengali"), Burr McIntosh (as "Talbot Wynne/Taffy"), Rosa Rand (as "Mrs. Bagot"), E.L. Walton (as "Rev. Thos. Bagot"). Note: Filmed by London Film Productions [UK distribution by Jury Films with no known US release] as Trilby (1914) [UK production], and by Equitable Motion Pictures Corporation [Distributed by World Film in original theatrical release, and released by Republic Distributing Corporation in 1920] as Trilby (1915) [starring Wilton Lackaye as "Svengali'], and by Richard Walton Tully Productions [distributed by Associated First National Pictures] as Trilby (1923) starring Arthur Edmund Carewe as "Svengali"). Other filmed versions: A short, Trilby and Little Billee (1896) was produced by The American Mutoscope Company acknowledging George L. Du Maurier. _Ella Lola, a la Trilby (1898)_ was produced by Edison Manufacturing Company in which dancer Ella Lola dances a routine based on the famous character of "Trilby", a short, The Adventures of Pimple: Trilby (1914) was produced in the UK by Folly Films [distributed by Phoenix Film Agency] that featured the same characters as the play, acknowledging George L. Du Maurier, but no playwright source credit was given.
- (1897) Stage Play: Dr. Belgraff. Written by Charles Klein. Garden Theatre: 19 Apr 1897- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Wilton Lackaye (as "Dr. Belgraff"), Forrest Robinson (as "Gerald Fenton"), Marie Wainwright.
- (1899) Stage Play: Children of the Ghetto. Drama. Written by Israel Zangwill. Directed by James A. Herne. Herald Square Theatre: 16 Oct 1899- Dec 1899 (closing date unknown/49 performances). Cast: Laura Almosnino, Frankie Bailey, Blanche Bates, Master Buckley, Jennie Buckley, Richard Carle, Frank Cornell, Mathilde Cottrelly, Ada Curry, Zella Davenport, Gus V. De Vere, H.F. Dolan, Ada Dwyer, Gus Frankel, John D. Garrick, A Ghaistly, L. Greenberg, Emil Hoch, O'Frederick Hoffmann, Wilton Lackaye (as "Rob Schmuel"), Phineas Leache, Adolph Lestina, Fred Lotto, Rosabel Morrison, Louise Muldener, William Norris, Charles E. Odlin, Isabel Preston, E.J. Raymond, William Singerman, Charles Stanley, Mary Stoner, Sadie Stringham, S. Swartz, Mabel Taliaferro, N. Trucks, Frank Worthing. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1900) Stage Play: The Greatest Thing in the World. Drama. Written by 'Beatrice De Mille' and Harriet Ford. Directed by William Seymour. Wallack's Theatre: 8 Oct 1900- 22 Oct 1900 (Played in repertory with "The Land of Heart's Desire"/"In a Balcony." Beginning 23 Oct 1900, "The Moment of Death" followed by "The Greatest Thing in the World" for 24 performances. On the afternoon of October 26, a special performance was given of "The Land of Heart's Desire" and "In a Balcony"/unknown performances). Cast: Robert Edeson, Alphonse Ethier, John Glendinning, Mrs. John Glendinning, Edwin James, Wilton Lackaye, Sarah Cowell Le Moyne, Charles Marriott, Anna O'Malley, Florence Rockwell, Charles Stanley, Walter Thomas, Adelaide Thurston. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1900) Stage Play: Quo Vadis. Written by Hugh Stanislaus Stange, from the novel by Henryk Sienkiewicz. Incidental music by Julian Edwards. Academy of Music: 31 Dec 1900- Jan 1901 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: J.B. Booth, Aubrey Boucicault, Adeline Dunlap, Samuel Edwards, Bijou Fernandez (as "Lygia"), Sarah Kaplan, Wilton Lackaye (as "Petronius"), Frank Mordaunt, Willard Newell, Carlotta Nillson, Georgia Florence Olp, Elita Proctor Otis, Charles Riegel, E.L. Walton, Richard G. Williams.
- (1901) Stage Play: The Price of Peace. Melodrama. Written by Cecil Raleigh. Broadway Theatre: 21 Mar 1901- May 1901 (closing date unknown/60 performances). Cast: Henry Bergman, William T. Blakeley, May Buckley, William T. Carleton [credited as W.T. Carleton], Charles Cherry, Nellie Claire, A.R. Colton, Eugenie Dingens, Louise Dingens, Grace Dudley, Marion Elmore, Carroll Fleming, Arthur Forrest, James Hinton, Harry J. Holliday, Violet Holliday, Eric Hope, Harrison Hunter, Charles Kent, Wilton Lackaye, Ralph Lenox, Edward Lester, Kate Lester, Helen McVeigh, Louis Morrell [Broadway debut], Elizabeth Padgette, F. Roberts, Harry Roberts, Minnie Seligman, Anne B. Sutherland, Mabel Taliaferro, Fred Thorne, Henry Travers [Broadway debut], Virginia Vere, Pauline Von Arnold. Replacement actor: John E. Kellerd. Produced by Jacob Litt.
- (1901) Stage Play: Uncle Tom's Cabin (Revival). Dramatization of the novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe. Academy of Music: 4 Apr 1901- Jun 1901 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Mabel Amber, Earle Brown, Alice Evans, William Fredericks, William Harcourt, Wilton Lackaye, Dora Lane, Georgia Florence Olp, Maud Raymond, Emily Rigl, Theodore Roberts, Mortimer Snow, Arthur Sprague, L.R. Stockwell, Odell Williams, Annie Yeamans. Produced by William A. Brady. NOTE: This was the 3rd Broadway revival since the original 1852 production was mounted at Purdy's New National Theatre.
- (1901) Stage Play: Don Caesar's Return. Written by Victor Mapes. Scenic Design by Arthur Voegtlin. Directed by Victor Mapes. Wallack's Theatre: 3 Sep 1901- Nov 1901 (closing date unknown/87 performances). Cast: Virginia Buchanan, Herbert Carr, Egbert Case, Edward Donnelly, Fernanda Eliscu, James K. Hackett, Thomas A. Hall, Hale Hamilton [Broadway debut], Theodore Hamilton, Ira Hards [Broadway debut], Florence Kahn, Wilton Lackaye (as "King Carlos"), William Lamp, W.J. Le Moyne, George LeSoir, John E. Mackin, Sidney Price, Theodore Roberts, Maude Roosevelt, Charlotte Walker. Produced by James K. Hackett.
- (1901) Stage Play: Colorado. Drama. Written by Augustus Thomas. Incidental music by William Furst. Directed by Joe Humphreys. Wallack's Theatre: 18 Nov 1901-Dec 1901 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: John W. Albaugh Jr., Frank Austin, Christine Blessing, Francis Carlisle, Hearn Collins, J.M. Colville, Francis Conlan, Rosa Cook, Frank Donovan, Louis Eagan, Morris Frank, Harry Gibson, Henry L. Hall, David Higgins, Maud Hoffman, William H. James, Frank Kemble, Clement R. Kirby, Wilton Lackaye (as "Tom Doyle"), Thomas Lambson, Horace Lewis, Frederick Morris, Jean Newcombe, Herbert Pollard, Violet Rand, Lawrence Sheehan, William Simpson. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1902) Stage Play: A Modern Magdalen. Drama.
- (1902) Stage Play: Twirly Whirly. Musical comedy. Music by William T. Francis and John Stromberg. Book by Edgar Smith. Lyrics by Edgar Smith and Robert B. Smith. Musical Director: William T. Francis. Additional music by John T. Kelly. Additional lyrics by John T. Kelly and Wilton Lackaye. Directed by Julian Mitchell. Weber and Fields' Broadway Music Hall: 11 Sep 1902- 11 Apr 1903 (247 performances). Cast: Eva Allen, Louise Allen, Will Archie, Frankie Bailey (as "Don Carrara"), Mabel Barrison, Eugenie Bashford, Charles A. Bigelow, Edna Birch, Grace Bishop, Carrie Bowman, Edith Caine, Mamie Chapin, Mattie Chapin, Bessie Clayton, William Collier (as "Bob Upton"), Peter F. Dailey, Lillian Diamond, Peggy Donaldson, Lew Fields (as "Meyer Ausgaaben"), Virginia Foltz, Carolyn Fostelle, Emily Francis, Lillian Harris, May Harris, Jean Hassall, Ollie Hatfield, Grace Heckler, Bena Hoffman, Mollie Hoffman, Katherine Howland, Ethel Jewett, John T. Kelly, Eleanor Kendall, Anna Leslie, May Leslie, Frankie Loeb, Agnes Lynn, Mabel Lynn, May MacKenzie, Bonnie Maginn, Eva Merrill, Anna Miller, Estelle Moyer, Gertie Moyer, Ilma Pratt, Annie Revere, Lillian Russell (as "Mrs. Stockson Bond"), Laura Senac, Winnie Siegrist, Gertrude Taylor, Fay Templeton (as "Maude Moraine"), Vernie Wadsworth, Joe Weber (as "Michael Schlaatz"), Elizabeth Young. Produced by Weber & Fields.
- (1903) Stage Play: The Frisky Mrs. Johnson. Drama. Written and directed by Clyde Fitch. Based on "Mme. Flirt" by Paul Gavault and Georges Berr. Princess Theatre: 9 Feb 1903- Apr 1903 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: William L. Abingdon, F. Owen Baxter, Amelia Bingham, Madge Carr Cook, Minnie Dupree, Alfred Fisher, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Wilton Lackaye (as "Jim Morley"), Richard Lambart, Ernest Lawford, George S. Probert, Alison Skipworth, Charles H. Wentz, Lillian Wright. Produced by Amelia Bingham. Note: Filmed by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation as The Frisky Mrs. Johnson (1920).
- (1904) Stage Play: The Pit. Drama. Written by Channing Pollock, from the novel by Frank Norris. Lyric Theatre: 10 Feb 1904- Apr 1904 (closing date unknown/77 performances). Cast: Howard Boulden, Edgar Bowman, Clay Boyd, Wilson Burke, Bert Burrell, Harold Byrne, Marian A. Chapman, Harry Converse, Kenneth Davenport, Adeline Dunlap, James Emerson, Agnes Evans, Edmund Evans, Douglas Fairbanks, Agnes Findlay, Mabel Findlay, John J. Fogarty, Robert Peyton Gibbs, Doris Goodwin, Mrs. Powhattan Gordon, George Grey, Henry Gunson, Hale Hamilton, Margaret Kenmare, Charles Kenyon, Wilton Lackaye (as "Curtis Jadwin"), Amber Lawlord, Richard Manuel, J. Cleneay Mathews, Thomas McCabe, Tilden Mercer, Charles Merritt, Walter Moran, Owen Murphey, Jane Oaker, Bowman Ralston, Ed Ralston, Franklyn Roberts, Rudy Saxe, Willard Saxon, Avon Stern, William Stern, A.H. Stuart, Eddie Stuart, Frank Tillman, William Titus, Richard Webster, White Whittlesey, Joseph A. Wilkes, Maude Wilson, Cecil Worth, Robert Wright, Vera Zalene. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1904) Stage Play: Pillars of Society (Revival). Written by Henrik Ibsen. Translated by William Archer. Lyric Theatre: 15 Apr 1905 (1 performance). Cast: Howard Boulden, Agnes Findlay, Mabel Findlay, Powhattan Gordon, Hale Hamilton, William Hazeltine, George A. Kelley, Margaret Kenman, Wilton Lackaye, Jane Oaker, K. Olive Oliver, Edmund J. Reardon, A.H. Stuart, White Whittlesey, Joseph A. Wilkes, Maude Wilson.
- (1905) Stage Play: Trilby. Comedy (revival). Written by Paul M. Potter. Based on the novel by George L. Du Maurier. Choreographed by Carl Marwig. New Amsterdam Theatre: 8 May 1905- May 1905 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Herbert Ayling (as "Dodor"), Meredith G. Brown, Grace Campbell, Ulric B. Collins, Mathilde Cottrelly (as "Mme. Vinard"), William Courtenay (as "William Bagot/Little Billee"), 'Leo Ditrichstein' (as "Zou Zou"), Mabel Findlay, Maude Fisher, John Glendinning (as "Alexander McAllister, the Laird"), 'Virginia Harned' (as "Trilby O'Ferrall"), Marie Horgan (as "Contralto"), Wilton Lackaye (as "Svengali"), Marguerite Lewis (as "Musette"), Dorothy Maynard (as "Angele"), Burr McIntosh (as "Taffy"), E.W. Morrison, Almas Peltier (as "Phillippe"), Rosa Rand, (as "Mrs. Bagot"), Edmund H. Reardon (as "Lorimer"), E.L. Walton (as "Rev. Thos. Bagot"). Produced by William A. Brady. Note: Filmed by London Film Productions [UK distribution by Jury Films with no known US release] as Trilby (1914) [UK production], and by Equitable Motion Pictures Corporation [Distributed by World Film in original theatrical release, and released by Republic Distributing Corporation in 1920] as Trilby (1915) [starring Wilton Lackaye as "Svengali'], and by Richard Walton Tully Productions [distributed by Associated First National Pictures] as Trilby (1923) starring Arthur Edmund Carewe as "Svengali"). Other filmed versions: A short, Trilby and Little Billee (1896) was produced by The American Mutoscope Company acknowledging George L. Du Maurier. _Ella Lola, a la Trilby (1898)_ was produced by Edison Manufacturing Company in which dancer Ella Lola dances a routine based on the famous character of "Trilby", a short, The Adventures of Pimple: Trilby (1914) was produced in the UK by Folly Films [distributed by Phoenix Film Agency] that featured the same characters as the play, acknowledging George L. Du Maurier, but no playwright source credit was given.
- (1906) Stage Play: The Law and the Man. Drama. Based on "Les Miserables" by Victor Hugo. Adapted by Wilton Lackaye. Directed by Wilton Lackaye [earliest Broadway credit]. Manhattan Theatre: 20 Dec 1906- Feb 1907 (closing date unknown/54 performances). Cast: John Beck [Broadway debut], Claudia Carson, Joseph Chaillee, Fred Esmelton [Broadway debut], Louise Everts, Thomas F. Fallon, Arthur Foster, Gretchen Hartman, Edwin Holland, D. Ito, Percy Johns, Miss Kaste, Wilton Lackaye (as "Jean Valjean"), William Lamp, Harry Lane, Ralph Lansing, Jeffreys Lewis, Ada Long, Melbourne MacDowell, Tilden Mercer, B. Miller, James Mortimer, William Naughton, John D. O'Hara, Thomas Parker, F. Pollard, Jewell Power, Ethel Quimby, Richard Remmek, Fanny Reynolds, Sara Sanderson, Agnes Savage, Josephine Sherwood (as "Fantine"), George Ward. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1908) Stage Play: The Battle. Drama. Written by Cleveland Moffett. Savoy Theatre: 21 Dec 1908- Apr 1909 (closing date unknown/144 performances). Cast: H.B. Warner (as "Phillip"), Charles S. Abbe, Elsie Ferguson, Gerald Griffin, E.M. Holland, Wilton Lackaye (as "John J. Haggleton"), Olive McVine, Miltern Pollock, Josephine Victor, Emily Wurster. Produced by Liebler & Co. Note: Filmed as The Money Master (1915).
- (1910) Stage Play: Jim the Penman (Revival). Written by Sir Charles Lawrence Young. Directed by Lawrence Marston. Lyric Theatre: 10 May 1910- Jun 1910 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: George Barnum, Thurlow Bergen, Marguerite Clark, J.H. Davies, Arthur Forrest, Ernest Glendinning, Wilton Lackaye, Jeffreys Lewis, John Mason, Louis Massen, Frederick Paulding, Grace Reals, Florence Roberts, Theodore Roberts. Produced by William A. Brady. Note: Filmed as Jim the Penman (1921).
- (1911) Stage Play: The Stranger. Melodrama (revival). Written by Charles T. Dazey. Bijou Theatre: 21 Dec 1911- Jan 1912 (closing date unknown/28 performances). Cast: Ouida Bergère, Harriet Brent, Arthur Byron, William Frederic, Henry Hall, Howard Hall, Wilton Lackaye (as "John Marshall"), Frank Sheridan, Muriel Starr, Louis Thomas, Malcolm Williams. Produced by L.S. Sire.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Right to Happiness. Written by Gustave Guiches and P.B. Ghersi. Translated by F.G. Fay. Bijou Theatre: 11 Jan 1912- Jan 1912 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Arthur Byron, Frank Conlan, Julia Hay, Adelaide Keim, Wilton Lackaye, Wedgwood Nowell, Sybilla Pope, Walter H. Regan, Harold Rowe, Muriel Starr, Louis Thomas, Arthur J. Vallancourt. Produced by L.S. Sire.
- (1913) Stage Play: Fine Feathers. Written and directed by Eugene Walter. Astor Theatre: 7 Jan 1913-Mar 1913 (closing date unknown/79 performances). Cast: Robert Edeson, Lolita Robertson, Rose Coghlan, Max Figman, Helen Hilton, Wilton Lackaye, Amelia Sumers. Produced by Harry Frazee.
- (1915) Stage Play: Trilby (Revival). Written by Paul M. Potter. From the novel by George L. Du Maurier. Shubert Theatre: 3 Apr 1915- Jun 1915 (closing date unknown/73 performances). Cast: Leslie Austen, Cynthia Brooke, Virginia Fox Brooks, Rose Coghlan, Leo Ditrichstein (as "Zou Zou"), Annie Esmond, Walter S. Fredericks, Taylor Holmes (as "Gecko"), Cecil King, Wilton Lackaye (as "Svengali"), George MacFarlane, Frederick Macklyn, Burr McIntosh (as "Taffy"), Leslie Ryecroft, Brandon Tynan. Produced by Joseph Brooks and Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert. Note: Previously filmed by London Film Productions [UK distribution by Jury Films with no known US release] as Trilby (1914) [UK production], and by Equitable Motion Pictures Corporation [Distributed by World Film in original theatrical release, and released by Republic Distributing Corporation in 1920] as Trilby (1915) [starring Wilton Lackaye as "Svengali'], and by Richard Walton Tully Productions [distributed by Associated First National Pictures] as Trilby (1923) starring Arthur Edmund Carewe as "Svengali"). Other filmed versions: A short, Trilby and Little Billee (1896) was produced by The American Mutoscope Company acknowledging George L. Du Maurier. _Ella Lola, a la Trilby (1898)_ was produced by Edison Manufacturing Company in which dancer Ella Lola dances a routine based on the famous character of "Trilby", a short, The Adventures of Pimple: Trilby (1914) was produced in the UK by Folly Films [distributed by Phoenix Film Agency] that featured the same characters as the play, acknowledging George L. Du Maurier, but no playwright source credit was given.
- (1917) Stage Play: The Inner Man. Written by Abraham S. Schomer. Lyric Theatre (moved to the Cort Theatre on 3 Sep 1917- close): 13 Aug 1917- unknown (48 performances). Cast: William Balfour, Harry Davenport (as "Hon. Wm. Elvin"), Fred Esmelton, Maude Hanaford, Grace Henderson, Julie Herne, 'Wilton Lackaye" (as "Dick Bolger"), Thomas A. Magrane, Albert Prisco, George Rand, Lillian Rith, Ray L. Royce, Antonio Salerno, Charles A. Stevenson, Charles White. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1918) Stage Play: The Awakening (Revival). Written by Ruth Sawyer. Criterion Theatre: 1 Oct 1918- Oct 1918 (closing date unknown/29 performances). Cast: Edwin Beryl, Howard Boulden, Oscar G. Briggs, Laura Burt, Luray Butler, Charles Eaton, Bennett Kilpatrick, Theodore Kosloff, Wilton Lackaye, G.R. Post, Harry Sothern, Khyva St. Albans, Gilda Varesi Archibald, Frederick Walter, Henry B. Walthall, Leonard Willey. Produced by Tamar and Sabinoff Co. Inc.
- (1919) Stage Play: A Good Bad Woman. Written by William Anthony McGuire. Directed by Richard Bennett. Harris Theatre: 8 Apr 1919- May 1919 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: Robert Edeson, Margaret Illington, Katherine Kaelred, Wilton Lackaye, Amy Ongley, Richard Tabor, Hazel Turney. Produced by Harry Frazee.
- (1919) Stage Play: Palmy Days. Comedy/drama. Written by Augustus Thomas. Playhouse Theatre: 27 Oct 1919- Dec 1919 (closing date unknown/50 performances). Cast: Eugenie Campbell, Lillian Dix (as "Mrs. Curley"), Edward J. Guhl, Mattie Keene, Wilton Lackaye (as "Kaintuck"), George Le Guere, Alexis M. Polianov, Grace Reals, John Robb, Emmett Shackelford, Olaf Skavlan, Harry Southard (as "Bud Farrell"), George E. Spaulding, Genevieve Tobin (as "The Cricket"), Thomas Walsh, Edgar M. Wolley. Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1921) Stage Play: Trilby (Revival). Written by George L. Du Maurier. National Theatre: 23 Dec 1921- Jan 1922 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Joseph Allen, Violet Anderson, Frank Doane, Desmond Gallagher, Diana Gray, Ruth Harding, Geneva Harrison (as "Mimi"), I.B. Johnson, Harry Kittredge, Wilton Lackaye (as "Svengali"), Wilton Lackaye Jr. (as "Theodore de la Farce"), Rose Le Vere, Jeffreys Lewis, Edmund Lowe (as "William Bagot"), Ignacio Martinetti, Harry Mestayer (as "Gecko"), George Nash (as "Talbot Wynne/Taffy"), Carrie Radcliffe, Cyril Ring (as "Lorimer"), Charlotte Walker (as "Trilby O'Ferrall"), Laura Walters. Produced by Coöperative Players Inc. Note: Previously filmed by London Film Productions [UK distribution by Jury Films with no known US release] as Trilby (1914) [UK production], and by Equitable Motion Pictures Corporation [Distributed by World Film in original theatrical release, and released by Republic Distributing Corporation in 1920] as Trilby (1915) [starring Wilton Lackaye as "Svengali"], and by Richard Walton Tully Productions [distributed by Associated First National Pictures] as Trilby (1923) starring Arthur Edmund Carewe as "Svengali"). Other filmed versions: A short, Trilby and Little Billee (1896) was produced by The American Mutoscope Company acknowledging George L. Du Maurier. Ella Lola, a la Trilby (1898) was produced by Edison Manufacturing Company in which dancer Ella Lola dances a routine based on the famous character of "Trilby", a short, The Adventures of Pimple: Trilby (1914) was produced in the UK by Folly Films [distributed by Phoenix Film Agency] that featured the same characters as the play, acknowledging George L. Du Maurier, but no playwright source credit was given.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Goldfish. Comedy. Book adapted by Gladys Unger. Based on the French of M. Armont and Mr. Gerbidon. Directed by Stuart Walker. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 17 Apr 1922- Jun 1922 (closing date unknown/70 performances). Cast: Dennis Cleughs, John De Silva, Rhy Derby, Robert T. Haines, Ben Hendricks, Wilton Lackaye (as "Count Stanislaus Nevski"), Lucille La Verne, Wilfred Lytell, Norma Mitchell, Marjorie Rambeau (as "Jenny"), John Robb. Produced by J.J. Shubert and Lee Shubert.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Monster. Drama. Written by Crane Wilbur. Directed by Lawrence Marston. 39th Street Theatre: 9 Aug 1922- Nov 1922 (closing date unknown/101 performances). Cast: Walter James, Wilton Lackaye, Frank McCormack, McKay Morris, Marguerite Risser, Charles Wray Wallace. Produced by Joseph M. Gaites. Note: Filmed as The Monster (1925).
- (1924) Stage Play: High Stakes. Melodrama. Written by Willard Mack. Hudson Theatre: 9 Sep 1924- Dec 1924 (closing date unknown/120 performances). Cast: Phoebe Foster, Wilton Lackaye (as "Richard Lennon"), Sue MacManamy, Lowell Sherman (as "Joe Lennon"), Robert Vivian (as "Murray"), Fleming Ward (as "Louis de Salde"). Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1925) Stage Play: Spring Fever. Comedy. Written by Vincent Lawrence. Directed by Bertram Harrison. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 3 Aug 1925- Sep 1925 (closing date unknown/56 performances). Cast: Arthur H. Allen, Kathryn Brown, Helen Carrington, Marion Coakley, J. Alden Cooke, John T. Dwyer (as "Harry Ayer"), Edward Emerson (as "Bell-Boy"), Agatha Frederic, Chandler Houghton (as "James Standish"), Leo Kennedy, Joseph Kilgour (as "David Waters"), Wilton Lackaye (as "Frank Hoyt"), Francetta Mallory, Charles Penman, James Rennie (as "Jack Kelly"), Emmet Ryan (as "Charles Williams"), Stewart Seymore, June Starr, Fred Sutton (as "A Stranger"), Lou Turner, Harry Whittemore. Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1925) Stage Play: Oh Mama. Comedy/farce. Written by Louis Verneuil. Book adapted by Harry Wagstaff Gribble and Wilton Lackaye. Playhouse Theatre: 19 Aug 1925- Oct 1925 (closing date unknown/70 performances). Cast: Alice Brady (as "Jacqueline La Garde"), Jean Burton, John Cromwell (as "Julien Rhenal"), Mildred Florence, William Leith (as "Adolph"), Kenneth MacKenna (as "Georges La Garde"), Edwin Nicander, Paul Porcasi (as "Maitre de Hotel"), Edythe Shyne.
- (1925) Stage Play: Appearances. Comedy/drama. Written by Garland Anderson. Directed by John Hayden. Frolic Theatre: 13 Oct 1925- Nov 1925 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Daisy Atherton, Hazele Burgess, James Cherry (as "Hiram Mathews"), William Davidge, Louis Frohoff, Doe Doe Green, Frank Hatch, Edwin Hodge, Edward Keane, Wilton Lackaye (as "A.A. Andrews"), Evelyn Mason, Leatta Miller, Lionel Monagas (as "Carl Sanderson"), Clifton Self, Joseph Sweeney (as "Jack Wilson"), Robert Toms, Mildred Wall (as "Elsie Benton"). Produced by Lester W. Sager.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Monkey Talks. Written by René Fauchois. Directed by Frank Reicher. Sam H. Harris Theatre: 28 Dec 1925- Mar 1926 (closing date unknown/98 performances). Cast: Luther Adler (as "Zizi"), Martha-Bryan Allen, Frank G. Bond, Tommy Colton, Sadonia Corelli, Arthur Engel, Rose Kean, Wilton Lackaye (as "Lorenzo"), Jacques Lerner, Philip Merivale (as "Sam Wick"), Harry Mestayer, Mike Morris, Nathan Shindell, Mark Smith, Eugene Weber, Gerard Willshire, Ethel Wilson. Produced by Archibald Selwyn.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Two Orphans. Drama. Written by 'Adolphe D'Ennery' and 'Eugene Cormonx'. Translated by 'N. Hart Jackson'. Directed by William A. Brady. Cosmopolitan Theatre: 5 Apr 1926- May 1926 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Fay Bainter (as "Louise"), Charles D. Brown, Hugh Buckler (as "Marquis De Presles"), Henrietta Crosman (as "Countess De Linieres"), Henry Cunningham, Ann Delafield, Henry E. Dixey, Marie DuChette, Carolyn Ferriday, Mrs. J.R. Hurley, Wilton Lackaye (as "Count de Linieres"), Wilton Lackaye Jr. (as "Footman"), Robert Loraine, James Morrison, Florence Nash, Mary Nash, Clement O'Loghlen, Joseph Perkins, Franklin Rich, May Robson (as "La Frochard"), José Ruben (as "Pierre Frochard"), William Seymour, Richard Stuart, Bess Tuttle, Robert Warwick (as "Jacques Frochard"), Mrs. Thomas Whiffen. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert. Produced in association with William A. Brady and Dwight Wiman.
- (1927) Stage Play: Trelawny of the 'Wells.' Comedy (revival). Written by Arthur Wing Pinero. Directed by George C. Tyler. New Amsterdam Theatre: 31 Jan 1927- Mar 1927 (closing date unknown/56 performances). Cast: Henrietta Crosman (as "Mrs. Telfer"), Lawrence D'Orsay, Eric Dressler, John Drew, J.F. Foster, Helen Gahagan, O.P. Heggie, Frieda Inescort, John E. Kellerd, J.M. Kerrigan, Otto Kruger, 'Wilton Lackaye" (as "James Telfer"), Robert Lansing, Pauline Lord, Rollo Peters, Gerald Rogers, Effie Shannon, Matthew Smith Jr., Mrs. Thomas Whiffen, Peggy Whiffen, Estelle Winwood. Produced by George C. Tyler.
- (1929) Stage Play: Sweet Land of Liberty. Melodrama. Written and Directed by Philip Dunning. Knickerbocker Theatre: 23 Sep 1929- Sep 1929 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: George Barbier (as "Charlie Hunter"), Dorothy Blackburn (as "Mrs. Molly Richards"), Thomas Coffin Cooke (as "Muserve"), Joseph Crehan (as "Otis"), Anne Forrest (as "Flossie Brendell"), Robert Harrison (as "Newton"), J.J. Hyland (as "Patrolman Russ"), James Keane (as "Nevens"), Wilton Lackaye (as "War Veteran"), Hermann Lieb (as "Franklin Baker"), Robert Lynn (as "Buckley"), Elsa Ryan (as "Mrs. Hunter"), John Sharkey (as "Joseph J. Davis"), Bobbie Steele (as "Little Jackie"), Ralph Theodore (as "Jack Richards"), Joseph Woodburn (as "Dan"). Produced by Abraham L. Erlanger and George C. Tyler.
- (1929) Stage Play: Ladies of the Jury. Comedy. Written by Fred Ballard. Directed by Harrison Grey Fiske. Erlanger's Theatre: 21 Oct 1929- Jan 1930 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Vanda Curci, George Farren, Mrs. Fiske, Germaine Giroux, Claire Grenville, Dudley Hawley, Marie Hunt, Vincent James, Elsie Keene, Walter Kinsella (as "Steve Bromm"), Wilton Lackaye (as "Judge Fish"), Sardis Lawrence, William Lorenz, Hallie Manning, June Mullin, Virginia Murray, Eunice Osborne, Edward Powell, Al Roberts, J.H. Stoddart, George Tawde (as "Andrew MacKaig"), C.W. Van Voorhis. Produced by Abraham L. Erlanger and George C. Tyler.
- (1930) Stage Play: Love, Honor and Betray. Drama. Written by Fanny Hatton and Frederic Hatton. Adapted from the French of Andre Antoine. Directed by Donn Mullally. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 12 Mar 1930- Apr 1930 (closing date unknown/45 performances). Cast: Alice Brady (as "The Woman"), George Brent (as "The Chauffeur") [only Broadway role], Glenda Farrell (as "The Young Girl"), Clark Gable (as "The Lover") [final Broadway role), Wilton Lackaye (as "The Doctor") [final Broadway role], Mark Smith (as "The Husband"), Robert Williams (as "The Young Man"). Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1887) Stage Play: Paul Kauvar. Drama. Written by Steele MacKaye. Incidental musical selected and arranged by Edgar Stillman Kelley. Directed by Julian Mitchell. Standard Theatre: 23 Dec 1887- unknown (unknown performances).
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