- (1910 - 1932) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1910) Stage Play: Pomander Walk. Drama. Written by Louis N. Parker. Wallack's Theatre: 20 Dec 1910- Apr 1911 (closing date unknown/143 performances). Cast: Marie Burke, Sybil Carlisle, Reginald Dance, Harriet Davis, Winifred Fraser, George Giddens, Edgar Kent, Stanley Lathbury, Helen Leyton, Dorothy Parker (as "Marjolaine Lachesnais"), Lennox Pawle (as "Jerome Brooke-Hoskyn") [Broadway debut], Thomas Wigney Percyval (as "Rev. Jacob Sterroyd"), Margaret Phillips, S.N. Price, Cicely Richards, Yorke Stephens. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Girl from Montmartre. Musical/farce. Material by Harry B. Smith and Robert B. Smith. Music by Henri Bereny. Lyrics by Harry B. Smith and Robert B. Smith. Additional music by Jerome Kern. Adapted from the French farce "La Dame de chez Maxim" by Georges Feydeau. Based on a French operetta "Das Madel von Montmarte" by Rudolph Schanzer. Additional music by Howard Talbot, Lionel Monckton and Franz Wagner. Additional lyrics by M.E. Rourke, Clifford Harris, Arthur Wimperis, John Golden and Percy Greenbank. Musical Director: Harold Vicars. Directed by Thomas Reynolds. Criterion Theatre (on hiatus from 29 Sep 1912 to 6 Apr 1913 then moved to The Grand Opera House from 7 Apr 1913 to close): 5 Aug 1912- Apr 1913 (closing date unknown/72 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Grace Beaumont, Natalie Burr, Audrey Burr, Audrey Burton, Richard Carle, Alice Carrington, Frances Carter, George T. Chance, Maud Clare, Katherine Daly, William Danforth (as "Dr. Brumage"), Lillian Davis, Louise Donovan, Clara Eckstrom, Merceita Esmonde, Dolly Filly, Hazel Flint, Mary Gilmore, Jeanette Greene, John Hamilton, Al Hart, Viola Harty, Bertha Holly, Ida Howe, Percy F. Leach, Lela Lee, Helene Lucas, George Lydecker, George R. Lynch, Moya Mannering, Marion Miller, Alan Mudie, Ralph Nairn, Lennox Pawle, Lillian Rice, Marie Rose, Cissie Sewell, May Sheldon, Joseph C. Smith, Geraldine Taylor, Hazel Troutman, Dai Turgeon, Angie Weimers, Hattie Williams, Trixie Wilson. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1913) Stage Play: Liberty Hall (Revival). Written by R.C. Carton. Empire Theatre: 11 Mar 1913- Apr 1913 (closing date unknown/39 performances). Cast: Emily Dodd, Wilfred Draycott, John Dugan, Ada Dwyer, Martha Hedman, Sidney Herbert, Charlotte Ives, Julian L'Estrange, Willis Martin, John Mason, Lennox Pawle, Thomas Wigney Percyval. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1913) Stage Play: Beauty and the Barge. Written by Louis N. Parker and W.W. Jacobs. Wallack's Theatre: 13 Nov 1913- Nov 1913 (closing date unknown/6 performances). Cast: Emma Chambers, Edward Combermere, Arthur Curtis, James Dale, Stanley H. Groome, David Hallam, Lena Halliday, Ruby Hallier, John Harwood, Jack Hobbs, Montagu Love, Cyril Maude, Margery Maude, Mary Merrall, Hunter Nesbitt, Lennox Pawle, Joseph Sims, R.P. Young. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1913) Stage Play: Grumpy. Written by Horace Hodges and Thomas Wigney Percyval. Directed by Thomas Wigney Percyval. Wallack's Theatre: 19 Nov 1913- Apr 1914 (closing date unknown/181 performances). Cast: Maud Andrew, Edward Combermere, Arthur Curtis, James Dale, Lena Halliday, John Harwood, Montagu Love, Cyril Maude, Margery Maude, Hunter Nesbitt, Lennox Pawle, Percival Young. Produced by Liebler & Co. Note: Filmed by Famous Players-Lasky [later known as Paramount Pictures] as Grumpy (1923).
- (1919) Stage Play: Monsieur Beaucaire. Musical/opera.
- (1922) Stage Play: Marjolaine. Musical.
- (1923) Stage Play: Jack and Jill. Musical comedy.
- (1923) Stage Play: The Mountebank. Written by William J. Locke [final Broadway credit] and Ernest Denny [final Broadway credit]. Directed by David Burton. Lyceum Theatre: 7 May 1923- Jun 1923 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: F. Cecil Butler (as "Parker"), Marjorie Chard (as "Lady Verity-Stewart"), Lillian Kemble Cooper (as "Lady Auriol Dayne"), Louis La Bey (as "Gustave"), Lennox Pawle (as "Horatio Bakkus"), T. Wigney Percyval (as "Anthony Hylton"), Gabrielle Ravine (as "Elodie"), Charles Romano (as "Harry Verity-Stewart"), Nora Swinburne (as "Evadne"), Norman Trevor (as "Andrew Lackaday, Petit Patou"). Produced by Charles Frohman Inc. Note: Filmed by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as The Side Show of Life (1924).
- (1923) Stage Play: Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary. Comedy. Written by St. John Ervine. Scenic Design by Ernest Gros. Lighting Design by Louis Hartman. Directed by David Belasco. Belasco Theatre: 11 Sep 1923- Nov 1923 (closing date unknown/86 performances). Cast: Gladys Burgess (as "Ellen"), Audrey Cameron ("Jenny"), Orlando Daly (as "Rev. Canon Peter Considine, M.A."), Florence Edney (as "Miss Mimms"), Mrs. Fiske (as "Mary Westlake"), Winifred Fraser (as "Mrs. Considine"), A.P. Kaye (as "Mr. Hobbs"), Naoe Kondo (as "Tori"), Francis Lister(as "Geoffrey"), Lennox Pawle (as "Mr. Beeby"), C. Aubrey Smith (as "Sir Henry Considine, K.C.M.G."), Nora Swinburne (as "Sheila"). Produced by David Belasco. Produced by arrangement with Harrison Grey Fiske.
- (1924) Stage Play: The Werewolf. Comedy. Written by Gladys Unger, from the original by Rudolph Lothar. 49th Street Theatre: 25 Aug 1924- Dec 1924 (closing date unknown/112 performances). Cast: Marion Coakley, Laura Hope Crews (as "Duchess of Capablanca"), Gaby Fleury, Leslie Howard (as "Paolo Moreira"), Ruth Mitchell, Edwin Nicander (as "Florencio De Viana"), Lennox Pawle (as "Eliphas Leone"), Sydney Paxton, Vincent Serrano. Produced by George B. McLellan.
- (1924) Stage Play: The Harem. Comedy. Written by Ernest Vajda. Book adapted by Avery Hopwood. Directed by David Belasco. Belasco Theatre: 2 Dec 1924- May 1925 (closing date unknown/183 performances). Cast: Arthur Bowyer, William Courtenay, Robert Fischer, Virginia Hammond, Lennox Pawle (as "Petri"), Lenore Ulric (as "Carla"), Marjorie Vonnegut. Produced by David Belasco.
- (1927) Stage Play: The Matrimonial Bed. Written by Seymour Hicks. Based on the French of T. Mirande and Mouesy-Eon. Directed by Bertram Harrison. Ambassador Theatre: 12 Oct 1927- Oct 1927 (clocing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: Clay Clement (as "Doctor Baudin"), Amy Dennis (as "The Nurse"), John Hendricks (as "A Workman"), Kenneth Hill (as "Gustave Corton"), Winifred Kingston (as "Juliette Corton"), John T. Murray (as "Adolph Noblet"), Vivien Oakland (as "Sylvaine Jaimet"), Lee Patrick (as "Juliette Corton"), Lennox Pawle (as "Auguste Chabbonais"), Kay Strozzi (as "Suzanne Trebel"), Fred Sutton (as "Gendarme"), May Vokes (as "Corinne"). Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1928) Stage Play: Mima. Written by David Belasco. From "The Red Mill" by Ferenc Molnár. Directed by David Belasco. Belasco Theatre: 12 Dec 1928- May 1929 (closing date unknown/180 performances). Cast: Eduardo Abdo (as "Alichino, Devils, The Laboratory of Magister"), A.E. Anson (as "Magister, Devils, The Laboratory of Magister"), Najeeb Assaf (as "A Parisian Merchant, Baccarat Scene"), Eva Barcay (as "A French Noblewoman, Baccarat Scene"), Philip Bishop (as "The School Master, Human Being"), Sidney Blackmer (as "Janos, Human Being"), William Boag (as "A Member of Parliament, Human Being"), Lionel Braham (as "Rubicante, Devils, The Laboratory of Magister"), Romaine Callender [credited as A. Romaine Callender] (as "Malacoda, Devils, The Laboratory of Magister"), Reginald Carrington (as "His Majesty, King of Hell, Satan and His Court"), Norman Constantin (as "Fourth Arch-Devil, Satan and His Court"), Armand Cortes (as "A Croupier, Baccarat Scene"), W. Gordon Craig (as "Fifth Arch-Devil, Satan and His Court"), Ruth Dayton (as "Palmyra, Human Being"), Eugene Donovan (as "The Poet, Human Being"), Andre Dumont (as "A Gendarme, Monte Carlo Scene"), Jane Ferrell (as "The Maid, Manikins/An Old Woman Selling Newspapers, Monte Carlo Scene"), Myra Florian (as "A Cocotte, Monte Carlo Scene"), Dwight Frye (as "Alfons, Manikins"), George Gardon (as "First Arch-Devil, Satan and His Court"), Vivienne Giesen (as "Ilonka, Human Being"), Florence Golden (as "A Princess, Baccarat Scene"), Kitty Gray (as "Vocal Soloist, Cabaret Scene"), Alan Hale (as "Farfarello, Devils, The Laboratory of Magister"), Charlcie Hedge (as "A Banker's Wife, Baccarat Scene"), Arthur Stuart Hull (as "The Husband, Manikins"), Jerome Jordan (as "Cagnazzo, Devils, The Laboratory of Magister"), Madeleine King (as "Etel, Human Being"), Richard Lambart (as "Libicocco, Devils, The Laboratory of Magister"), Frank Lengel (as "Barbariccia, Devils, The Laboratory of Magister"), Arthur MacArthur (as "Scarmiglione, Devils, The Laboratory of Magister"), Schuyler MacGuffin (as "Calcabrina, Devils, The Laboratory of Magister"), Charles H. Martin (as "The Prime Minister, Charles H. Martin"), Jah Misko (as "A Gypsy Fiddler, Cabaret Scene"), Fred Nelson (as "Green Imp, Devils, The Laboratory of Magister"), Logan Paul (as "An Old Gambler, Manikins"), Lennox Pawle (as "The Adjutant, Satan and His Court"), Ben Probst (as "Second Arch-Devil, Satan and His Court"), Frederick Raymond (as "Sixth Arch-Devil, Satan and His Court"), George Ryan (as "A Young Gambler, Manikins"), Anthony J. Sansome (as "Draghignazzo, Devils, The Laboratory of Magister"), Harold Seton (as "Secretary to the Adjutant, Satan and His Court"), Loretto Shea (as "A Rich Heiress, Baccarat Scene"), Maurice Sturez (as "An Ogling Man, Manikins"), Bernard Sussman (as "A Letter-Carrier, Baccarat Scene"), Douglas F. Swanson (as "Chief Stoker, Devils, The Laboratory of Magister"), Lenore Ulric (as "Mima, Manikins"), Kraft Walton (as "Third Arch-Devil, Satan and His Court"), Helen Withers (as "A Woman with a Lorgnette, Baccarat Scene"), H. Percy Woodley (as "M. Topandy, Monte Carlo Scene/A Waiter, Cabaret Scene"), Ali Ilma Yousoff (as "His Serene Highness, Cabaret Scene"). Produced by David Belasco.
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