- (1901 - 1935) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (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.
- (1908) Stage Play: Via Wireless. Melodrama. Written by Paul Armstrong and Winchell Smith. Liberty Theatre: 2 Nov 1908- Jan 1909 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Edwin Arden (as "Lieutanant Sommers, U.S.N."), Arthur Ellsworth, Maude Granger, William B. Mack, Vera McCord (as "Frances Durant"), Francis D. McGinn, Robert McWade, Gorgie Drew Mendum, John Miltern (as "Edward Pinkney"), Frank Monroe, Louis Morrell, Edgar Robbins, William Stone, Walter Thomas, Richard E. Webster, Ethel Wright. Produced by Frederic Thompson.
- (1913) Stage Play: The Girl and the Pennant. Written by Rida Johnson Young and Christy Mathewson [only Broadway credit]. Lyric Theatre: 23 Oct 1913- Nov 1913 (closing date unknown/20 performances). Cast: William Courtenay (as "Copley Reeves"), Florence Reed (as "Mona Fitzgerald"), Robert Brott, George W. Day, Edgar Hill, Jack Johnson, T. Morse Koupal, Tully Marshall, Ralph Morgan, Louis Morrell, Walter A. Mulvahill, Wallace Owen, James Reed, William Roselle, Harry Southard [credited as Harry D. Southard], Calvin Thomas, Malcolm Williams. Produced by Selwyn & Co.
- (1914) Stage Play: Innocent. Written by George Broadhurst. Directed by Edward Elsner and George Broadhurst. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 9 Sep 1914- Dec 1914 (closing date unknown/109 performances). Cast: Allen Atwell, Burt Castle, Claire Coste, Harold De Becker, Leo De Valery, Pauline Frederick, Kenneth Hunter, Hardee Kirkland, Julian L'Estrange, Arthur Lewis, John Miltern, Louis Morrell, George Probert, George Seybolt. Produced by A.H. Woods. Note: Filmed as Innocent (1918).
- (1919) Stage Play: The Magic Melody. Musical romance.
- (1923) Stage Play: Mary Jane McKane. Musical comedy.
- (1924) Stage Play: The Man in Evening Clothes. Comedy. Written by André Picard and Yves Mirandeis. Translated by Ruth Chatterton. Henry Miller's Theatre: 5 Dec 1924- Dec 1924 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: Joseph Bingham (as "A Man Patron"), Elmer Brown (as "Louis"), P.L. Carpenter (as "A Gentleman"), Irene Freeman (as "Coat Girl"), Marjorie Gateson (as "Gaby Cordier"), Alden Gay (as "A Lady"), Norma Havey (as "Cashier"), Valerie Jones (as "Margot"), Hubbard Kirkpatrick (as "Aristede/Orchestra Leader"), Irma Kornelia (as "Blanche"), Louis La Bey (as "First Waiter/Barkeeper"), William Lorenze (as "Maitre d'hôtel"), Reginald Mason (as "D'Allouville"), Kathryn Meredith (as "A Lady Patron"), Henry Miller (as "Count De Lussange"), L'Estrange Millman (as "Monjardin"), Carlotta Monterey (as "Germaine De Lussange"), Louis Morrell (as "Soyer"), Leonard Mudie (as "Guilde"), Grant Stewart (as "Buffetaute"), Lark Taylor (as "Secretary"), Ann Winston (as "Helene"), Marjorie Wood (as "Ninnette"). Produced by Henry Miller. Produced by arrangement with David Belasco and Charles B. Cochran.
- (1928) Stage Play: Whoopee! Musical comedy. Material adaption by William Anthony McGuire. Based on "The Nervous Wreck" by Owen Davis. Music by Walter Donaldson. Lyrics by Gus Kahn. Musical Director: Gustave Salzer. Dialogue directed by William Anthony McGuire. Dances and Ensembles Staged by Seymour Felix. Directed by Seymour Felix. New Amsterdam Theatre: 4 Dec 1928- 23 Nov 1929 (407 performances). Cast included: Eddie Cantor (as "Henry Williams"), Jean Ackerman, Josephine Adair, Sylvia Adam, Colette Ayers, Agnes Ayres, Mabel Baade, Peggy Bancroft, Elsie Behrens, Olive Brady, Ann Brown, Dorothy Brown, Sam Bunin, Katherine Burke, Spencer Charters, Chief Caupolican, Frank Colletti, Marie Conway, Mary Coyle, Myrna Darby, Ruth Downey, Betty Dumbris, Madeline Dunbar, Buddy Ebsen, Bill Erickson, Ruth Etting, Harold Ettos, Muriel Flood, Hazel Forbes, Bob Forte, Tamara Geva, Jack Gifford, Gladys Glad, Betty Gray, Muriel Gray, Paul Gregory, Edouard Grobe, Francis Guinan, Albert Hackett (as "Chester Underwood"), Vivian Hall, James P. Houston, Meredith Howard, Don Hudson, Tom Hughes, Yvonne Hughes, Elenor Hunt, George Huntington, Jack James, Mary Jane, Louise Joyce, Lillian Knight, David Labris, Wynne Lark, Helen Lehigh, Tom Leventhal, Jack Lewis, Olga Loft, Elaine Mann, Chas. Mayon, Freda Mierse, Frieda Mierse, Gwendolyn Milne, Joe Minitello, Louis Morrell, Catherine Moylan, Edward Nadeau, Pat O'Day, Agnes O'Laughlin, Lillian Ostrum, Connie Owens, Dorothy Paterson, Dorothy Patterson, Charles Pettinger, Will H. Philbrick, Valerie Raemier, Pauline Ray, Bob Rice, Rita Riecker, Marion Roberts, Waldo Roberts, Jerry Rogers, Irving Ross, Jack Rutherford, Jack Shaw, Ethel Shutta, Adele Smith, Frances Upton, Helen Walsh, Matt Webster, Bobbe Weeks, Bobbie Wellsley, Gil White. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1933) Stage Play: The Ghost Writer. Written by Martin Mooney. Scenic Design by Cirker & Robbins. Directed by Jo Graham. Theatre Masque: 19 Jun 1933- Jul 1933 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Mary Arden (as "Kitty"), Anthony Blair (as "Duffy"), Peggy Conklin (as "Peggy Winston"), Griffin Crafts (as "Jay Barnes"), Lynn Eswood (as "Betty"), Tom Fadden (as "Mike"), William Frawley (as "Joe Gordon") [final Broadway role], Ara Gerald (as "Claire Castell"), Madeline Grey (as "Mrs. Winston"), Frederick Lewis (as "A.H. McGee"), Louis Morrell (as "Edwin Preece"), Robert Pitkin (as "Dan Clayton"), Hal Skelly (as "Bill Harkins"), George Sweet (as "Jimmie Higgins"), Arthur J. Wood (as "Burke"), Clare Woodbury (as "Mrs. Klein"). Produced by F. Richard Hopkins and Walter Heyer.
- (1934) Stage Play: All the King's Horses. Musical/romantic comedy. Book by Frederik Herendeen. Lyrics by Frederik Herendeen. Based on the play "Carlo Rocco" by Lawrence Clarke and Max Giersberg. Music by Edward A. Horan. Musical Director: Oscar Bradley. Music orchestrated by Robert Russell Bennett and Hans Spialek. Choreographed by Theodore Adolphus. Directed by José Ruben. Shubert Theatre (moved to The Imperial Theatre from 19 Feb 1934 to close): 30 Jan 1934- 12 May 1934 (120 performances). Cast: Doris Anderson, Frank Augustyn, Virginia Davies, Winnie Duncan, Jack Edwards, Harold Freeman, Frank Greene, Russell Hicks (as "Count Ergard Regitard Batthy"), Gertrude Hogan, Einar Holt, Manart Kippen (as "A Patron"), Dorothy Koster, Blanche Lytell, Nancy McCord, Howard Morgan, Louis Morrell, Robert O'Conner, Joan Orner, Arthur F. Otto, Naida Pahl, Doris Patston, Guy Robertson, Leonard Rogall, Etna Ross, Helen Ryan, Betty Starbuck, June Tempest, Frances Thress, Andrew Tombes, Mora Vordkin, Edna West. Produced by Harry L. Cort and Charles H. Abramson. Produced by arrangement with E. Steuart-Tavant. Note: Produced on film as All the King's Horses (1935) by Paramount as a Carl Brisson vehicle.
- (1935) Stage Play: Potash and Perlmutter. Comedy (revival). Written by Montague Glass and Charles Klein. Directed by Robert Leonard. Park Theatre: 5 Apr 1935- Apr 1935 (closing date unknown/19 performances). Cast: Frank Allworth (as "Mozart Rabiner"), Willard Dashiell (as "Senator Murphy"), Paula Denning (as "Mozart Rabiner"), Hazel Drury (as "Katie"), Waldo Edwards (as "Boris Andrieff"), Harry Eshback (as "Farrell"), Nancy Evans (as "Miss Cohen"), Walter Fenner (as "Henry D. Feldman"), Betty Hanna (as "Ruth Goldman"), Ethel Harris (as "Miss Nelson"), Frank Jaquet (as "Expressman"), Sylvia Leigh (as "Irma Potash"), Robert Leonard (as "Mawruss Perlmutter"), Louis Morrell (as "A Gentleman") [final Broadway role], Arthur S. Ross (as "Abe Potash"), Sam Sidman (as "Steuerman"), Beau Tilden [credited as Milano Tilden] (as "Irma Potash"), Bertha Walden (as "Mrs. Potash"), Gaile Watson (as "Miss Levin"), Joseph K. Watson (as "Marks Pasinsky"). Produced by United Players Inc.
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