- (1896 - 1954) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1896) Stage Play: The Gay Mr. Lightfoot. Farce. Written by Louis De Lange and Lee Arthur [earliest Broadway credit]. Bijou Theatre: 16 Dec 1896- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Mabel Amber, Charles Bradshaw, Frederic Conger, Bijou Fernandez (as "Helen"), Agnes Findlay, Wright Huntington, W.H. Thompson.
- (1899) Stage Play: The Ghetto. Drama. Written by C.B. Fernald, from the Dutch by Herman Heijermans. Broadway Theatre: 15 Sep 1899- Oct 1899 (closing date unknown/43 performances). Cast: Richard Buhler, Henry Burton, Emmett Corrigan, Samuel Edwards, Bijou Fernandez, Grace Filkins, Robert Paton Gibbs, Joseph Haworth, George Heath, Sidney Herbert [Broadway debut], Harry Holliday, William H. Pascoe, Mrs. McKee Rankin. Produced by Jacob Litt.
- (1900) Stage Play: The Countess Chiffon.
- (1900) Stage Play: Quo Vadis. Written by Janette L. Gilder. Based on the novel by Henryk Sienkiewicz. Herald Square Theatre: 9 Apr 1900- May 1900 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Harrison Armstrong (as "Ursus"), Anna Barkley (as "Miriam"), John Blair (as "Vincius"), T.B. Bridgeland (as "Tigellinus"), Myron Calice (as "Father Linus"), Frank Currier (as "Chilo"), Joseph Damery (as "Gulo"), Bijou Fernandez (as "Lygia"), Robert Fischer (as "Nero") [Broadway debut], Robert Gemp (as "Hasta"), William Herbert (as "Lucan"), F. Husted (as "Vestinius"), Little Arthur (as "Little Aulus"), Jane Marbury (as "Nigidia") [Broadway debut], Gertrude McGill (as "Calvia"), Minnie Monk (as "Pomponia"), E.J. Morgan (as "Petronius"), W.V. Ranous (as "Vitellius"), Hattie Russell (as "Poppaea"), Grayce Scott (as "Eunice"), Willard Simpson (as "Glaucus"), Engel Sumner (as "Acte"), Dollie Thornton (as "A Slave"), Howard Truesdell (as "Croton"). Note: Filmed by MGM as Quo Vadis (1951).
- (1900) Stage Play: Quo Vadis. Written by Hugh Stanislaus Stange, from the novel by Henryk Sienkiewicz. Incidental music by Julian Edwards. Academy of Music: 31 Dec 1900- Jan 1901 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: J.B. Booth, Aubrey Boucicault, Adeline Dunlap, Samuel Edwards, Bijou Fernandez (as "Lygia"), Sarah Kaplan, Wilton Lackaye (as "Petronius"), Frank Mordaunt, Willard Newell, Carlotta Nillson, Georgia Florence Olp, Elita Proctor Otis, Charles Riegel, E.L. Walton, Richard G. Williams.
- (1902) Stage Play: Lady Margaret. Comedy. Adapted from the French by Edward E. Rose. Bijou Theatre: 27 Jan 1902- Feb 1902 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Edward Abeles, Amelia G. Bingham, Edith Blair, Verner Clarges, Madge Carr Cook, Arnold Daly, Miss De Rondamayo, Robert Dudley, Minnie Dupree, Bijou Fernandez, Alfred Fisher, Marion Gardiner, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Annie Irish, Annie Morton, T. Roberts, Harriett Sawyer, Cora Tanner, Alice Theiss, Charles Walcot, Harold Walsh, Henry Warwick, Ivah Wills, Evelyn Wood, Frank Worthing. Produced by Amelia G. Bingham.
- (1902) Stage Play: Hearts Aflame. Drama. Written by Genevieve Greville Haines. Suggested by the novelette by Louise Winter. Garrick Theatre: 12 May 1902- May 1902 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Leslie Bingham, Lillian Bond, James H. Bradbury, Rhoda Cameron, Rosa Da Pont, Arnold Daly (as "Harry"), Dorothy Dorr (as "Mrs. Harmony"), Bijou Fernandez, Robert T. Haines (as "Paul Charteris"), Lawrence Hilliard, Jane Holly, Frank Howson, George Leslie, William Lester, Ethel Lyman, Tully Marshall, Max Mazzanovich, Nat Nazarro Jr., Channez Olney, Edna Phillips, Joseph A. Phillips, Mary Poore, Becton Radford, Lucile Watson [Broadway debut], Adelyn Wesley, Josephine Wyndham. Produced by Walter N. Lawrence.
- (1902) Stage Play: Hearts Aflame. Drama [return engagement]. Written by Genevieve Greville Haines. Suggested by the novelette by Louise Winter. Bijou Theatre: 8 Sep 1902- Oct 1902 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Herbert Ayling, Aubrey Boucicault, Arnold Daly, Dorothy Dorr, Bijou Fernandez, Lawrence Hilliard, Jane Holly, Edward Lester, Kate Lester, Joseph A. Phillips, Morton Selton, John Sherman, W.M. Travers, Lionel Ward, Lucile Watson, Henry West.
- (1904) Stage Play: Olympe. Drama. Written by Pierre Decourcelle. From the novel by Alexandre Dumas. Directed by Eugene Wiley Presbrey. Knickerbocker Theatre: 18 Jan 1904- Feb 1904 (closing date unknown/21 performances). Cast: W.L. Abingdon, Amelia Bingham, Myron Calice, Edgar L. Davenport, Amy Denton, Thomas F. Fallon [Broadway debut], Bijou Fernandez, Frank Fullham, Louise Galloway, J.H. Gilmour, Jean Hayden, Charles Haynes, Fred Herford, Gilbert Heron, Edith Hinkle, Harry Hyde, H.S. Marvin, Dorothy Russell, George Schaeffer, Harold M. Shaw, Ralph Stillwell, Ivy Troutman [Broadway debut], Adelyn Wesley, Basil West, Henry Woodruff. Produced by Amelia G. Bingham.
- (1905) Stage Play: A Fair Exchange. Comedy. Written by Henry Martyn Blossom [credited as Henry Blossom]. Liberty Theatre: 4 Dec 1905- Dec 1905 (closing date unknown/21 performances). Cast: Percy F. Ames, Axel Brunn, Lizzie Hudson Collier, T.H. Davies, Gertrude Doremus, Bijou Fernandez, John Flood, Claire Kulp, Newton Lindo, Donald MacLaren, Channez Olney, George Parsons, Forrest Robinson, Thomas W. Ross. Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1906) Stage Play: The Redskin. Melodrama. Written by Donald MacLaren. Directed by William A. Brady. Liberty Theatre: 1 Mar 1906- Mar 1906 (closing date unknown/26 performances). Cast: Lionel Adams, Edwin Arden, Leonard Barry, Claude Brooke, Albert Bruning (as "Sheanaugua"), Marion Chapman, Avonia Eldridge, Bijou Fernandez (as "Lashota"), Escamillo Fernandez, Katherine Grey, Margaret Kenmare, J.O. Le Brasse, Alice Leigh, Laura Lemmers, Tyrone Power Sr.. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1906) Stage Play: Arms and the Man. Comedy (revival). Written by George Bernard Shaw. Lyric Theatre: 16 Apr 1906- May 1906 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Arnold Daly (as "Captain Bluntschli"), Bijou Fernandez (as "Louka"), John Findlay, William Harcourt (as "Major Sergius Saranoff"), Chrystal Herne (as "Raina Petkoff"), Joseph Maddern (as "Russian Officer"), Dodson Mitchell (as "Major Paul Petkoff"), Isabelle Urquhart. Produced by Arnold Daly.
- (1909) Stage Play: Springtime. Written by Booth Tarkington and Harry Leon Wilson. Based on a short story by George Bronson-Howard. Music by Harry Rowe Shelley. Directed by Frederic Thompson. Liberty Theatre: 19 Oct 1909- Dec 1909 (closing date unknown/79 performances). Cast: Joseph Brennan, Sallie Brent, Earle Browne, Charles Butler, Bijou Fernandez, Samuel Forrest, William Harrigan, Edwin Holland, Helen Lindroth, William B. Mack, "Nell" Mabel Taliaferro, Alice Parke Warren. Produced by Frederic Thompson. .
- (1936) Stage Play: The Masque of Kings. Written by Maxwell Anderson. Directed by Philip Moeller. Shubert Theatre: 8 Feb 1936- Apr 1936 (closing date unknown/89 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Koinoff"), Edith Atwater, Wyrley Birch (as "Sceps"), Edward Broadley (as "Loschek"), Leo G. Carroll (as "Count Joseph Hoyos"), Pierre Chace, Dudley Digges (as "The Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria-Hungary"), Frank Downing, Bijou Fernandez (as "Marie"), Pauline Frederick (as "The Empress Elizabeth of Austria-Hungary"), Alan Hewitt, Charles Holden, Joseph Holland, John Hoyt (as "Baron von Neustadt") [credited as John Hoysradt], Henry Hull (as "The Crown Prince Rudolph of Austria-Hungary"), Henry Hull Jr., Catherine Lawrence, Margo (as "The Baroness Mary"), Vetsera Benjamin Otis, Hobart Skidmore, Barry O'Moore(as "Count Taafe"), Elizabeth Young. Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1937) Stage Play: I'd Rather Be Right. Musical comedy. Music by Richard Rodgers. Lyrics by Lorenz Hart. Material by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart. Material staged by George S. Kaufman. Modern dances staged by Ned McGurn. Choreographed by Charles Weidman. Alvin Theatre (moved to The Music Box Theatre from 23 May 1938- close): 2 Nov 1937- 9 Jul 1938 (290 performances). Cast: Joseph Allen Sr., David Allman, Florenz Ames (as "Henry B. Maxwell"), Al Atkins, Jack Barnes, Virginia Berger, Sol Black, Robert Bleck, Jeanette Bradley, Charles Bywater, Cecil Carey, Donald C. Carter, John Cherry, Ruth Clayton, George M. Cohan (as "The President of the United States"), Marie Louise Dana, Eleanor De Witt, Martin Fair, Bijou Fernandez (as "The Secretary of Labor"), Len Frank, Kate Frederic, John Fulco, Ralph Glover, Ruth Gormley, Joe Granville, Marion Green, Geraldine Hamilton, Edward Harrington, Joy Hodges (as "Peggy Jones"), Taylor Holmes, Robert Howard, Jay Hunter, Jack Kearney, Linda Kellogg, Georgette Lampsi, Jeanette Lee, Jack Leslie, Robert Less, Velma Lord, Joseph Macaulay, Lili Mann, William Marel, Austin Marshall, Irene McBride, Charles McLoughlin, John McQuade, Evelyn Mills, Jack Mills, Warren Mills, Marie Nash, Fred Nay, Austra Neiman, Paul Parks, Erminie Randolph, Jack Reynolds, Jane Richardson, Tina Rigat, Margaret Sande, Patsy Schenk, Betty Schlaffer, Clarise Sitomer, Bob Spencer, Emily Stephenson, Georgie Tapps, Beau Tilden, Norman Van Emburgh, Joe Verdi, Dorothy Waller, Mary Jane Walsh, Jack Whitney, Herbert Wood. Produced by Sam Harris. Note: The facts of this production were somewhat inaccurately depicted in Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942).
- (1954) Stage Play: The Prescott Proposals. Comedy. Written by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse. Directed by Howard Lindsay. Broadhurst Theatre: 16 Dec 1953- 3 Apr 1954 (125 performances). Cast: Katharine Cornell (as "Mary Prescott, U.N. Delegate from the United States"), Ben Astar, Felix Aylmer, Roger Dann, Minoo Daver, Lorne Greene (as "Elliott Clark"), Bartlett Robinson (as "John Capek, U.N. Delegate from Czechoslovakia"), Hubert Beck, Richard Bengali (as "Ensemble"), Ward Costello (as "Ensemble"), Robert Culp (as "Alan Draper, Press Attache"), Richard De Russo, Jan de Ruth, John Drew Devereaux, Bijou Fernandez (as "Ensemble"), Edward Groag, Sheppard Kerman, Emily Lawrence, John Leslie, Joe Masteroff, Helen Ray, Bernard Reines, Boris Tumarin, J.P. Wilson. Produced by Leland Hayward.
- (October 24, 1938) She acted in the George S. Kaufman, Moss Hart, Richard Rodgers, and Lorenz Hart's musical revue, "I'D Rather Be Right," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio with George M. Cohan (President); Marie Nash; Austin Marshall; Ralph Glover; Paul Parks; Taylor Holmes; Marion Green; Rene Giannone; Al Atkins; Robert Bleck; Jack Mills; Charles McLoughlin; Robert Less; John Cherry; Florenz Ames; Joseph Vitale; Georgie Tapps; Marie Louise Dana; Joseph Allen; Mary Jane Walsh; Lorraine Cater; Joe Verdi; Jack Reynolds; and Sol Black in the cast. Richard Rodgers was composer. Lorenz Hart was lyricist. Book by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart. George S. Kaufman was director. Sam H. Harris was producer.
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