- Novel: "Edward Dempsey".
- (1925) Stage: Wrote (w/LeRoy Clemens) "Alias the Deacon", produced on Broadway Comedy. 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 A. Kennedy (credited as 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).
- Playwright: "The Hurdy-Gurdy Man".
- (1927) Stage: Wrote (w/Samuel Shipman) "Crime", produced on Broadway. Melodrama. Directed by A.H. Van Buren. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 22 Feb 1927-Aug 1927 (closing date unknown/186 performances). Cast: Carol Baldwin, Barbara Barondess, Elwood Fleet Bostwick (as "Insp. McGuiness"), William Boulias, Neil Bridges, Delancey Cleveland, Marie Cole, Claude Cooper, Josephine Deffry, Cleve Delland, Katharine Francis, Spurr K. Gould, Walter D. Greene, R.H. Irving, Kay Johnson, Eddie Kelly, Jack La Rue (as "Spud"), Michael Markham, Charles P. Mather, Earle Mayne, Douglass Montgomery (as "Tommy Brown"), Chester Morris (as "Rocky Morse"), John O'Meara, Marvin Oreck, Walter Powers, Irving Rapper, James Rennie, Jess Romer, Clifton Self, Phillip M. Sheridan, Sylvia Sidney (as "Annabelle Porter"), Mary Smith, Jack Thomson, John Ward, Gustav Yorke. Produced by A.H. Woods. NOTE: Filmed as Law of the Underworld (1938), The Pay-Off (1930).
- (1928) Stage: Wrote (with Samuel Shipman) "Fast Life", produced on Broadway. Melodrama. Directed by A.H. Van Buren. Ambassador Theatre: 26 Sep 1928-Oct 1928 (closing date unknown/21 performances). Cast: C. Edwin Brandt, John Burch, Irene Cattell (as "Christina Johnson"), Goo Chong, Jean Clarendon, Claudette Colbert (as "Patricia Mason"), Donald Dillaway, Frederick Earle, Frank Graham, Vincent Gulliver, Frank Howson (as "Clyde Turner"), Thomas Irwin, Donald McClelland, Frank B. Miller, Adrian Morris, Chester Morris (as "Chester Palmer"), William Morris, Dorothy Payne, Frank Reyman, Wells Richardson, Muriel Robinson, Anne Tarnoff, Robert Toms, Walter Tyrrell, Crane Wilbur (as "Bradford Palmer"), Mabel Williams, Paul Wilson. Produced by A.H. Woods.
- Playwright: "East Is West" (filmed as East Is West (1922)).
- (5/21/26-8/26) Stage: Wrote (w/'Leroy Clemens') "Aloma". Performed at the Adelphi Theatre in London, England, with Vivienne Osborne, Francis Lister, Clay Clement, Mary Barton, Jack Raine, Allan Jeayes, Margaret Yarde, H. St. Barbe, Muriel Alexander and W. Cronin Wilson in the cast. NOTE: Filmed as Aloma of the South Seas (1941), Aloma of the South Seas (1926), Aroma of the South Seas (1931).
- Playwright: "Scarlet Pages" (filmed as Scarlet Pages (1930)).
- Story: Wrote (w/Samuel Shipman) "The Lost Game" (filmed as Law of the Underworld (1938)).
- (1925) Stage Play: Aloma of the South Seas. Drama. Written by John B. Hymer and LeRoy Clemens. Directed by A.H. Van Buren. Lyric Theatre: 20 Apr 1925- Jun 1925 (closing date unknown/66 performances). Cast: Korola Alleneve (as "Nahoma"), Marion Barney (as "Mrs. Ridgley"), Arthur Barry (as "Sumner Ridgley"), Lola De Rome (as "Moana"), Dorotha Denise (as "Unola"), William Gargan (as "Boano") [Broadway debut], George Gaul (as "Nuitane"), Walter Glass (as "Shorty"), Richard Gordon (as "Van Templeton"), Denis Gurney (as "Reginald Ridgley"), Penelope Hubbard (as "Taula"), Ben Johnson (as "Andy Taylor"), Priscilla Knowles (as "Hina"), Andrea McKinnon (as "Luana"), Anne Morrison (as "Sylvia Templeton"), Vivienne Osborne (as "Aloma"), Al. Roberts (as "Hongi"), Frank M. Thomas (as "Bob Holden"), Arthur Vinton (as "Red Malloy"). Produced by Carl Reed. Note: Filmed by Famous Players-Lasky (Later Paramount Pictures) as Aloma of the South Seas (1926), and by Paramount Pictures as Aloma of the South Seas (1941).
- (1932) Stage Play: Happy Landing. Written by John B. Hymer and William E. Barry. Directed by Lawrence Marston. Chanin's 46th Street Theatre: 26 Mar 1932- Apr 1932 (closing date unknown/26 performances). Cast: Harold Bolton (as "Reporter"), John Butler (as "Hal Herndon"), William Carey (as "Charles Stevens"), Anne Carpenger (as "Miss Bond"), Lenore Chippendale (as "Mrs. Thomas W. Dumont"), Griffin Crafts (as "Caso"), Harry Davenport (as "George Stebbins"), William David (as "Russell Whiting"), Randolph Hale (as "Reporter"), Russell Hardie (as "Blin Gardner"), Harold Heaton (as "Robert Willis Granville"), Lady Justine Jordan (as "Reporter"), Nolan Leary (as "Radio Announcer/Mr. Knobb"), Pierre Mario (as "Carvello"), Boris Nicholai (as "Bellboy"), Catherine Dale Owen (as "Norma Landis") [final Broadway role], John Parrish (as "Ira Thompson"), Edwin Redding (as "Sam Taylor"), Thomas Reynolds (as "Major Green"), Charles A. Richards (as "Reporter"), Rene Roberti (as "Luigi Cerrino"), Margaret Sullavan (as "Phyllis Blair"), Banfield Taylor (as "News Cameraman/Mr. Platt"), Tom Tempest (as "Hennesey"), Marjorie Wood (as "Miss Crawford"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (February 13, 1922) His play, "East is West," was performed at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio with Fay Bainter in the cast.
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