- (1910 - 1933) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1910) Stage Play: A Son of the People.
- (1919) Stage Play: Abraham Lincoln. Historical drama.
- (1923) Stage Play: Robert E. Lee. Historical drama.
- (1924) Stage Play: Catskill Dutch. Drama. Written by Roscoe Brink. Belmont Theatre: 6 May 1924- May 1924 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Ada Barbour (as "Mait Meyers"), Frederic Burt (as "Brammy Wolleben"), Evelyn Carrington (as "Viney Fronce"), Ann Davis (as "Neelia-Anne"), Minnie Dupree (as "Sait Wolleben"), William Hasson (as "Deacon Mauny Tenneych"), David Landau (as "Elder Shauny Fronce"), Willard Mac Hargue (as "Jacob Onderdonk"), Kenneth MacKenna (as "Peetcha"), Frank McGlynn (as "Case Steenkoop"), William R. Randall (as "Deacon Ikey Meyers"), Helen Reimer (as "Irey's-Anne"), Dorothy Sands (as "Nautcha Tenneych"), Adele Schuyler (as "Charity Logendyke"), Helen Tower (as "Naomi Van Kill"), Louis Wolheim (as "Cobby"). Produced by Richard Herndon.
- (1924) Stage Play: That Awful Mrs. Eaton. Drama. Written by John Farrar and Stephen Vincent Benet. Morosco Theatre: 29 Sep 1924- Oct 1924 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Cordelia Howard Aiken (as "Mrs. John Quincy Adams"), Katharine Alexander (as "Peggy O'Neal Eaton"), Mary Allen (as "Dolly Madison"), Frank Andrews (as "Mordecai Noah/John Branch, Secretary of the Navy"), Margaret Armstrong (as "Mrs. Everett"), Lee Beggs (as "Daniel Webster") [Broadway debut], James A. Bliss (as "U.S. Senator Peleg Sprague"), Joyce Borden (as "Emily Donelson"), Laura Brittan (as "Mrs. Henry Clay"), Herbert Bunston (as "Sir Charles Vaughan, British Ambassador"), Ulric Blair Collins (as "Duff Green"), Henry Crosby (as "Colonel Towson"), Harry Davies (as "Major-General Alexander Macomb"), H.G. Emerson (as "Samuel D. Ingham, Secretary of Treasury"), Franklyn Fox (as "Richard Hibson"), Elmer Grandin (as "John C. Calhoun"), Virginia Howell (as "Mrs. Sprague"), Margot Lester (as "Mary Vaughan"), Kirah Markham (as "Mrs. Daniel Webster"), Frank McGlynn (as "Andrew Jackson"), Isabel O'Madigan (as "Mrs. John C. Calhoun"), Ernest E. Pollock (as "John McPherson Berrien, Attorney General"), William R. Randall (as "John Henry Eaton, Secretary of War"), Mary Ellen Ryan (as "Mrs. Hibson"), Lota Sanders (as "Mrs. Branch"), Clifford Sellers (as "Mrs. Ingham"), Mary Taylor (as "Mrs. Berrien"), Lou Turner (as "William Taylor Barry, Postmaster General"), Minor Watson (as "Major William B. Taylor"), Robert Wayne (as "Martin Van Buren, Secretary of State"), Thomas H. Wenning (as "Commodore John Rodgers"), William Walcott [erroneously credited as William Wolcott] (as "Dr. Campbell"), Walter Young (as "Jim"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1926) Stage Play: Black Cockatoo. Melodrama.
- (1927) Stage Play: The Road to Rome. Written by Robert E. Sherwood. Directed by Lester Lonergan. Playhouse Theatre: 31 Jan 1927- Jan 1928 (closing date unknown/392 performances). Cast: Charles Brokaw (as "Scipio"), Fairfax Burger (as "Varius"), Joyce Carey, Jane Cowl (as "Amytis"), Louis Hector (as "Hasdrubal"), Lionel Hogarth (as "Sertorius/Thotmes"), Barry Jones, Walter Kinsella (as "Third Guard"), Ben Lackland (as "Second Guard"), Richie Ling (as "Fabius"), Lewis Martin, Jock McGraw, John McNulty, Peter Meade, Philip Merivale (as "Hannibal"), Harold Moffet (as "Carthalo"), Clement O'Loghlen, William Pearce, Gert Pouncy, Jessie Ralph (as "Fabia"), William R. Randall (as "Drusus"), Alfred Webster. Produced by William A. Brady and Dwight Wiman. Theatrical trivia: The Playhouse Theatre was a 865 seat venue at 137 W 48th Street, NY. Built by William A. Brady, it opened in 1911. It was sold upon Mr. Brady's retirement as a producer to the Shuberts in 1944. ABC leased it from them from 1949-52, using it as a radio station. It was demolished in 1969 and incorporated as part of Rockefeller Center.
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