- (1902 - 1930) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1904) Stage Play: Julius Caesar. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Herald Square Theatre: 1 Dec 1902- Jan 1903 (closing date unknown/50 performances). Produced by Richard Mansfield.
- (1904) Stage Play: Old Heidelberg. Based on "Alt Heidelberg" by Wilhelm Meyer-Foerster. Lyric Theatre: 12 Oct 1903- Nov 1903 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Richard Mansfield (as "Karl Heinrich"), A.G. Andrews, Vivian Bernard, H. Coleman, W.J. Constantine, Grace Elliston, Edward Fitzgerald, A.E. Greenaway, H.S. Hadfield, Leslie Kenyon, Francis McGinn, H. Neuman, William J. Sorelle, Ernest C. Warde, Henry Wenman, Annie Woods. Produced by Richard Mansfield.
- (1904) Stage Play: Ivan the Terrible. Tragedy. Written by Aleksei Tolstoy. Translated by Mme. S.R. DeMeissner. New Amsterdam Theatre: 1 Mar 1904- Mar 1904 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: A.G. Andrews, Vivian Bernard, Ludwig Brunswick, Hamilton Coleman, Ida Conquest, Laura Eyre, Edward Fitzgerald, Arthur Forrest, A.E. Greenaway, Mona Harrison, H. Hatfield, Alma Hathaway, Leslie Kenyon, Frank Kingdon, Henri Laurent, Richard Mansfield, Francis McGinn, Adelaide Nowak, Olive Oliver, W.T. Patron, Marcel Scrace, William Sorelle, Milano Cary Tilden, Ernest C. Warde, Henry Wenman. Produced by Richard Mansfield.
- (1905) Stage Play: Beau Brummell. (Revival/production played in repertory with "King Richard III", "Ivan the Terrible", "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde", "The Merchant of Venice", "A Parisian Romance"). New Amsterdam Theatre: 20 Mar 1905- 8 Apr 1905 (unknown performances). Cast: Dallas Anderson, A.G. Andrews, William Elliott, Edward Fitzgerald, Gertrude Gheen, Helen Glidden, Harry Hadfield [Broadway debut], J.A. Hafey, Alma Hathaway, Leslie Kenyon, Richard Mansfield, Francis D. McGinn, Irene Prahar, Julie Marie Taylor, Ernest C. Warde, Henry Wenman. Produced by Richard Mansfield Repertory.
- (1905) Stage Play: The Misanthrope. Comedy. Written by Molière. New Amsterdam Theatre: 10 Apr 1905- 15 Apr 1905 (8 performances). Cast: Dallas Anderson, A.G. Andrews, Eleanor Barry, Vivian Bernard, Arthur Bethelet, Paul Case, Hamilton Coleman, William Elliott, Edward Fitzgerald, Gertrude Gheen, Helen Glidden, Harry Hadfield, J.A. Hafey, Harold Hancock, Alma Hathaway, Leslie Kenyon, Margaret Kilroy, Edward Lewers, L.E. Lewisson, T.J. Lilley, Emily Macpherson, Richard Mansfield (as "Alceste, in love with Célimène"), Frank Maples, Francis D. McGinn, Thomas Mills, Leona Mowers, Mildred Norris, W.J. Patron, Irene Prahar, Julie Marie Taylor, Robert Wagner, Ernest C. Warde, Henry Wenman. Produced by Richard Mansfield Repertory.
- (1906) Stage Play: Beau Brummell. (Revival). Written by Clyde Fitch. New Amsterdam Theatre: 19 Mar 1906- 7 Apr 1906 (unknown performances/played in repertory with King Richard III, Ivan the Terrible, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The Merchant of Venice, A Parisian Romance, Don Carlos, The Scarlet Letter). Cast: A.G. Andrews, Eleanor Barry, Vivian Bernard, Sheridan Block, Clarence Handyside, Alma Hathaway, Wallie Howe, Leslie Kenyon, Margaret Kilroy, Richard Mansfield, Sydney Mather, Thomas Mills, Florence Rockwell, Ernest C. Warde, Henry Wenman. Produced by Richard Mansfield Repertory.
- (1907) Stage Play: Peer Gynt. Drama. Written by Henrik Ibsen. Translated by William Archer and Charles Archer. New Amsterdam Theatre: 25 Feb 1907- 23 Mar 1907 (22 performances). Cast: David T. Arrey, Vivian Bernard, James L. Carhart, Sydney Cowell, Ruby Craven, Ory Diamond, Emma Dunn (as "Aase, a Peasant Widow"), Arthur Forrest, Gertrude Gheen, Hugh Hancock, Wallie Howe, Isabel Howell, Frank Kingdon, Adele Klaer, Marguerite Lindsay, Evelyn Loomis, Cecil Magnus, Richard Mansfield (as "Peer Gynt, Her Son"), Marc McDermott, George McDonald, Gordon Mendelssohn, James Newman, Adelaide Nowak (as "Solveig"), Alice Parks Warren, Irene Prahar (as "Anitra"), Frank Reynolds, Arthur Row, S.B. Stoddard, Olive Temple, Louis Thomas, Lawrence C. Toole, Muriel Walling, Ernest C. Warde, Henry Wenman. Produced by Richard Mansfield Repertory.
- (1909) Stage Play: Septimus.
- (1910) Stage Play: The Little Damozel. Comedy.
- (1911) Stage Play: Everywoman (Her Pilgrimage in Quest of Love). Music by George Whitefield Chadwick. A Morality Tale written by Walter Browne. Musical Director: Hugo Frey. Directed by George F. Marion. Herald Square Theatre (moved to The Lyric Theatre from 29 May 1911- 1 Jul 1911, then moved to The Herald Square Theatre from 19 Feb 1912 to close): 27 Feb 1911- 23 Mar 1912 (189 performances). Cast: Jean Barrett, Wilda Bennett, Vivian Blackburn, Rue Brown, Grace Calve, William Calvin, Charlotte Carter, H. Cooper Cliffe, Patricia Collinge (as "Youth"), Juliet Day, Frederic De Belleville, David Estoclet, Marjorie Fitch, Eleanor Flowers, Richard Fuller, Suzette Gordon, Laura Nelson Hall, Stella Hammerstein, Charles Hayne, Sydney Jarvis, Kathleen Kerrigan, Alice Kline, Frank Lacy, Sarah Cowell Le Moyne (as "Truth"), Richard Lee, Edward MacKay, Barry Maxwell, Betty Murdoch, Hubert Osborne (as "Witless"), Aurora Pratt [erroneously credited as Aurora Piatt], Detmar Poppen, Edna Porter, John L. Shine, Henry Wenman (as "Bluff"), McIntyre Wickstead. Produced by Henry W. Savage. Note: Filmed by Paramount Pictures as Everywoman (1919), starring Bebe Daniels in one of her first featured roles after leaving Harold Lloyd's shorts.
- (1929) Stage Play: Journey's End. Drama. Written by R.C. Sherriff. Scenic Design by James Whale. Directed by James Whale [earliest Broadway credit]. Henry Miller's Theatre: 22 Mar 1929- 17 May 1930 (485 performances). Cast: Sol Douday (as "German Soldier"), Jack Hawkins (as "2nd Lieut. Hibbert") [Broadway debut], Colin Keith-Johnston (as "Captain Stanhope") [Broadway debut], Leon Quartermaine (as "Lieut. Osborne"), Evelyn Roberts (as "Captain Hardy"), Sidney Seaward (as "Sergeant Major"), Eric Stanley (as "Colonel"), Victor Stanley (as "Private Mason"), Henry Wenman (as "2nd Lieut. Trotter") [final Broadway role], Derek Williams (as "2nd Lieut. Raleigh"). Produced by Gilbert Miller. Produced by arrangement with Maurice Browne.
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