- (1915) Stage: Appeared (as "Israel Hands") in "Treasure Island" on Broadway. Directed by Charles Hopkins and Edward Emery. Punch and Judy Theatre: 1 Dec 1915-Apr 1916 (205 performances).
- (1918) Stage: Appeared in "The Unknown Purple" on Broadway. Written by Roland West (also producer) and Carlyle Moore. Lyric Theatre: 14 Sep 1918-May 1919 (closing date unknown/273 performances). Cast: Richard Bennett, Curtis Benton, Earle Brown, E.L. Duane, Lorraine Frost, Marion Kerby [credited as Marion Kerby], Arthur Le Vien, Helen MacKellar, Frank McCormack, Edward Van Sloan. NOTE: One of the biggest hits of WWI-era Broadway.
- (1921) Stage: Appeared (as "Sacques") in "Marie Antoinette" on Broadway. Drama (revival). Written by Edymar. Directed by Grace George (also in cast as "Maria Antoinette") and John Cromwell (also in cast as "Maillard"). Playhouse Theatre: 22 Nov 1921-Nov 1921 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Roy Adams (as "Swiss Guard"), Belle Daube (credited as Harda Daube; as "Madame de Genlis"), Pedro de Cordoba (as "Count Axel Fersen"), Floria de Martimprey (as "Tirewoman"), Henri de Statera (as "Swiss Guard"), Paul Doucet (credited as H. Paul Doucet; as "Leonard"), Agnes Dunphy (as "De Beauvert"), Jean Eastman (as "Tirewoman"), Florence Edney (as "Countess de Noailles"), Craig Ellis (as "Toulan"), Fred Eric (as "Louis XVI, King of France"), Jack Grattan (as "Louis, Duke of Normandy, the Dauphin"), Austin O. Huhn (as "Augeard"), Rexford Kendrick (as "Pinnet"), Victor La Salle (as "Usher"), Jane Page (as "Tirewoman"), H.W. Rathke (as "Usher"), Walter Ringham (as "Joseph II, Emperor of Austria"), Lorna Valare (as "Marie Therese, the Princess Royal"), Bettie Wales (as "Princess de Lamballe"), Basil West (as "Caspierre"), Douglas Wood (as "Duc d'Orleans"), Frances Young (as "Madame Mouchy").
- (1921) Stage: Appeared (as "Grouchy, Cowboy on Carsten's Ranch") in "The Squaw Man" on Broadway. Drama (revival). Written by Edwin Milton Royle. Directed by William Faversham (also in cast as "Capt. James Wynnegate, Cousin of Henry Wynnegate, Afterwards Known as Kit Carson"). Astor Theatre: 26 Dec 1921-Feb 1922 (closing date unknown/50 performances). Cast: Elizabeth Bellairs (as "Lady Mabel Wynnegate, Sister of Henry Wynnegate"), Chauncey Causland (as "McSorley, Engineer of the Overland Limited"), H. Cooper Cliffe (as "Malcolm Petrie, Solicitor of Henry Wynnegate"), Murray Darcy (as "Parker, Conductor of the Overland Limited"), J. Malcolm Dunn (as "Henry Wynnegate, Earl of Kerhill"), Bernard Durkin (as "Little Hal, Nat-U-Ritch's Son"), Herbert Farjeon (as "Baco White"), William Frederic (as "Bud Hardy, County Sheriff"), Harry Hanlon (as "Pete, A Cowboy"), Winifred Harris (as "Lady Elizabeth Wynnegate, Mother of Henry Wynnegate"), Riley Hatch (as "Tab-Y-Wana, Peach Chief of the Utes"), William T. Hays (as "Mr. Hiram Doolittle"), Frank Hollins (as "Sir John Applegate, Diana's Cousin"), Julia Hoyt (as "Diana Wynnegate, Countess of Kerhill"), Curley Judge (as "Punk, A Chinaman"), Emily Lorraine (as "Mrs. Hiram Doolittle"), Frank Lyon (as "Parson"), Bertram A. Marburgh (as "Andy, Cowboy on Carston's Ranch"), Burr McIntosh (as "Big Bill, Foreman of Carston's Ranch"), Willard Robertson (as "Cash Hawkins"), Gerald Rogers (as "Rev. Belachazar Chiswick"), Josephine Royle (as "Nat-U-Ritch, Daughter of Tab-Y-Wana"), George Schaeffer (as "Bates, Butler of Henry Wynnegate"), Emmett Shackelford (as "Shorty, Cowboy on Carston's Ranch"), Edmund Soraghan (as "Nick, Barkeeper of "The Long Horn Saloon"), Ralph Sumpter (as "Lieut. Crosby"), Raymond Van Rensselaer (as "Lieut. Markwell"). Produced by Lee Shubert.
- (1922) Stage: Appeared (as "James Grupton Sr.") in "Makers of Light" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Frederick Lansing Day. Neighborhood Playhouse: 23 May 1922-Jun 1922 (closing date unknown/21 performances). Cast: Ace Angline (as "Michael"), Elsie Brown (as "Bertha"), Albert Carroll (as "Jimmy Grupton"), Eleanor Carroll (as "Lucy"), Eva Condon (as "Mrs. Nellis"), Edwin H. Kasper (as "Peters"), Frederick Lloyd (as "John McCleary"), Lily Lubell (as "Ruth"), Ian Maclaren (as "David Nellis"), Junius Matthews (as "Willis Button"), John McGovern (as "Tom"), Esther Mitchell (as "Agnes Chatley"), Adrienne Morrison (as "Sally Morton"), John Francis Roche (as "Joseph Prine"), Anne Schmidt (as "Alice"), Augustin Sweeny (as "Charlie"), Paula Trueman (as "Pearl"), Polaire Weissmann (as "Florence").
- (1922) Stage: Appeared (as "Boule") in "The Red Poppy" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by André Picard and Francis Carco. Directed by Iden Payne. Greenwich Village Theatre: 20 Dec 1922-Dec 1922 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Produced by Henry Baron.
- (1923) Stage: Appeared (as "The Rake") in "The Failures" on Broadway. Drama. Garrick Theatre: 19 Nov 1923-Jan 1924 (closing date unknown/40 performances).
- (1926) Stage: Appeared (as "Capt. Sheamus Blagdon") in "Slaves All" on Broadway. Written by Edward Percy. Directed by Lumsden Hare. Bijou Theatre: 6 Dec 1926-Dec 1926 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott (as "Julia Rigordan"), Vera Allen (as "Ann Rigordan"), Lionel Atwill (as "John Rigordan"), Stanley Drewitt (as "Squitch"), Halliwell Hobbes (as "Rev. Matthew Holdsworth"), Nancie Halliwell Hobbes (as "Charlotte Holdsworth"), Marguerite Mosier (as "Jenny Venn"), Thomas Wigney Percyval (as "Dr. Felix Burn"), Reginald Sheffield (as "George Squitch"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1924) Stage: Appeared in "The Passing Show of 1924" on Broadway. Musical revue. Directed by James C. Huffman. Winter Garden Theatre: 3 Sep 1924-22 Nov 1924 (106 performances).
- (1925) Stage: Appeared in "Artists and Models" on Broadway. Musical revue. Music by Al Goodman, J. Fred Coots, Maurice Ruebens [credited as Maurice Rubens] and Sigmund Romberg. Book by Harold Atteridge and Harry Wagstaff Gribble. Lyrics by Clifford Grey. Music orchestrated by Emil Gerstenberger. Musical Director: Oscar Bradley. Choreographed by Jack Haskell and Gertrude Hoffman [credited as Gertrude Hoffmann]. Scenic Design by Watson Barratt. Costume Design by Erté and George Barbier. Directed by J.J. Shubert and Alexander Leftwich. Winter Garden Theatre: 24 Jun 1925-7 May 1926 (416 performances). Cast: May Alexander, Al Allison, Yvonne Bacon, Phil Baker, Leon Barte, Leon Bartels, Louise Blackburn, Jay Brennan, Murray Browne, Dorothy Burnell, Joseph Caits, Louis Caits, Grace Cantrell, Thelma Carlton, Jane Carroll, Marion Case, Gloria Christy, Teddy Claire, Morine Clarke, Herbert Corthell, Arthur Craig, Eileen Culshaw, Marguerite Dalby, Claire de Figaniere, Patricia DeLong, Ferral Dewees, Billy De Wolfe, Jane Dobbin, Mildred Douglas, Dorothy Drum, Pudgie Duker, Dottie Ellis, Jean English, Mildred Espy, Alberta Faust, Miriam Fine, Harriet Fowler, Helene Frederic, Catherine Gallimore, Janice Glenn, Gladys Granzow, Sarah Granzow, Toots Gregory, Florence Gunther, Joe Higgins, Shari Hockman, Llora Hoffman, Margie Hoffman, Gertrude Hoffman Girls, Dorothy Hordern, Sunshine Jarrman, Andrew Joachim, May Judels, Kathleen Karr, Thelma Kay, John Kenny, Mary Kissell, Emma Kleigge, Florence Kolinsky, Ada Landis, Betty Lawrence, Alice MacDonald, Aline MacMahon, Carol Maybury, Lulu McConnell, Billy McKay, Margaret McKay, Margaret Merle, Margie Minor, Maxine Morton, Helen Murray, Evelyn Nelson, Jack Oakie [final Broadway role], Gene Owens, Agatha Phillips, Frank Phillips, Florence Quinn, Stanley Rogers, George Rosener, Marion Ross, Agnes Schroeder, Sid Silvers, Margaret Sloan, Charlotte Suddath, Jacquelin Surprise, Beatrice Swanson, Penn Thornton, Peggy Timmons, Eric Titus, Katrina Trask, Billy B. Van, Dorothy Van Heft, Lew Walker, June Wall, Gene Wallin, Dorothy Weber, Eleanor Willems, Frances Willems, Minerva Wilson, Walter Woolf King [credited as Walter Woolf], Ruth Zackey. Replacement actor: Al Jolson [from 21 Mar 1926- ?]. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1926) Stage: Appeared (as "Smug") in "The Pearl of Great Price" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Robert McLaughlin. Directed by James C. Huffman. Century Theatre: 1 Nov 1926-Nov 1926 (closing date unknown/32 performances).
- (1923) Stage: Apperared (as "The Duke de la Tremouille") in "Saint Joan" on Broadway. Drama. Written by George Bernard Shaw. Garrick Theatre: 28 Dec 1923-May 1924 (closing date unknown/195 performances). Cast: Seth Baldwin, Albert Bruning, Walter Butterfield, Morris Carnovsky, Maurice Colbourne (as "Dunois, The Bastard of Orleans"), Ernest Cossart, William M. Griffith, Philip Leigh, Winifred Lenihan, Joseph McCaulay, Ian Maclaren, Jo Mielziner (as "Court Page"), James Norris, Elizabeth Pearre, Albert Perry, Henry Travers, Frank Tweed, A.H. Van Buren (as "The Earl of Warwick"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1927) Stage: Appeared in "The Brothers Karamazov" on Broadway. Directed by Philip Moeller. Guild Theatre: 3 Jan 1927-Feb 1927 (closing date unknown/56 performances). Cast: William Boren, Charles Carden, Morris Carnovsky, Elizabeth Church, Phyllis Connard (as "Arina"), Charles Courtneidge, Cheryl Crawford (as "Ensemble"), John Davis, Dudley Digges, Clare Eames, Dorothy Fletcher, Lynn Fontanne, George Gaul, Adele Halliday, Felix Jacoves (as "Ensemble"), Philip Leigh, Philip Loeb, Herman Lovejoy, Leigh Lovel, Alfred Lunt, Thomas Meegan, Hugh Rennie, Edward G. Robinson (as "Smerdiakow"), Bernard Savage, Robert Schnitzer, Henry Travers (as "Grigori Vassilliev"), Max Weiser, Kitty Wilson. Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1927) Stage: Appeared (as "Cy Treadwell") in "Weather Clear--Track Fast" on Broadway. Written / directed / produced by Willard Mack. Hudson Theatre: 18 Oct 1927-Dec 1927 (closing date unknown/63 performances). Cast: Jim Bubbles (as "Baltimore Sleeper"), Joe Buck (as "Chicken Man"), William Courtleigh (as "Silent Johnson"), Richard Cubitt (as "Monte Gilmay"), Florence Earle (as "Mrs. Upshaw"), Charles Hill (as "Two-Time Kelly"), Joe Laurie (as "Joe McGinn"), Frank Lyon (as "Dick Rotherrock"), Walda Mansfield (as "Fern Wilson"), Clark Marshall (as "Johnny Coreleson"), Janet McLeay (as "Mary Marlo"), Tommy Meade (as "Biddy Francis"), Joseph Sweeney (as "Alex Cerinac"), Gertrude Walker (as "Gladiola Jennings").
- (1928) Stage: Appeared (as "Landlord") in "Napoleon" on Broadway. Directed by Robert Milton and Frank Merlin. Empire Theatre: 8 Mar 1928-Mar 1928 (closing date unknown/11 performances).
- (1928) Stage: Wrote "Brothers, a Melodrama in Prologue and Three Acts", produced on Broadway. Directed by Arthur Hurley. 48th Street Theatre: 25 Dec 1928-Aug 1929 (closing date unknown/255 performances). Produced by John Henry Mears. NOTE: Filmed as Brothers (1930).
- (1929) Stage: Appeared in (as "Jeff") / wrote / directed "The Come-On Man" on Broadway. 49th Street Theatre: 22 Apr 1929-May 1929 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Herbert Ashton Jr. (as "Jimmie McGuire"), Donald Campbell (as "Rodney Stewart"), Teresa Dale (as "Maria Stewart"; Broadway debut), Leona Hollister (as "Mrs. Schaeffer"), Robert W. Lawrence (as "Stevens"), George MacQuarrie (as "William Strange"), Jane Marbury (as "Marguerite Strange"), Antony Stanford (as "Rodney Stewart Jr."), Mary Wall (as "Betty Strange"), Harold Webster (as "Jack Harold"). Produced by Roy Walling.
- (1929) Stage: Appearerd (as "Paul Harmon") in "Mountain Fury" on Broadway. Drama. Written by David Davidson Jr. Directed by E.J. Blunkall. President Theatre: 25 Sep 1929-Oct 1929 (closing date unknown/13 performances).
- (1931) Stage: Appeared (as "Edgar Count Muller") in "Enemy Within" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Will Piper and Lois Howell. Directed / produced by Roy Walling. Hudson Theatre: 5 Oct 1931-Oct 1931 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast included: Walter Greaza, George MacQuarrie.
- (1932) Stage: Appeared (as "Edward Gray") in "Hired Husband" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by August L. Stern. Directed by Alfred White. Bijou Theatre: 3 Jun 1932-Jun 1932 (closing date unknown/19 performances). Cast: Flavia Arcaro, Terry Carroll, Waldo Edwards, Paul Everton, Isidore Marcil. Produced by Robert Sterling.
- (1933) Stage: Wrote "The Locked Room", produced on Broadway (final Broadway credit5). Melodrama. Directed by William B. Friedlander. Ambassador Theatre: 25 Dec 1933-Jan 1934 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Valerie Bergere, Morton Flamm, Walter Gilbert, Robert Gleckler (as "Ryan"), Jonathan Hole (as "John Burgess Jr."), Lawrence Keating (as "Charles Burgess"; Broadway debut), Harold Kennedy, Jane Kim, Harmon MacGregor, Sam J. Park, Ruth Sheppard, Nena Sinclair, Robert Sloane (as "Ralph Burgess"). Produced by M.S. Schlesinger and William B. Friedlander.
- (1930) Stage: Wrote "Brothers, a Melodrama in Prologue and Three Acts", produced on Broadway (revival).
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