- (1909 - 1931) Stage actor. Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1909) Stage Play: The Barber of New Orleans. Written by Edward Childs Carpenter. Daly's Theatre: 15 Jan 1909- 5 Feb 1909 (27 performances). Produced by William Faversham.
- (1930) Stage Play: The Ninth Guest. Melodrama/mystery.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Trail of the Lonesome Pine. Melodrama (original production). Written by Eugene Walter. Based on the novel by John Fox Jr. New Amsterdam Theatre: 29 Jan 1912- Feb 1912 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Berton Churchill (as "John Hale"), Charlotte Walker (as "June"), Lillian Dix, William S. Hart [final Broadway role], Alice Lindahl, Willard Robertson, Richard Sterling, Cyrus Wood, George Woodward. Produced by Klaw & Erlanger. Note: Filmed by Broadway Picture Producing Company as The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1914), by Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company [distributed by Paramount Pictures], by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1916), by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1923), by Out of the Inkwell Films [distributed by Red Seal Pictures] as Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1927) [short], by Walter Wanger Productions/Paramount Pictures [distributed by Paramount Pictures] (most notable version) as The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1936).
- (1927) Stage Play: Revelry. Written by Maurine Dallas Watkins. Based the novel by Samuel Hopkins Adams. Directed and produced by Robert Milton. Theatre Masque: 12 Sep 1927- Oct 1927 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Harry Bannister, 'Lionel Bevans' (as "Second Guard"), Frederick Burton, Berton Churchill (as "Willis Markham"), James Crane, Jefferson De Angelis, Charles Ellis, Rose Hobart (as "Gladys Hartley"), Irene Homer, Adele Klaer, George MacFarlane, William B. Mack, David Munroe, Eleanor Woodruff.
- (1914) Stage Play: The Money Makers. Written by Charles Klein. Booth Theatre: 5 Oct 1914- Oct 1914 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Joseph Adelman, Lionel Bevans, Eva Condon, Emmett Corrigan, Alfred Fisher, Echlin Gayer, Walter Kingsford, Felix Krembs, Dodson Mitchell, Eugene O'Brien, Eugene Prazier, Calvin Thomas, Margaret Wycherly. Produced by Selwyn & Co.
- (1916) Stage Play: The Cinderella Man. Written by Edward Childs Carpenter. Hudson Theatre: 17 Jan 1916- Jul 1916 (closing date unknown/192 performances). Cast: Theodore Babcock, Frank Bacon, Berton Churchill, Phoebe Foster, Shelly Hull, Lucille La Verne, Charles Lane, Reginald Mason, Percival T. Moore, Hazel Turney, Hubert Wilke. Produced by Oliver Morosco.
- (1917) Stage Play: The Lassoo. Written by Victor Mapes. Lyceum Theatre: 13 Aug 1917- Oct 1917 (closing date unknown/56 performances).
- (1917) Stage Play: The Pipes of Pan. Written by Edward Childs Carpenter. Hudson Theatre: 6 Nov 1917- Jan 1918 (closing date unknown/87 performances). Cast: Janet Beecher, Berton Churchill, Buford Hampden, Edith King, Reginald Mason, Mosalie Mathieu, Rita Stanwood, Henry Travers, Norman Trevor. Produced by Selwyn & Co.
- (1918) Stage Play: The Long Dash. Written by Robert Mears Mackay and Victor Mapes. 39th Street Theatre: 5 Nov 1918- Dec 1925 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: Byron Beasley, Berton Churchill, Walter Colligan, Frank Decamp, Henry E. Dixey, Malcolm Duncan, Robert Edeson, Harry English, Millicent Evans [final Broadway role], Helen Hilton, Violet Kemble Cooper, Georgia Lee, Harry T. Leeland, John Terry, J.C. Tremayne. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1919) Stage Play: Adam and Eva. Comedy. Written by Guy Bolton and George Middleton. Longacre Theatre: 13 Sep 1919- Jun 1920 (closing date unknown/312 performances). Produced by F. Ray Comstock and Morris Gest. Note: Produced for Adam and Eva (1949).
- (1921) Stage Play: Six-Cylinder Love. Comedy. Written by William Anthony McGuire. Directed by Sam Forrest. Sam H. Harris Theatre: 25 Aug 1921- Jul 1922 (closing date unknown/344 performances). Cast: Berton Churchill (as "George Stapleton"), Howard Hull Gibson, Eleanor Gordon, Harry Hammill, Kenneth Hill, Hedda Hopper (as "Margaret Rogers"), Betty Linley, Donald Meek (as "Richard Burton"), Ralph Sipperly (as "William Donroy"), Calvin Thomas, Ernest Truex (as "Gilbert Sterling"), Fay Walker, June Walker (as "Marilyn Sterling"). Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1923) Stage Play: In Love With Love. Comedy. Written by Vincent Lawrence. Directed by Robert Milton. Ritz Theatre: 6 Aug 1923- Nov 1923 (closing date unknown/128 performances). Cast: Berton Churchill (as "William Jordan"), Lynn Fontanne, Henry Hull (as "Robert Metcalf"), Ralph Morgan, Maryland Morne (as "Julia"), Robert Strange (as "Frank Oakes"). Produced by William H. Harris Jr.
- (1923) Stage Play: Connie Goes Home. Comedy. Written by Edward Childs Carpenter. Based on a story by Fanny Kilbourne [credited as Fannie Kilbourn]. Directed by Frederick Stanhope. 49th Street Theatre: 6 Sep 1923- Sep 1923 (closing date unknown/20 performances). Cast: Berton Churchill (as "George M. Barclay"), Florence Earle (as "Mrs. Gibbs"), Lorna Elliott (as "Mrs. Merrick"), Sylvia Field (as "Connie"), Donald Foster (as "Jim"), Audrey Hart (as "Josephine Pierce"), Fred Irving Lewis (as "Chester Barclay"), Martha Madison (as "Hilda"), Harry E. McKee (as "Albert"), Arlina McMahon (as "Molly Latimer"), Ethel Remey (as "Isobel Wayne"), Valerie Valaire (as "Edna St. Cloud"). Produced by Kilbourn Gordon.
- (1923) Stage Play: Robert E. Lee. Historical drama. Written by John Drinkwater. Ritz Theatre: 20 Nov 1923- Dec 1923 (closing date unknown/15 performances). As "Robert E. Lee."
- (1924) Stage Play: Merry Wives of Gotham. Comedy. Written by Laurence Eyre. Henry Miller's Theatre: 16 Jan 1924- Apr 1924 (closing date unknown/96 performances). Cast: Bertha Ballenger (as "Denbeigh"), Berton Churchill (as "Lambart DeRhonde"), Arthur Cole (as "Andy Gorman"), Laura Hope Crews (as "Annie O'Tandy"), Mary Ellis (as "Brigid Shannahan/Ophelia O'Tandy"), Herbert Farjeon (as "Angelo"), Grace George (as "Anne DeRhonde"), Wlliam Hanley (as "Dirk DeRhonde"), Avis Hughes (as "Sister Mercedes"), Tom Maguire (as "Phelim Hennessy"), John Miltern (as "Major Fowler"), Mignon O'Doherty (as "Cathy Donovan/Widow Gorman"), Eddie Quinn (as "Jimminy"), William Quinn (as "Patsy/A Small Gorman"), Lewis Sealy [credited as Lewis A. Sealy] (as "Pomeroy"), Arthur Sinclair (as "Seumas O'Tandy"), Judith Vosselli (as "Mother Agnes/Hudson Bess"), George Wilson (as "Paperhanger"), Ann Winston (as "Miss Mortimer"). Produced by Henry Miller.
- (1924) Stage Play: Cheaper to Marry. Written by Samuel Shipman. 49th Street Theatre: 15 Apr 1924- Jun 1924 (closing date unknown/71 performances). Cast: Horace Braham, Berton Churchill, Alan Dinehart, Ruth Donnelly, Florence Eldridge, Claiborne Foster, Olga Lee, Robert Warwick. Produced by Richard Herndon.
- (1924) Stage Play: Carnival. Written by Ferenc Molnár. Translated by Melville Baker. Directed by Frank Reicher. Cort Theatre: 29 Dec 1924- Jan 1925 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Henry Bloomfield (as "Police Secretary"), Richard Bowler (as "Secret Service Man"), Edith Harding Brown (as "Second Coat Room Woman"), Leo L. Carroll (as "Matyas Oez"), Berton Churchill (as "Sandor Oroszy"), Elsie Ferguson (as "Camilla"), Franklyn Fox (as "A Cavalry Captain"), Anna Gray (as "Liszka"), Basil Hanbury (as "Doorman"), Margaret Hutchins (as "A Girl"), Nicholas Joy (as "Edmund/Police Commissaire"), Kenneth Lawton (as "Lackey"), Stanley Logan (as "Rudolf"), Tom Nesbitt (as "Nicholas Kornady"), Mignon O'Doherty (as "First Coat Room Woman"), Mildred Wall (as "Third Coat Room Woman"). Produced by Charles Frohman Inc.
- (1925) Stage Play: Alias the Deacon. Comedy. Written by John B. Hymer and LeRoy Clemens. Directed by Winchell Smith and Priestly Morrison. Sam H. Harris Theatre: 24 Nov 1925- Jul 1926 (closing date unknown/277 performances). Cast: Kaye Barnes (as "Slim Sullivan"), Anna Bentley (as "Mrs. Boynton"), Berton Churchill (as "The Deacon"), Jerry Devine (as "Willie Clark"), Donald Foster (as "John Adams"), Averell Harris (as "Luella Gregory"), Sneb Howard (as "Brakeman"), Virginia Howell (as "Mrs. Gregory"), Leo Kennedy (as "Brick McGoorty"), Marie Loring (as "Mrs. Howgert"), Mayo Methot (as "Phyllis Halliday"), Frank Monroe (as "Jim Cunningham"), Ralph Morehouse (as "Deputy"), Viola Morrison (as "Mrs. Pike"), John F. Morrissey (as "Ed King"), Al Roberts (as "Bull Moran"), Betty Rutland (as "Mrs. Clayton"), Arline Tucker (as "Fanny Pike"), Frances Underwood (as "Mrs. Clark"), Clyde Veaux (as "Tony"). Produced by Samuel Wallach. Note: Filmed as Alias the Deacon (1927), Alias the Deacon (1940), Half a Sinner (1934).
- (1930) Stage Play: The Ninth Guest. Meldorama/mystery. Written and directed by Owen Davis. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 25 Aug 1930- Oct 1930 (closing date unknown/72 performances). As "Dr. Reid." Cast: William Courtleigh, Brenda Dahlen, Owen Davis, Alan Dinehart, Thais Lawton, Frank Shannon, Robert Vivian. Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1912) Stage Play: Julius Caesar. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Lyric Theatre: 4 Nov 1912- Dec 1912 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast included: Lionel Belmore, William Faversham. Produced by William Faversham.
- (1928) Stage Play: Carry On. Written by Owen Davis. Directed by Clifford Brook. Theatre: Masque: 23 Jan 1928- Jan 1928 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Produced by Carl Reed.
- (1930) Stage Play: Five Star Final. Melodrama. Written by Louis Weitzenkorn [final Broadway credit]. Cort Theatre: 30 Dec 1930- Jun 1931 (closing date unknown/175 performances). Cast: Sydney Booth (as "Mr. Arthur Loveland Weeks"), Lillian Bronson, A.S. 'Pop' Byron (as "Randall"), King Calder (as "Philip Weeks"), Berton Churchill, Frank Dae (as "Brannegan"), Ken Dana, Mike D'Arcy, Amy Dennis, Malcolm Duncan (as "Michael Townsend"), Frances Fuller (as "Jenny Townsend"), Georgette Harvey (as "Minerva"), Fred House, Richard Huey (as "Harold"), Laurie Jacobs, Allen Jenkins (as "Ziggie Feonstein"), P.J. Kelly, Alvin Kerr (as "Arthur"), Kathryn Keyes, Bruce MacFarlane, Merle Maddern (as "Nancy Voorhees Townsend"), Madeline Marshall (as "Miss Edwards"), Dorothy McElhone (as "Rooney"), Alexander Onslow, Henry Sherwood, Helene Sinnott (as "Miss Taylor"). Produced by A.H. Woods. Note: Filmed by Warner Bros. as Five Star Final (1931) and by Warner Bros. as Two Against the World (1936). Also produced as a 1954 installment of Lux Video Theater (adaption telecast 11 Nov 1954).
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