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IMDbPro
Vincent Serrano in A Modern Monte Cristo (1917)

Other works

Vincent Serrano

Edit
  • (1900 - 1928) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
  • (1900) Stage Play: Arizona. Drama. Written by Augustus Thomas. Scenic Design by Walter Burridge and Charles H. Ritter. Herald Square Theatre: 10 Sep 1900- 14 Jan 1901 (140 performances). Cast: Sidney Ainsworth (as "Lt. Young"), Adora Andrews (as "Lena Kellar"), Louise Closser Hale [credited as Louise Closser] (as "Miss McCullagh") [Broadway debut), Mattie Earle (as "Mrs. Canby"), Stephen B. French (as "Sam Wong"), Malcolm Gunn (as "Lt. Hallack"), Walter Hale (as "Capt. Hodgman"), Edwin Holt (as "Col. Bonham"), Jane Kennark (as "Estrella Bonham"), George Morehead (as "Maj. Cochran"), Thomas Oberle (as "Sgt. Kellar"), George O'Donnell (as "Dr. Fenlon"), Theodore Roberts (as "Henry Canby"), Eleanor Robson Belmont[credited as Eleanor Robson] (as "Bonita Canby") [Broadway debut], Edgar Selwyn (as "Tony Mostano"), Vincent Serrano (as "Lt. Denton") [Broadway debut]. Produced by Kirke La Shelle and Fred R. Hamlin. Note: Filmed by All-Star Features as Arizona (1913), substantially rewritten as Arizona (1918) as a Douglas Fairbanks feature and by Columbia Pictures as Arizona (1931) as a John Wayne vehicle.
  • (1901) Stage Play: The Merchant of Venice. Comedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Knickerbocker Theatre: 24 May 1901- May 1901 (closing date unknown/3 performances). Cast: Macklyn Arbuckle (as "Antonio, a merchant of Venice"), Aubrey Boucicault (as "Bassanio, friend of Antonio"), William Courtleigh (as "Prince of Morocco"), J.E. Dodson (as "Launcelot Gobbo, servant to Shylock"), Maxine Elliott (as "Portia, an heiress in Belmont"), Effie Ellsler (as "Jessica, Shylock's daughter"), Arthur Garrels (as "Salarino, friend of Antonio"), Nat C. Goodwin (as "Shylock, a Jewish moneylender"), S.M. Hall (as "Balthasar, servant to Portia"), Annie Irish (as "Nerissa, Portia's waiting gentle-woman"), William J. Le Moyne (as "Gobbo"), Frank Mayne (as "Court Clerk"), Neil O'Brien (as "Tubal, an associate of Shylock"), Frederick Perry (as "Prince of Arragon, suitor to Portia"), William Sampson (as "Leonardo, servant to Bassanio"), Vincent Serrano (as "Gratiano, gentleman of Venice"), H.P. Stone (as "Solanio, friend of Antonio"), Frank Weston (as "Duke of Venice"), Henry Woodruff (as "Lorenzo, gentleman of Venice").
  • (1901) Stage Play: The Way of the World. Drama. Written by Clyde Fitch. Victoria Theatre: 4 Nov 1901- Dec 1901 (closing date unknown/35 performances). Cast: Sybyl Anderson, Frank Andrews, Clara Bloodgood, Alice Campbell, Elsie de Wolfe (as "Mrs. Croydon"), Mrs. Drummond, Frances Duff, Jane Holly, Clara B. Hunter, Harrison Hunter, Franklyn Hurleigh, Lester Keith, Laura Lane, Frank Mills (as "Mr. Croydon"), Mr. Moore, Joseph Phillips, Georgianna Pitcher, Vincent Serrano (as "Mr. Nevill"), Alison Skipworth (as "Mrs. Nevill"), Henry Stokes, Ralph Theodore, Maud Thomas, Donald B. Wallace, Frederick Wallace, Master Wright, Mrs. Wright. Produced by George W. Lederer.
  • (1903) Stage Play: Pretty Peggy. Drama. Written by Frances Aymar Mathews [earliest Broadway credit]. Herald Square Theatre: 23 Mar 1903- May 1903 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Anne Albert, Bernard A. Reinold [credited as Adolph Bernard] (Broadway debut), James J. Brown, Edward Burgess, Lily Calder, Sydney Cowell, Justine Cutting, Rose Doyle, Carl Eckstrom, Grace George (as "Peg Woffington"), Ruth Holt (may be Ruth Holt Boucicault, but unconfirmed), William Hungerford, Bertie Keller, Norah Lamison, Frances Leigh, Laura Lemmers, S.E. Lewis, Robert Lorraine, Donald MacLaren, Victor Manley, Addison March, Henry March, Margaret Mayo, Fred G. Swift, George Sylvester, Mary Thomas, Annie Ward Tiffany, Miss Tucker, Albert J. Tucker, Lyman Tucker, Bertha Tucman, Burt Tucman. Produced by William A. Brady.
  • (1903) Stage Play: A Japanese Nightingale. Written by William Young, from the novel by Onoto Wotanna. Daly's Theatre: 19 Nov 1903- 30 Dec 1903 (46 performances). Cast: Margaret Illington (as "Yuki"), May Buckley, Frank Gilmore, Miriam Hutchins, Eugene Jepson, Orrin Johnson, Fania Marinoff, Olive May, Robert McWade (undetermined role) [Broadway debut], Frederick Perry, Vincent Serrano, Fritz Williams.
  • (1904) Stage Play: The Ruling Power. Drama.
  • (1904) Stage Play: The Rich Mrs. Repton. Written by R.C. Carton. Criterion Theatre: 16 Nov 1904- Nov 1904 (unknown closing date/5 performances). Cast: Edward Abeles, Beatrice Agner, Frederick E. Beane, Herbert Budd, Fay Davis, Arthur Elliott, Harold Hartsell, Ernest Lawford, Arthur Lawrence, Edgar Norton, Florida Pier, Vincent Serrano, Katherine Stewart. Produced by Charles Frohman.
  • (1905) Stage Play: Mrs. Leffingwell's Boots. Comedy. Written by Augustus Thomas. Savoy Theatre (moved to The Lyceum Theatre from 30 Jan 1905- close): 11 Jan 1905- 30 Apr 1905 (123 performances/production rotated with A Maker of Men for about 2 weeks during it's run at the Lyceum Theatre). Cast: Mrs. A.A. Adams, J.H. Barnes, Jessie Busley, William Courtenay (as "Walter Corbin"), Fay Davis (as "Mabel Ainslie"), Del De Louis, M.J. Gallagher, Dorothy Hammond (as "Mrs. Bonner"), Margaret Illington (as "Mrs. Leffingwell"), Ernest Lawford, Louis Payne, J. G. Saville, Vincent Serrano (as "Richard"), Jay Wilson. Produced by Charles Frohman.
  • (1905) Stage Play: La Belle Marseillaise. Drama. Written by Pierre Berton. Knickerbocker Theatre: 27 Nov 1905- Dec 1905 (closing date unknown/29 performances). Cast: Frank Andrews, William Balfour, Grena Bennett, Adele Block, Elizabeth Brock, Charles Brown, F.S. Coe, William Courtenay, Stanley Dark, H. Bruce Delamater, Ralph Delmore, W.H. Dupont, Eddison von Ottenfeld [credited as William Eddison], Eugenie Flagg, Harris L. Forbes, W.L. Garwood, J.H. Gilmour, Frank Goldsmith, Jane Gordon, William Grossman, Virginia Harned, Joseph Kaufman, E.J. Kelly, Louis La Bey, Sidney Mansfield, Joseph Maylon, Bernhard Niemeyer, Madelaine Rives, Vincent Serrano, Margaret Smith, C. Smithman, Alice Van Ronk, Joseph E. Whiting. Produced by Charles Frohman.
  • (1907) Stage Play: On Parole. Romance. Written by Louis Evan Shipman. Majestic Theatre: 25 Feb 1907- Mar 1907 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Frank E. Aiken, Morgan Coman, Francis X. Conlan, Scott Cooper, Frederick Forrester, Helen Graham, Thomas P. Jackson, Alethea Luce [Broadway debut], Frederick Nichols, Howard Pembroke, Vincent Serrano (as "Major Dale"), Charlotte Walker (as "Constance Pinckney"), Fay Wheeler. Produced by Henry Miller.
  • (1907) Stage Play: The Movers. Drama.
  • (1909) Stage Play: A Little Brother of the Rich.
  • (1910) Stage Play: The Girl He Couldn't Leave Behind Him. Written by Gustav Kadelburg. Directed by William Collier Jr. Garrick Theatre: 9 Mar 1910- Apr 1910 (closing date unknown/37 performances). Cast: Grace Carlyle, William Danforth, Edgar Franklin, Richard Gordon, Eddie Gorman, Grace Johnson, Georgie Mendum, Edwin Nicander, Anita Rothe, Zelda Sears, Vincent Serrano, George Trader, Hattie Williams. Produced by William Collier Jr.
  • (1911) Stage Play: Our World.
  • (1911) Stage Play: As a Man Thinks.
  • (1913) Stage Play: A Man's Friends.
  • (1913) Stage Play: Arizona. Written by Augustus Thomas. Lyric Theatre: 28 Apr 1913- Jun 1913 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Alma Bradley, Oliver Doud Byron, Jennie Dickerson, John Drury, Dustin Farnum [final Broadway role], William Farnum, Elsie Ferguson, Harry S. Hadfield, Walter Hale, J.W. Hartman, Chrystal Herne, John Herne, Rapley Holmes, George O'Donnell, Vincent Serrano, Phyllis Young. Produced by William A. Brady.
  • (1913) Stage Play: The Lure. Written by George Scarborough. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 14 Aug 1913- Dec 1913 (closing date unknown/132 performances). Cast: Dorothy Dorr (as "The Madam"), Mary Nash (as "The Girl, Sylvia"), Vincent Serrano (as "The Special Agent"), Edwin Holt, Mortimer Martini, Lola May, Lucia Moore, George Probert, Susanne Willis. Produced by Lee Shubert.
  • (1914) Stage Play: That Sort. Written by Basil Macdonald Hastings. Harris Theatre: 6 Nov 1914- Nov 1914 (closing date unknown/25 performances). Cast: Jessie Abbot, Charles Brown, Charles Bryant, John Burkell, David Lassford, Charlotte Granville, Clinton Hamilton, Carrie Merrilees, Nona Murray, Alla Nazimova, Beatrice Prentice, Wilfred Seagram, Vincent Serrano. Produced by Liebler & Co.
  • (1914) Stage Play: The Lie.
  • (1915) Stage Play: The Revolt. Written by Edward Locke. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 1 Apr 1915- May 1915 (closing date unknown/36 performances). Cast: Alma Belwin, Claire Burke, Sam Edwards, Sara Enright, Beth Franklyn, Howard Gould, Charles N. Greene, Charles Hallock, Rosanna Logan, Edwin Mordant, Fred W. Peters, Jessie Ralph, Vincent Serrano, F. Russell Smith, Annette Tyler, Suzanne Willa, Frank Worth. Produced by F. Ray Comstock.
  • (1916) Stage Play: Pay-day. Written by Oliver D. Bailey and Lottie M. Meaney [earliest Broadway credit]. Cort Theatre (moved to The Booth Theatre from 13 Mar 1916- close): Feb 1916- unknown (49 performances). Cast: William Bennett, Burke Clarke, Gertrude Dallas, Pauline Duffield, Irene Fenwick, Henry Harmon, Edward J. Hayes, Suzanne Jackson, Vincent Serrano, John Stokes. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert. Note: Filmed by Metro Pictures Inc. as Pay Day (1918).
  • (1917) Stage Play: De Luxe Annie.
  • (1918) Stage Play: By Pigeon Post.
  • (1919) Stage Play: Our Pleasant Sins. Written by Thomas W. Broadhurst [final Broadway credit]. Belmont Theatre: 21 Apr 1919- May 1919 (32 performances). Cast: Henrietta Crosman, Pauline Lord, Vincent Serrano, Forrest Winant. Produced by Stewart & Morrison Inc. Note: Filmed by Superior Talking Pictures [distributed by Sono Art-World Wide Pictures] as Damaged Love (1931) [presumed lost as of Feb 2014].
  • (1922) Stage Play: Fools Errant. Drama. Written by Louis Evan Shipman. Directed by B. Iden Payne. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 21 Aug 1922- Oct 1922 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Alexandra Carlisle (as "Greta Ellis"), Robert Cummings (as "Dr. Graham "), Ruth Elaine (as "Maid"), Arthur Fitzgerald (as "Molloy"), Cyril Keightley (as "Eric Brierly"), C. Tracy L'Engle (as "Mrs. Kinsey Elton"), Gregory Loring (as "Sims"), Isabel Pell (as "Maid"), Charles Reigel (as "Cassidy"), Bodil Rosing (as "Maid"), Vincent Serrano (as "John Pritchard"), Lucile Watson (as "Fanny Pritchard"), Fritz Williams (as "James Stannard"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
  • (1923) Stage Play: The Alarm Clock. Comedy. Written by Avery Hopwood. From "La Sonnette d'Alarme" by Maurice Hennequin and Romain Coolus. 39th Street Theatre: 24 Dec 1923- Jan 1924 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Charles S. Abbe (as "Theodore Boom"), George Alison, Marion Coakley, Helen Flint (as "Lulu Deane"), Gail Kane (as "Mrs. Dunmore"), Ernest Lambart, Bruce McRae, Blanche Ring (as "Mrs. Susie Kent"), Vincent Serrano, John Troughton, Harold Vermilyea (as "Homer Wickham"). Produced by A.H. Woods.

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