- Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- The Prima Donna (1901). Musical/farce. Music by Aimee Lachaume. Book by Harry B. Smith. Musical Director: Aimee Lachaume. Lyrics by Harry B. Smith. Featuring songs by Fitz Penn. Herald Square Theatre: 17 Apr 1901- 18 May 1901 (36 performances). Cast: Mabel Wiles (credited as Mabel Arnold), Madeline Bouton, Charles B. Bowers, Etta Butler, William Cameron, William P. Carleton, Herbert Cawthorne, Toby Claude, Gilbert Clayton, Mabel Courtney, Mazie Follette, Lulu Glaser, Catherine Lewis, Hattie Moore, Eugene Redding, Blanche West [Broadway debut]. Produced by A.H. Chamberlyn.
- The Little Duchess (1901). Musical comedy. Music by Reginald De Koven. Based on material by Harry B. Smith. Lyrics by Harry B. Smith. Musical Director: Herman Perlet. Additional lyrics by Julian Fane, Robert Cole, William Jerome and J.P. Harrington. Additional music by Ellen Wright, A. Baldwin Sloane, J. Rosamond Johnson and Leo LeBrunn. Directed by George F. Marion. Casino Theatre (moved to The Grand Opera House from 21 Apr 1902 to close): 14 Oct 1901- Apr 1902 (closing date unknown/144 performances). Cast: Frankie Bailey, Sydney Barraclough, Katherine Bell, Charles A. Bigelow, Vivian Blackburn, Eva Davenport, Daisy Dean, Robert Fairchild, D.J. Flanigan, Minnie Gaylor, Lillian Harris, Anna Held, Joseph W. Herbert, Phyllis La Fond, George Marion, B. McGahen, Mme. Monti, Harold T. Morey, Billy Norton, Adelaide Orton, Helen Planchet, Ruth Rennard, Clara Selton, Anna St. Tel, Charles Swain, E.A. Tester, Elaine Van Selover, Joseph Welch, Blanche West (as "Nanon/Chorus"), Bessie Wynn. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- Higgledy-Piggledy (1904). Musical/farce/revue. Music by Maurice Levi. Material by Edgar Smith. Lyrics by Edgar Smith. Choreographed by Sam Marion. Scenic Design by John H. Young and Ernest Albert. Directed by George Marion. Weber and Fields' Broadway Music Hall: 20 Oct 1904- 25 Mar 1905 (185 performances). Produced by Joseph M. Weber and Florenz Ziegfeld Jr./ Note: Return engagement: Higgledy-Piggledy (1905). Musical/farce. Music by Maurice Levi. Based on material by Edgar Smith (also lyrics). Choreographed by Sam Marion. Directed by George F. Marion. Weber and Fields' Broadway Music Hall: 26 Aug 1905- 9 Sep 1905 (17 performances). Cast: Aimee Angeles, Robert Austin, Iva Barbier, Charles A. Bigelow, Irene Bishop, Vivian Blackburn, Aubrey Boucicault, Esther Brunette, Edna Chase, Elsie Davis, Mildred De Vere, Henry DePack, Richard Dolliver, Belva Don Kersley, Marie Dressler (as "Philopena Schnitz"), Franz Ebert, Charles Flynn, Florence French, Caroline Green, Bert Hagen, Lillian Harris, Anna Held (as "Mimi de Chartreuse"), Bena Hoffman, Harry Hoffmann, Jarvis Jocelyn, Grace Kimball, Florence Lancaster, Beatrice Learwood, Daisy Leon, Maude LeRoy, Freda Linyard, Hatty Lorraine, Bonnie Maginn, Sam Marion, Madeleine Martin, Frank Mayne, May McKenzie, Harry Morris, Edythe Moyer, Addie Orton, Frances Palmer, Violet Pearle, Marjorie Relyea, Maude Seddon, Elaine Selover, Edyth Smyth, Walter Stanton, W. Douglas Stevenson, Ada Verne, Mabel Verne, Vernie Wadsworth, Beatrice Walsh, Joseph M. Weber, Blanche West, Kitty Wheaton. Produced by Joseph M. Weber and Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- Higgledy-Piggledy (1905). Musical/farce/revue (return engagement).
- Moonshine (1905). Musical. Book by Edwin Milton Royle and George V. Hobart. Music by Silvio Hein [earliest Broadway credit]. Lyrics by George V. Hobart and Edwin Milton Royle. Scenic Design by Frank E. Gates and Edward A. Morange. Costume Design by Eaves Costume Co. Choreographed by Gertrude Hoffman. Directed by Frederick Perry. Liberty Theatre (moved to the Majestic Theatre on 25 Dec 1905 to close): 30 Oct 1905-6 Jan 1906 (53 performances). Cast: Leona Anderson (as "Countess of Broadlawns"), Franklyn Ardell (as "Chorus"), Roy Atwell (as "Lord Dumgarven"), Therese Baron (as "Chorus"), George Beban (as "Marcel Barbier"), Margaret Berrien (as "Chorus"), Ernestine Brady (as "Chorus"), Margaret Brooks (as "Chorus"), Marie Cahill (as "Molly Moonshine"), Whitlock Davis (as "Chorus"), Leslie Deane (as "Chorus"), Mabel Douglas (as "Chorus"), Alfred DuChemin (as "Chorus"), Frances Gordon (as "Lady Gweneth"), Sadie Harris (as "Sadie Short"), William Ingersoll (as "Plunger Dawson"), J. Ward Kett (as "Earl of Broadlawns"), James E. Ludwig (as "Chorus"), George Lyman (as "Chorus"), James Lyons (as "Chorus"), Edith MacBride (as "Chorus"), Anella Martin (as "Chorus"), Olga May (as "Chorus"), Louise McDonald (as "Chorus"), Lucille Monroe (as "Chorus"), Anna Mooney (as "Chorus"), Marion Mosby (as "Chorus"), Clara Palmer (as "Lola Charmion"), Frederick Paulding (as "Baron Hosaki"), H.R. Roberts (as "Terence O'Fogg"), Dore Rogers (as "Chorus"), Virginia Steinhart (as "Chorus"), Dick Temple (as "Hon. Lionel Longacre"), Harriet Van Buren (as "Chorus"), Marion Watts (as "Chorus"), Blanche West (as "Chorus"), William B. Wood (as "Chorus"), H. Guy Woodward (as "General Moroff"). Produced by Daniel V. Arthur.
- Marrying Mary (1906). Musical. Music by Silvio Hein. Book by Edwin Milton Royle. Based on the play "My Wife's Husbands" by Edwin Milton Royle. Lyrics by Benjamin Hapgood Burt. Musical Director: Silvio Hein. Featuring songs by Chris Smith. Featuring songs with lyrics by Cecil Mack. Daly's Theatre: 27 Aug 1906- 6 Oct 1906 (43 performances). Cast: Franklyn Ardell (as "Eph"), Roy Atwell (as "Willie Drinkwater"), George Backus (as "Reverend Thorley Throcmorton"), Annie Buckley (as "Fleurette"), Marie Cahill (as "Mary Montgomery"), Frances Carruthers (as "Miss Keene"), William Courtleigh (as "Ormsby Kelpepper"), Eugene Cowles (as "Colonel Henry Clay Kulpepper"), Annabelle Gordon (as "Miss Smith"), Bessie Graham (as "Miss Brown"), Ben. F. Grennell (as "M. Archambeau"), William Herman (as "Head Waiter"), Jane Hewitt (as "Miss Morton"), Elizabeth King (as "Miss Wiley"), Sadie Long (as "Miss Verdon"), George Lyman (as "Bell-Boy"), Olga May (as "Miss Savage"), Anna Mooney (as "Miss Greene"), James A. Reid (as "Porter"), Elsie Shaw (as "Miss Longfront"), Ethel Shaw (as "Miss Arbuckle"), Mark Smith (as "Bishop Brigham Smudge"), Virginia Staunton (as "Kitty Kulpepper"), Virginia Steinhardt (as "Miss Longsince"), Blanche West (as "Miss Curley"), H. Guy Woodward (as "Senator David Bunchgrass"). Produced by Daniel V. Arthur.
- Miss Innocence (1908). Musical extravaganza. Music by Ludwig Englander. Based on material by Harry B. Smith. Lyrics by Harry B. Smith. Featuring songs by Egbert Van Alstyne. Featuring songs with lyrics by Harry Williams. Featuring "My Post Card Girl" by Louis A. Hirsch and Addison Burkhard. Featuring "I'm Learning Something Every Day" by Nora Bayes and Jack Norworth. Featuring "I Have Lost My Little Brown Bear" by J. Rosamond Johnson and Bob Cole. Featuring "I'm Crazy When the Band Begins to Play" by Jean Schwartz and William Jerome. Featuring "What Kind of a Wife to Choose" by Gus Edwards. Musical Director: Frank Darling. Produced under the direction of Julian Mitchell. Note: Production revived at The New York Theatre: 30 Nov 1908- 1 May 1909 (176 performances). Cast: Charles A. Bigelow, Edith Decker, Lawrence D'Orsay (as "Captain, The Hon. Roland Fitzmaurice Montjoy of the First Life Guards"), Eva Francis, Anna Held (as "Anna/Miss Innocence"), Emma Janvier, Shirley Kellogg, Lillian Lorraine, Edith St. Clair, Florence Walton, Gladys Zell, Charles Barry, James Barry, Edna Birch, Bertha Blake, Martha Bright, John S. Brush, Miss Burns, Daisy Carson, Edna Chase, Daisy Clark, James Clyde, Miss Davies, Edna Dodsworth, Ethel Donaldson, Faico, Alfred Fairbrother, Miss Fennell, Dorothy Follies, William Gammage, Robert Paton Gibbs (as "The Duke of Pomerania"), Mayble Gilmore, Elise Hamilton, Josephine Harriman, F. Stanton Heck, Maurice Hegeman, May Hopkins, Vonnie Hoyt, Violet Jewell, La Flamencia, Beatrice Learwood, Ruby Lewis, Lionel Lozier, Miss MacDonald, Selma Mantell, Leo Mars, Virginia Marshall, Dudley Oatman, Mae Paul, Grace Rankin, Alfred Rinehart, Pierre Roudil, Daisy Rudd, Mabel Snyder, Madlyn Summers, Peter Swift, Reina Swift, Lottie Vernon, Grace Washburn, John Wentzel, Blanche West (as "Spanish Dancer/Maid/Ballet Achool"), Vida Whitmore, Marion Whitney, Lillian Wiggins, May Willard, Anna C. Wilson, Ernest Wood, John A. Young. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- The Old Town (1910). Musical.
- The Bachelor Belles (1910). Musical comedy.
- Peggy (1911). Musical. Music by Leslie Stuart. Book by George Grossmith Jr. Lyrics by C.H. Bovill. Based on "L'Amorcage" by Leon Xanroff and Gaston Guerin. Featuring songs by Irving Berlin. Conducted by Silvio Hein. Directed by Ned Wayburn. Casino Theatre: 7 Dec 1911- 6 Jan 1912 (36 performances). Cast: Betty Adams (as "Chorus"), Louise Alexander (as "Polly Polino"), Hylton Allen (as "Emil"), Josephine Angela (as "Chorus"), Jane Arrol (as "Chorus"), Byron Bell (as "Chorus"), W.M. Benedict (as "Chorus"), Esther Bissett (as "Diamond"), Charles Brown (as "Auberon Blow"), Maude Brown (as "Ruby"), Ruth Cardon (as "Chorus"), Olive Carr (as "Chorus"), Angelo Caruso (as "Chorus"), Frank Caruso (as "Chorus"), Jules Charmette Phonso/Aristide Picot"), Jeanette Clark (as "Chorus"), Isabel Congleton (as "Chorus"), Adelaide Croker (as "Chorus"), Marguerite Dana (as "Chorus"), Marjorie Dayton (as "Chorus"), William J. deForest (as "Chorus"), Madeline d'Harville (as "Dance Specialty"), Tom Dingle (as "Marquis of Didsbury"), Billy Faye (as "Chorus"), Harry Fisher (as "Cecil Custard Carutheres"), Marie Garland (as "Chorus"), Laura Gaynelle (as "Chorus"), Katherine Grant (as "Chorus"), Eleanore Gray (as "Chorus"), Charles Gurney (as "Chorus"), Elsie Hamilton (as "Dolly"), Louise Hawman (as "Chorus"), Waldo Heinemann (as "Chorus"), Billie Hunter (as "Chorus"), Renee Kelly (as "Peggy Barrison"), Fluffy Lichter (as "Chorus"), Clara Lloyd (as "Chorus"), Joseph Luna (as "Chorus"), Genarro Marino (as "Chorus"), Eva Marlow (as "Chorus"), Dorothy Marlowe (as "Chorus"), Janet Marran (as "Chorus"), Monsieur Maurice (as "Dance Specialty"), Seppie McNeil (as "Chorus"), Aimee Montague (as "Chorus"), Hazel Mooney (as "Chorus"), Helen Mooney (as "Chorus"), Gladys Moore (as "Dance Specialty"), Flora Ottie (as "Chorus"), Madeleine Ottie (as "Chorus"), Faith Powell (as "Chorus"), Paul Profatta (as "Chorus"), Lew Quinn (as "Man About Town"), John W. Ransome (as "Montagu Bartle"), Paul Riblet (as "Chorus"), Arthur J. Richter (as "Chorus"), Ada Robertson (as "Chorus"), Margaret Rutledge (as "Miss Vooch"), Joan Sherman (as "Chorus"), Farren Soutar (as "Captain James Bendoyle"), Irene Spencer (as "Chorus"), Kelcey Staunton (as "Chorus"), May Thompson (as "Chorus"), Gertrude Thurston (as "Chorus"), Oliver Van Der Burgh (as "Chorus"), Minerva Walton (as "Chorus"), Anna Watson (as "Chorus"), Elsie Weller (as "Chorus"), Arthur Wells (as "Chorus"), Blanche West (as "Nini/Jeanette"), Vida Whitmore (as "Doris Bartle"), Nellie Wilkie (as "Chorus"), Grace Williams (as "Chorus"), Rose Winter (as "Lady Frederick"), Alva York (as "Lady Snoop"). Produced by Thomas W. Ryley.
- The Gypsy (1912). Musical/operetta. Book by Frank S. Pixley. Music by Gustave Luders. Lyrics by Frank S. Pixley. Musical Director: Hilding Anderson. Directed by A.M. Holbrook. Park Theatre: 14 Nov 1912- 23 Nov 1912 (12 performances). Cast: Ronald Hamilton Earle (as "Lord Stanhope"), John R. Hazzard (as "Count von Sternberg"), Eleanor Kent (as "Lady Lucy"), Ernest Lambert (as "Lord Kyddlehurst"), Francis Lieb (as "Paulo"), Josephine Morse (as "Agra"), W.A. Roberts, Violet Seaton (as "Lady Alicia"), William Sellery (as "Bago"), Blanche West (as "Clytie") [final Broadway role], Anna Wilkes (as "Sophie"), Forrest Winant (as "Phipps"). Produced by John Cort.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content