- (1911 - 1931) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1911) Stage Play: Maggie Pepper. Comedy. Written by Charles Klein. Harris Theatre: 31 Aug 1911- Jan 1912 (closing date unknown/147 performances). Cast: Rose Stahl (as "Maggie Pepper"), Rachel Arliss (as "Miss Morton"), Herbert Ayling (as "Murchison"), J.H. Benrimo [credited as J. Harry Benrimo] (as "Jim Darkin"), Helen Dahl (as "Imogene Kelly"), Laurence Eddinger (as "Detective Bailey"), Jeanette Horton (as "Ethel Hargen"), Marie Hudson (as "Johanna"), W.J. Kline (as "Johnson"), Lee Kohlmar (as "Jake Rothchild"), Eleanor Lawson (as "Mrs. Thatcher"), Agnes Marc (as "Hattie Murphy"), Beatrice Prentice (as "Zaza"), Stuart Robson (as "Elevator Boy"), Beverly Sitgreaves (as "Ada Darkin"), Grant Stewart (as "Mr. Hargen"), Frederick Truesdell (as "Joe Holbrook").
- (1913) Stage Play: Potash and Perlmutter. Written by Montague Glass [earliest Broadway credit] and Charles Klein. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 16 Aug 1913- Sep 1915 (closing date unknown/441 performances). Cast: Barney Bernard (as "Abe Potash"), Alexander Carr (as "Mawruss Perlmutter"), Marguerite Anderson (as "Irma"), Fred Carter, Leo Donnelly, Louise Dresser (as "Ruth Snyder"), Grace Fielding, Edward Gillespie, Stanley Jessup, Joseph Kilgour (as "Feldman"), Lee Kohlmar, Dorothy Landers, Gertrude Millington, Albert Parker (as "Boris Andrieff") [final Broadway role], Arthur J. Pickens, Russell Pincus, Dore Rogers. Produced by A.H. Woods. Notes: (1) One of the biggest hits on Broadway prior to WWI (2) Filmed by Goldwyn Pictures Corp. [distributed by Associated First National Pictures] as Potash and Perlmutter (1923).
- (1915) Stage Play: Abe and Mawruss. Written by Roi Cooper Megrue and Montague Glass. Directed by Roi Cooper Megrue. Lyric Theatre: 21 Oct 1915- Apr 1916. Cast: Corinne Barker, Louise Dresser, Claiborne Foster, James W. Spottswood, Amy Summers, Julius Tannen, Lee Kohlmar. Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1922) Stage Play: Partners Again. Comedy.
- (1925) Stage Play: Tangletoes.
- (1925) Stage Play: June Days. Musical comedy.
- (1927) Stage Play: Sam Abramovitch.
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