- Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- Brother Jacques (1904). Comedy/Farce. Written by Henri Bernstein and Pierre Veber [earliest Broadway credit/adaption]. Directed by Edward E. Rose. Garrick Theatre: 5 Dec 1904- Jan 1905 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Grena Bennett, Lou W. Carter, Elizabeth Churchill, J.R. Cooley, Mary Gordon, Ira Hards, May Hennessey, Elizabeth Johnson, Sidney Mansfield, Annie Russell, May Davenport Seymour, Grant Stewart, Mrs. Charles Walcot, Joseph Wheelock Jr., George W. Wilson, Claire Winston, William Wray, Oswald Yorke. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- Twenty Days in the Shade (1908). Farce.
- The Girl from Rector's (1909). Written by Paul M. Potter. From the French of Pierre Veber. Weber's Music Hall: 1 Feb 1909- Jul 1909 (closing date unknown/184 performances). Cast: J.W. Ashley, Nena Blake, William Burress, Herbert Carr, Florence M. Constantine, Helena H. Constantine, Violet Dale, Max Freeman, Mildred McNeill, John Daly Murphy, Isabel O'Madigan, Elita Proctor Otis, Nella Webb, Dallas Welford, Van Rensselaer Wheeler.
- The Runaway
- Madam President (1913). Written by Jose G. Levy. Based on the French of Maurice Hennequin and Pierre Veber. Garrick Theatre: 15 Sep 1913- Jan 1914 (closing date unknown/128 performances). Cast: Pattie Browne, 'Belle D'Aube', John W. Dean, Jack Devereaux, W.J. Ferguson, Elene Foster, George Giddens, Minna Gombell [Broadway debut], Duncan McRae, Oliver Ramsdell, Douglas Ross, Ruth D. Sinclair, Cornelius Sutcliffe, Fannie Ward, Aubrey West, Clarence Weymouth. Produced by Charles Frohman. Note: Filmed as Madame la Presidente (1916); produced by Oliver Morosco Productions and distributed by Paramount [Famous Players].
- The Girl Behind the Gun (1918).
- [Posthumous credit] (May 1981) Pierre Veber and Maurice Hennequin's play, "Have You Anything to Declare?," was adapted by Cogo-Fawcett and Murray at the Roundhouse Theatre in London, England in a Royal Exchange Theatre Company production with Dilys Hamlett, Noel Howlett, Derek Griffiths, Brian Cox, and Susan Littler in the cast. Braham Murray was director.
- Other productions (note: all of Veber's Broadway credits were essentially adaptations of earlier French productions; above list of original/foreign productions likely incomplete).
- Sunny Days (1928). Musical comedy (revival). Music by Jean Schwartz. Book by Clifford Grey and William Carey Duncan. From the French of Maurice Hennequin and Pierre Veber. Lyrics by Clifford Grey and William Carey Duncan. Musical Director: John L. McManus. Choreographed by Ralph Reader. Century Theatre: 1 Oct 1928- 27 Oct 1928 (32 performances). Produced by Montmartre Productions, Inc.
- (1928) Stage Play: Sunny Days. Musical comedy. Music by Jean Schwartz [final Broadway credit]. Book by Clifford Grey and William Carey Duncan. From the French of Maurice Hennequin and Pierre Veber. Lyrics by Clifford Grey and William Carey Duncan. Musical Director: John L. McManus. Choreographed by Ralph Reader. Scenic Design by Watson Barrett. Directed by Hassard Short. Imperial Theatre: 8 Feb 1928- 5 May 1928 (101 performances). Cast: Charlotte Walton Ayres [credited as Charlotte Ayers] (as "Premier Dancer"), Donald Black (as "Mircourt"), Maxine Carson (as "Lulu"), Rosalie Claire (as "Angele Larue"), George Clidd (as "Ensemble"), Aida Conkey (as "Ensemble"), Peggy Cornell (as "Babette"), Doris deLanti (as "Ensemble"), Lillian Dixon (as "Ensemble"), Jacqueline Feeley (as "Ensemble"), Marjorie Finley (as "Nanine"), Harry Gordon (as "A Thief"), Sophia Grebow (as "Ensemble"), Ruth Hartman (as "Ensemble"), Sid Hawkins (as "Robert"), Maury Holland (as "Victor Duval"), Claire Hooper (as "Countess D'Exmore/Ensemble"), Verenetta Hoots (as "Ensemble"), Charlotte Joyce (as "Ensemble"), Sidney Kane (as "Ensemble"), Irene Kelly (as "Ensemble"), Fraun Koski (as "Ensemble"), Robert Lee (as "Ensemble"), Bob Lively (as "Bergeot"), Esther Lloyd (as "Ensemble"), Jeanette MacDonald (as "Ginette Bertin "), Vida Manuel (as "Ensemble"), Audrey Maple (as "Madame Dorsay"), Trude Marr (as "Ensemble"), Isobel Mason (as "Ensemble"), Virginia May (as "Ensemble"), Fred Mayon (as "Ensemble"), Reed McClelland (as "Ensemble"), Frank McIntyre (as "Leon Dorsay"), Liane Memet (as "Ensemble"), Virginia Otis (as "Ensemble"), Lynne Overman (as "Maurice Vane"), Jane Patrick (as "Ensemble"), Alli Raddigan (as "Ensemble"), Evangeline Raleigh (as "Georgette"), Carl Randall (as "Paul Morel"), Leonard Reid (as "Ensemble"), Helen Rich (as "Ensemble"), Edna Starck (as "Ensemble"), William Tasek (as "Ensemble"), Billy B. Van (as "Rudolph Max"), Ada Winston (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Hassard Short.
- Oh, Please (1926). Musical/farce. Material by Maurice Hennequin and Pierre Veber. Directed by Hassard Short. Fulton Theatre: 17 Dec 1926- Feb 1927 (closing date unknown/75 performances). Cast: Charles Angle, Robert Baldwin, Richard Bennett, Dorothie Bigelow, Helen Broderick, Leon Canova, Lloyd Carder, Gertrude Clemens (as "Miss Topeka"), Charles Columbus, Dolores Farris, James Garrett, Pearl Hight, Irma Irving, Kitty Kelly, Blanche Latell, Beatrice Lillie, Nick Long, Cynthia MacVae, Gertrude McDonald, Charles Purcell (as "Robert Vandeleur"), Josephine Sabel, Nelson Snow, Jack Wilson, Charles Winninger (as "Nicodemus Bliss"). Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
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