- (1887 - 1928) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1887) Stage Play: The Begum. Musical comedy/opera. Libretto by Harry B. Smith. Music by Reginald De Koven [earliest Broadway credit]. Musical Director: Adolph Nowak. Scenic Design by Joseph Clare. Costume Design by Mathilde Cottrelly. Fifth Avenue Theatre: 21 Sep 1887- 10 Dec 1887 (22 performances). Cast: Digby Bell (as "Myhnt-Jhuleep") [Broadway debut], Laura Joyce Bell, Nina Bertini, Mathilde Cottrelly (as "The Begum of Oude"), Jefferson De Angelis, Paula Franko, Edwin Hoff, DeWolf Hopper Sr. (as "Howja-Dhu"), Josephine Knapp, Harry MacDonough, Marion Manola, Annie Meyers, Grace Seavey, Hubert Wilke (as "Klam-Chowdee") [Broadway debut]. Produced by McCaull Opera Comique Company.
- (1899) Stage Play: Mother Goose. Musical.
- (1904) Stage Play: The Yankee Consul. Opera. Music by Alfred G. Robyn. Book by Henry Martyn Blossom [credited as Henry M. Blossom Jr.]. Lyrics by Henry Martyn Blossom. Directed by George F. Marion. Broadway Theatre: 22 Feb 1904- 2 Jul 1904 (115 performances). Cast: Mr. Armour (as "Chorus"), Charles Books (as "Chorus"), Rose Botti (as "Papinta, her niece/Chorus"), Louise Burpee (as "Chorus"), Madge Burpee (as "Francesca/Chorus"), Estrella Carmichael (as "Inez, Sancho's wife/Chorus"), Eda Chandler (as "Chorus"), Mr. Colishaw (as "Chorus"), Lila Conquest (as "Jacinta/Chorus"), J. Parker Coombs (as "Carlos, a water carrier"), William Danforth (as "Don Rafael Deschado, Governor of Puerto Plata"), Mae Darling (as "Anita"), Eva Davenport (as "Donna Teresa Rebera-y Uruburu, a wealthy widow"), Mr. DeCourcey (as "Chorus"), Clara Eckstrom (as "Chorus"), Lillian Eldredge (as "Panilla/Chorus"), Harry Fairleigh (as "Lieutenant Jack Morrell, Commanding U.S. Gunboat"), M.C. Flavin (as "Chorus/Leonora"), Toma Hanlon (as "Chorus"), Jack E. Hazzard (as "Herr Gebubler, His Secretary"), Raymond Hitchcock (as "Abijah Booze"), Albert Juhre (as "Nunez"), Edna Marsh (as "Chorus"), J.H. McLean (as "Felipo, telegraph operator"), Sallie McNeel (as "Blanca, a bar maid/Chorus"), Basil Millspaugh (as "Rodrigo, local officer"), Gertrude O'Neil (as "Bella/Chorus"), Adelaide Orton (as "Juanita, flower girl"), Jack Pratt (as "Miguel"), Mr. Pugh (as Chorus"), Mr. Purvionce (as "Chorus"), Frank Ranney (as "Sancho, proprietor of Los Dos Toros restaurant"), Freda Rica (as "Chorus"), J. Joe Seley (as "Chorus"), Lester Templeton (as "Chorus"), Miss Turten (as "Chorus"), May Wheeler (as "Estrella, fruit girl/Chorus"), L. Whitte (as "Chorus"), Hubert Wilke (as "Captain Leopoldo, of the Dominican Army"), Sophie Witte (as "Maria/Chorus"), Flora Zabelle (as "Bonita, her daughter"). Produced by Henry W. Savage.
- (1905) Stage Play: Fantana. Musical comedy.
- (1916) Stage Play: The Cinderella Man.
- (1918) Stage Play: Josephine. Written by Hermann Bahr. Book adapted by Washburn Freund. Knickerbocker Theatre: 28 Jan 1918- Feb 1918 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Ann Andrews, Marion Ballou, Aimee Dalmores, Arnold Daly, Arthur Forrest, George Frederichs, Virginia Harned, Grace Harrington, Paul Irving, John McManus, Harry Mestayer, Coulton White, Hubert Wilke. Produced by Arnold Daly.
- (1920) Stage Play: Sophie. Comedy/satire. Written by Philip Moeller. Greenwich Village Theatre: 2 Mar 1920- May 1920 (closing date unknown/79 performances). Cast: Paul Atherton (as "Sophie's Second Lackey"), O.P. Heggie (as "Louis Leon Felicite de Brancas/Count de Lauraguais"), Marjorie Hollis, Hubbard Kirkpatrick (as "Captain Etienne Mars"), Adolph Link (as "Mercy D'Argenteau"), Claire Mersereau (as "Vivienne"), Jean Newcombe (as "Rosalie Levasseur"), Emily Stevens (as "Sophie"), Sidney Toler (as "Sophie's First Lackey"), Daisy Vivian (as "Mlle. Abigalette Heinel"), John Webster, Basil West, Hubert Wilke (as "Christoph Willibald Ritter Von Gluck"), Oswald Yorke (as "The Abbe de Voisenon"). Produced by George C. Tyler.
- (1920) Stage Play: Poldekin. Comedy. Written by Booth Tarkington. Park Theatre: 9 Sep 1920- Oct 1920 (closing date unknown/44 performances). Cast: Carl Anthony (as "Podoff"), George Arliss (as "Poldekin"), William H. Barwald (as "Sergeant"), Julia Dean (as "Blanche"), Emil Hoch (as "Endachieff"), Manart Kippen (as "Nicolai"), Elsie MacKay (as "Maria"), Edward G. Robinson (as "Pinsky"), Sidney Toler (as "Welch"), Hubert Wilke (as "Krimoff"). Produced by George C. Tyler.
- (1923) Stage Play: Humoresque. Comedy/drama. Written by Fannie Hurst. Vanderbilt Theatre: 27 Feb 1923- Mar 1923 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Luther Adler (as "Leon Kantor, as an Adult"), James H. Bell (as "Stage Employee"), Vera Berliner (as "Mrs. Finschreiber"), Walter Brown (as "William"), Dorothy Burton (as "Esther Kantor, as an Adult"), Sidney Carlyle (as "Mannie Kantor"), Lillian Garrick (as "Rosie Ginsburg"), Elsa Grey (as "Gina Berg"), Chester Hermann (as "Isador Kantor"), Ada Hewitt (as "Esther Kantor"), Alfred Little (as "Leon Kantor"), Frank Manning (as "Sol. Ginsberg"), Charlotte Salkowitz (as "Ruby Kantor"), Sidney Salkowitz (as "Leon Kantor II"), Sam Sidman (as "Abraham Kantor"), Louis Sorin (as "Isador Kantor, as an Adult") [Broadway debut], Laurette Taylor (as "Sarah Kantor"), Hubert Wilke (as "Max Elsass"), Wayne Wilson (as "Reporter").
- (1923) Stage Play: Queen Victoria. Drama. Written by David Carb and Walter Prichard Eaton. Directed by Priestly Morrison. 48th Street Theatre: 15 Nov 1923- Dec 1923 (closing date unknown/44 performances). Cast: Donald Cameron (as "Viscount Melbourne"), Clarence Derwent (as "Benjamin Disraeli"), Herbert Farjeon (as "Sir James Clark"), George Farren (as "William Ewart Gladstone"), Edward Fielding (as "Duke of Wellington"), Frances Goodrich (as "Lady Gay Hawthorne"), Winifred Hanley (as "Duchess of Kent"), Borden Harriman (as "A Footman"), Ullrich Haupt (as "Prince Albert of Coburg") [Broadway debut], William Ingersoll (as "Lord Palmerston"), Arthur Maude (as "Edward, Prince of Wales"), Beryl Mercer (as "Alexandrina Victoria"), Anita Rothe (as "Baroness Lehzen"), Herbert Standing Jr. (as "Lord Conyngham"), Albert Tavernier (as "Archbishop of Canterbury"), Hubert Wilke (as "Baron Stockmar"). Produced by The Equity Players Inc.
- (1927) Stage Play: L'Aiglon. Drama/tragedy (revival). Written by Edmond Rostand. Translation by by Louis N. Parker [final Broadway credit]. Directed by John D. Williams. Cosmopolitan Theatre: 26 Dec 1927- Jan 1928 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Raymond Arthur (as "Lord Cowley"), Eva Benton (as "Scarampi"), William Courtleigh (as "Metternich, Chancellor of Austria"), Gertrude Davis (as "Countess Camerata, Napoleon's niece"), Madeline Delmar (as "Therese de Lorget"), Robert Farrell (as "Tiburce de Lorget, an exile in the Austrian pay"), Douglas Garden (as "Baron von Oberhaus"), John Hanley (as "An Austrian Sergeant"), Edwin Jerome (as "French Attache at Vienna"), Benedict MacQuarrie (as "Marquis of Bombelles"), George F. Marion (as "Flambeau, a Grenadier"), Gordon McCracken (as "Foresti, a Captain"), Richard Nicholls (as "Count Prokesch"), Perry Norman (as "Count Dietrichstein, the Duke's tutor"), Charles Peyton (as "A Doctor"), Catherine Proctor (as "Archduchess Sophia"), David Sager (as "Count Sedlinsky, Chief of Police"), Antonio Salerno (as "Montenegro"), Effie Shannon (as "Marie-Louise, Duchess of Parma"), Henry Stillman (as "Gen. Hartmann, in attendance on the Duke"), Michael Strange (as "L'Aiglon, Franz, Duke of Reichstadt, Napoleon's son"), James M. Sullivan (as "Marmont, a French Field Marshal"), Marjorie Vonnegut (as "Fanny Elssler, a dancer"), Clifford Walker (as "Baron Friederich von Gentz"), Harold West (as "A Tailor"), Hubert Wilke (as "Franz, Emperor of Austria"). Produced by John D. Williams. Produced by arrangement with Charles Frohman Inc.
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