- (1889) Produced (earliest Broadway credit) "After Dark" on Broadway. Melodrama (revival). People's Theatre: 20 May 1889-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown.
- (1896) Stage: Produced "Under the Polar Star" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Clay M. Greene. Revised by David Belasco. Academy of Music: 20 Aug 1896-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Francis Carlyle (as "Harry Carleton"), Cuyler Hastings (as "William Brandon"), Grace Henderson (as "Helen Blaine"), Charles Kent (as "Silas Rodman").
- (1896) Stage: Produced "Roaring Dick & Co." on Broadway. Drama. Written by Maurice Barrymore (also in cast). Palmer's Theatre: 16 Nov 1896-unknown (unknown performances).
- (1896) Stage: Produced "The Naval Cadet" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Charles T. Vincent. Directed by McKee Rankin. Grand Opera House: 30 Nov 1896-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: James J. Corbett.
- (1898) Stage: Co-produced (w/Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.) "Way Down East" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by Lottie Blair Parker [earliest Broadway credit]. Revised by Joseph R. Grismer. Manhattan Theatre: 7 Feb 1898-Jun 1898 (closing date unknown/152 performances). Cast: Phoebe Davies (as "Anna Moore"), Howard Kyle (as "David Bartlett, Son of Squire and Louisa Bartlett"), Odell Williams (as "Squire Amassa Bartlett"), Ella Hugh Wood. NOTE: Filmed as Way Down East (1908), Way Down East (1914), Way Down East (1920), Way Down East (1935).
- (1898) Stage: Co-produced (w/Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.) "The Turtle" on Broadway. Farce. Written by Léon Gandillot. Book adapted by Joseph Herbert. Manhattan Theatre: 3 Sep 1898-closing date unknown (performances unknown). Cast: W.J. Ferguson, Grace George [Broadway debut], Sadie Martinot.
- (1899) Stage: Co-produced (w/Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.) "Mlle. Fifi" on Broadway. Farce. Translated by Leo Ditrichstein. Written by Dumanoir & Carre. Manhattan Theatre: 1 Feb 1899-closing date unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Louise Beaudet (as "Mlle. Fifi"; Broadway debut), Aubrey Boucicault, Rose Coghlan, Grace George.
- (1899) Stage: Co-produced (w/Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.) "The Manicure" on Broadway. Musical/farce. Written by Artus and Sylvane. Book adapted by Joseph R. Grismer. Manhattan Theatre: 24 Apr 1899-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown.\
- (1899) Stage: Produced "'Round New York in 80 Minutes" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Book by James T. Waldron and Edward Fales Coward. Original / Selected Music by Edward E. Rice and John J. Braham. Lyrics by J. Cheever Goodwin. Koster and Bial's Music Hall (moved to The Star Theatre from 19 Feb 1900-close): 6 Nov 1899-24 Feb 1900 (50 performances). Cast: Unknown.
- (1900) Stage: Produced (w/Joseph R. Grismer) "Aunt Hannah" on Broadway. Musical/farce. Music by A. Baldwin Sloane. Book by Matthew J. Royal. Lyrics by Clay M. Greene. Assistant Director: Kirtland Calhoun. Directed by Joseph R. Grismer. Bijou Theatre: 22 Feb 1900-10 Mar 1900 (21 performances). Cast: Bella Bucklin (as "Martha"), John Bunny (as "Grosvenor Montmorenci"; Broadway debut), Nellie Burbank (as "Phillie"), Charles W. Butler (as "Grimes"), Leth Collins (as "Tottie"), Catherine Douglas (as "Tillie"), Agnes Findlay (as "Aunt Hannah"), Molly Fuller (as "Polly Madden"), Bobby Gaylor (as "Mike McCarty"), Frederick Hallen (as "Jack Hammersley"), Louise Hilton (as "Mary"), Harriet Kendall (as "Ottie"), Louise Lehman (as "Nora"), Caro Gordon Leigh (as "Evelyn"), Maud Morrison (as "Lottie"), Catherine Robinson (as "Dottie"), Bud Ross (as "Jim Madden"), Anna Williamson (as "Lillie"), M. Zabelle (as "Lillie").
- (1900) Stage: Produced "The Weather Hen" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Bente Thomas and Harley Granville-Barker. Manhattan Theatre: 13 Apr 1900 (1 performance). Cast: George Backus, Frank Bell, John Bunny, M. Converse, J.H. Davies, W.T. (William) Ellwanger, Felix Haney, Harold Hartsell, Sylvia Lyndon, George Probert, Mabel Strickland, Ella Hugh Wood.
- (1900) Stage: Produced "Her Majesty, the Girl Queen of Nordenmark" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by J.I.C. Clarke, from a novel by Elizabeth Tompkins. Directed by Frank Hatch (also in cast). Manhattan Theatre: 15 Oct 1900-Dec 1900 (closing date unknown/58 performances). Cast included: May Arthur, Isabelle Bowman, George Conklin, Frazer Coulter, Fernanda Eliscu, Alfred Garland, Grace George, Emil Hoch, P. James, Louise Lloyd, Agnes Marks, Agnes McCarthy, Thomas Meighan, Samuel Michaelson, Annie Mifflin, William Murchison, George Osbourne, Bert W. Parmeter, George Pauncefort [Broadway debut], Louis Payne, Morton Selten [credited as Morton Selton], T. Troy, Marion Walsh, Frank Worthing.
- (1901) Stage: Produced "Lover's Lane" on Broadway. Drama. Written / directed by Clyde Fitch. Manhattan Theatre (moved to The Theatre Republic from 20 Apr 1901 to close): 6 Feb 1901-May 1901 (closing date unknown/127 performances). Cast: Julian Barton, William Betts, Nannette Comstock (as "Mary Larkin"), Lizzie Conway, James Coyle, Brandon Douglas (as "Mrs. Woodbridge"), Agnes Findlay, Master Herbert Halliday, Ernest Hastings (as "Rev. Singleton"), Frank Hatch, Millie James, Lillian Lee, Annie Mifflin, Edward J. Ratcliffe (as "Herbert Woodbridge"), Master Jack Ryan, Zelda Sears, Lillian Sinnott, Rachel Sterling, L.R. Stockwell, Sadie Stringham, Charles W. Swain, Emily Wakeman.
- (1901) Stage: Produced "Uncle Tom's Cabin" on Broadway. Melodrama (revival). Written by Harriet Beecher Stowe, based on her novel. Academy of Music: 4 Apr 1901-Jun 1901 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Mabel Amber, Earle Brown, Alice Evans, William Fredericks, William Harcourt, Wilton Lackaye, Dora Lane, Georgia Florence Olp, Maud Raymond, Emily Rigl, Theodore Roberts, Mortimer Snow, Arthur Sprague, L.R. Stockwell, Odell Williams, Annie Yeamans.
- (1901) Stage: Produced "Under Southern Skies" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by Lottie Blair Parker. Theatre Republic: 12 Nov 1901-Jan 1902 (closing date unknown/71 performances). Cast: Grace George (as "Leila Crofton"), Beatrice Bonner, Thomas Burns, Justine Cutting [Broadway debut], Roza Durant Da Porte, Cuyler Hastings, Grace Henderson, Laura Lemmers, Burr McIntosh, Donald McLaren, Vess Osman, Maude Reindollar, George C. Staley, Ralph Stuart, Minnie Victorson. NOTE: Filmed as Under Southern Skies (1915).
- (1902) Stage: Produced "Foxy Grandpa" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Music / lyrics by Joseph Hart. Book by / directed by Melville Baker. Based on the comic strip by Carl E. Schultze. Musical Director / Musical Orchestrated by William H. Batchelor. Haverly's 14th Street Theatre: 17 Feb 1902-31 May 1902 (125 performances). Cast: Gertrude Arden (as "Elsa Vane"), Dorothy Armington (as "Millie Love"), J.R. Armstrong (as "Horace Goodman"), Bobbie Barry (as "Bunt"), Charles H. Bates (as "Hank" / "Pietro"), Arthur Borani (as "Weary Waggles"), Helen Chadwick (as "Lucy Snap"), Clifton Crawford (as "Jack Richman"), Carrie De Mar (as "Polly Bright"), Fleurette De Mar (as "Dorothy Goodman"), Mabel Dwight (as "Charlotte Fuller"), Marie Franklin (as "Dolly Munn"), Fred Haines (as "Henry Wilson"), Joseph Hart (as "Goodelby Goodman"), Eula Jordan (as "Mary Sweet"), John Keefe (as "Hiram Hopper"), Margaret Knight (as "Jallma" / "Agnes Ward"), Beatrice Lieb (as "Signorina Colonna"), Loretta Long (as "Betty Moore"), George E. Mack (as "Chub"; Broadway debut), Louise Moore (as "Millicent"), Minnie Packard (as "Daisy Deane"), Grace Pomeroy (as "Violet Young"), Eugene Redding (as "Signor Bolero"), Judith Shaw (as "Ethel Hunt"), Maurice Stone (as "Bob Summers" / "Michello"), E.F. Van Rennselear (as "Nelson Stone"), Charles Wilson (as "Tom Walker"), Florence Worden (as "Mildred Winters"), Bert Young (as "Dan Harper" / "Giorgio").
- (1902) Stage: Produced "Frou-Frou" on Broadway (revival). Written by Henri Meilhac. Adapted by Victorien Sardou. Garrick Theatre: 5 Jun 1902-Jun 1902 (closing date unknown/4 performances). Cast: Grace George (as "Gilberte"), Henry Bergman, Herbert Carr, Arthur Ebbets, Cuyler Hastings, Grace Henderson, Selene Johnson, Laura Lemmers, Donald MacLaren.
- (1903) Stage: Produced "Pretty Peggy" on Broadway. Drama [return engagement]. Written by Frances Aymar Mathews. Hoyt's Theatre: 5 Oct 1903-Nov 1903 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Bernard A. Reinold (credited as Adolph Bernard; Broadway debut), Grace George (as "Peg Woffington"), Ruth Holt, Frances Leigh, Donald MacLaren, Victor Manley, Addison March, Henry March, Margaret Mayo, Vincent Serrano, Fred G. Swift, George Sylvester, Annie Ward Tiffany, Miss Tucker, Albert J. Tucker, Lyman Tucker, Burt Tucman.
- (1903) Stage: Produced "Way Down East" on Broadway (revival). Written by Lottie Blair Parker [earliest Broadway credit]. Revised by Joseph R. Grismer. Academy of Music: 14 Dec 1903-unknown (48 performances). Cast: Harry Bender, Charles C. Blanchard, John E. Brennan, John Bunny [credited as J.H. Bunny], Ulric Blair Collins (credited as Ulric B. Collins; Broadway debut), C.B. Craig, Phoebe Davies, Laura Edwards, W.T. (William) Ellwanger, Robert A. Fischer, Marie Laurent, Marion L. Shirley, Sara Stevens, Frank Symonds, Ella Hugh Wood, T. Vail Wood. NOTE: Filmed as Way Down East (1908), Way Down East (1914), Way Down East (1920), Way Down East (1935).
- (1904) Stage: Produced "The Pit" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Channing Pollock [earliest Broadway credit]. From the novel by Frank Norris. Lyric Theatre: 10 Feb 1904-Apr 1904 (closing date unknown/77 performances). Cast: Howard Boulden, Edgar Bowman, Clay Boyd, Wilson Burke, Bert Burrell, Harold Byrne, Marian A. Chapman, Harry Converse, Kenneth Davenport, Adeline Dunlap, James Emerson, Agnes Evans, Edmund Evans, Douglas Fairbanks, Agnes Findlay, Mabel Findlay, John J. Fogarty, Robert Paton Gibbs [credited as Robert Peyton Gibbs], Doris Goodwin, Mrs. Powhattan Gordon, George Grey, Henry Gunson, Hale Hamilton, Margaret Kenmare, Charles Kenyon [Broadway debut], Wilton Lackaye (as "Curtis Jadwin"), Amber Lawlord, Richard Manuel, J. Cleneay Mathews, Thomas McCabe, Tilden Mercer, Charles Merritt, Walter Moran, Owen Murphey, Jane Oaker, Bowman Ralston, Ed Ralston, Franklyn Roberts, Rudy Saxe, Willard Saxon, Avon Stern, William Stern, A.H. Stuart, Eddie Stuart, Frank Tillman, William Titus, Richard Webster, White Whittlesey, Joseph A. Wilkes, Maude Wilson, Cecil Worth, Robert Wright, Vera Zalene.
- (1904) Stage: Produced "Girls Will Be Girls" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Book by Melville Baker. Music by / Lyrics by / Directed by Joseph Hart. Musical Director: H. Harris Ware. Haverly's 14th Street Theatre: 27 Aug 1904-3 Sep 1904 (9 performances). Cast: Clara Barnes (as "Chorus"), Lillian Bayer (as "Madeline Scribner"), William Bradley (as "Chorus"), Frank Braid (as "Chorus"), Art Brock (as "Abner Sankey"), Edith Brockley (as "Chorus"), William Brockley (as "Chorus"), Gladys Claire (as "Esther Sprouts"), Gwendoline Coate (as "Chorus"), Christine Cook (as "Brussell Sprouts"), Herbert Corthell (as "Sheriff Ketchem"; Broadway debut), Myra Crayne (as "Chorus"), Ethel Croley (as "Chorus"), Helen Daniels (as "Chorus"), Harry Davies (as "Marvin Brown"), Estelle Franklin (as "Chorus"), Margaret Hastings (as "Chorus"), William Herman (as "Chorus"), Anna Hoey (as "Chorus"), Mary Karr (as "Martha Young"), Al Leech (as "Prof. Ebeneezer Hezekiah Dodge"), Harry Linkey (as "Chorus"), John McVeigh (as "Tom Sparrow"), Ed Mora (as "Ned Raymond" / "Chorus"), Annabel Nivens (as "Chorus"), Mabel Nivens (as "Chorus"), Mabel Perotty (as "Chorus"), Arthur Rice (as "Chorus"), Charles Schell (as "Chorus"), Edward Schulze (as "Police Officer Holdhim"), D.C. Smith (as "Chorus"), Edna Snyder (as "Chorus"), Pearl Snyder (as "Chorus"), Roma Snyder (as "Lonely Sprouts"), Louise Striblen (as "Chorus"), Jean Ward (as "Chorus"), Oscar Watson (as "Henry Sniffens"), Harry Wilson (as "Police Officer Chase"), Dorothy Wood (as "Chorus"), Winfred Young (as "Nathan Hanley").
- (1905) Stage: Produced (w/Joseph R. Grismer) "Siberia" on Broadway (revival). Written by Bartley Campbell. Academy of Music: 16 Jun 1905-Feb 1905 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Benjamin Ackerman, Noah Beery, Bernard A. Reinold [credited as Adolph Bernard], James T. Bowman, Elliott Dexter, Carl Eckstrom, S.O. Frank, Daniel Gilfether, Felix Haney, Ernest Hastings, Franklyn Roberts, Frederick Roberts, Frank Russell, Burt Tucman, W.C. White, C. Jay Williams.
- (1905) Stage: Produced "The Shepherd King" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Arnold Reeves and Wright Lorimer. New York Theatre: 20 Feb 1905-Apr 1905 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Russell Barton, Harlow Bates, Carl Eckstrom, Ethelbert Hale [credited as Ethelbert Hales], T.N. Heffron, O'Kane Hillis, M.J. Jordon, Preston Kendall, Charles Kent, Frank Lander, William Leydon, Wright Lorimer, Henry Marlowe, Charles H. Martin, Henry Rhodes, David Swim, Benjamin Williams.
- (1905) Stage: Produced "Abigail" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Henry K. Chambers. Savoy Theatre: 21 Feb 1905-Apr 1905 (closing date unknown/47 performances). Cast: Ruth Benson, Louise Closser Hale [credited as Louise Closeer], Joseph Coyne, Justine Cutting, Arthur Forrest, Grace George (as "Abigail"), Mrs. Hone, Selene Johnson, Willis Martin, Henry Mills, Vivia Ogden, Herbert Rollins, Mary Stuart, Conway Tearle (as "John 'Booby' Kent"), Arthur Tennyson, Annie Woods.
- (1905) Stage: Produced "A Case of Frenzied Finance" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Kellett Chambers. Savoy Theatre: 3 Apr 1905-Apr 1905 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Harry Botter, Walter Campbell, Douglas Fairbanks (as "Bennie Tucker"), William J. Ferguson ( as "J.W. Johnson, An undertaker"), Robert Fischer, John Flood, Ada Gilman, Clara Gould, Frank Hatch, Laura Lemmers, Olive Murray, Emily Wakeman.
- (1905) Stage: Produced "Trilby" on Broadway. Comedy (revival). Written by Paul M. Potter. Based on the novel by George L. Du Maurier. Choreographed by Carl Marwig. New Amsterdam Theatre: 8 May 1905-May 1905 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Herbert Ayling (as "Dodor"), Meredith G. Brown (as "Anthony"), Grace Campbell (as "Bebe"), Ulric Blair Collins (as "Col. Kaw"), Mathilde Cottrelly (as "Mme. Vinard"), William Courtenay (as "William Bagot, Little Billee"), Leo Ditrichstein (as "Zou Zou"), Mabel Findlay (as "Honorine"), Maude Fisher (as "Mimi'), John Glendinning (as "Alexander McAllister, the Laird"), Virginia Harned (as "Trilby O'Ferrall"), Marie Horgan (as "Contralto"), Wilton Lackaye (as "Svengali"), Marguerite Lewis (as "Musette"), Dorothy Maynard (as "Angele"), Burr McIntosh (as "Taffy"), E.W. Morrison (as "Gecko"), Almas Peltier (as "Phillippe"), Rosa Rand (as "Mrs. Bagot"), Edmund H. Reardon (as "Lorimer"), E.L. Walton (as "Rev. Thos. Bagot").
- (1905) Stage: Produced "Way Down East" on Broadway (revival). Written by Lottie Blair Parker [earliest Broadway credit]. Academy of Music: 21 Aug 1905-Oct 1905 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Kate Beneteau, Charles C. Blanchard, John E. Brennan, Ulric Blair Collins (credited as Ulric B. Collins; Broadway debut), Frank Currier, Mary Davenport, Phoebe Davies, W.T. (William) Ellwanger, Robert A. Fischer, James T. Galloway, John H. Miles, Frank Symonds, Estelle Ward, Adam Warmouth, Ella Hugh Wood. NOTE: Filmed as Way Down East (1908), Way Down East (1914), Way Down East (1920), Way Down East (1935).
- (1905) Stage: Produced / directed "The Marriage of William Ashe" on Broadway. Drama. Written by: Margaret Mayo. Garrick Theatre: 20 Nov 1905-Dec 1905 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: John Carlton, Mrs. Reginald Carrington, W.J. Constantine, Justine Cutting, Richard Davis, George Franklin, Grace George, Cecil Kingstone, Alma Mara, Leona Radnor, H. Reeves-Smith, May Davenport Seymour, Fred W. Sidney, Katherine Stewart, Ben Webster, Mortimer H. Weldon, Maud Williamson, Frank Wilson, Alfred Woods. NOTE: Filmed as The Marriage of William Ashe (1921).
- (1905) Stage: Produced (w/Joseph R. Grismer) "As Ye Sow" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Rev. John M. Snyder. Musical Director: Charles F. Higgins. Scenic Design by H. Robert Law. Garden Theatre: 25 Dec 1905-Jan 1906 (closing date unknown/34 performances). Cast: Mac Barnes (as "Capt. Hanks"), Noah Beery (as "Tobe Hallett"), Edward Bender, Kate Beneteau, Oliver Blake, John Burton, Marion Chapman, George Coleman, Charles E. Craig, Edwin Forsberg, Frederic D. Freeman, Katherine Gemmill, Frank Gilmore, Samuel Gray, Frank Logan, Ernest Mack, May McCabe, Steven Meade, Harry Meredith, Franklyn Roberts, James K. Rogers, Pearl Sanford, Marie Taylor, Charlotte Walker, George R Warren, Edith Wright, Olive Wright.
- (1906) Stage: Produced / directed "The Redskin" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by Donald MacLaren. Scenic Design by H. Robert Law. Liberty Theatre: 1 Mar 1906- Mar 1906 (closing date unknown/26 performances). Cast: Lionel Adams, Edwin Arden (as "Niatawa"), Leonard Barry, Claude Brooke, Albert Bruning (as "Sheanaugua"), Marion Chapman, Avonia Eldridge, Bijou Fernandez (as "Lashota"), Escamillo Fernandez, Katherine Grey (as "Adulola"), Margaret Kenmare, J.O. Le Brasse, Alice Leigh, Laura Lemmers, Tyrone Power Sr. (as "Lonawanda").
- (1906) Stage: Produced "Clothes" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Avery Hopwood and Channing Pollock. Scenic Design by Robert T. McKee and H. Robert Law. Costume Design by Van Horn and Lord and Taylor. Mannhattan Theatre: 11 Sep 1906-Dec 1906 (closing date unknown/113 performances). Cast: Grace George (as "Olivia Sherwood"), Louise Closser Hale, Justine Cutting, Douglas Fairbanks, Robert T. Haines, Diana Huneker, Angela Ogden, Dorothy Revelle, Charles Stanley, A.H. Stuart, Anne Sutherland, Richard Wilson, Frank Worthing.
- (1906) Stage: Produced "The Shepherd King" on Broadway. Drama [return engagement]. Written by Arnold Reeves and Wright Lorimer. Academy of Music: 3 Dec 1906-Dec 1906 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Unknown.
- (1906) Stage: Produced "The Law and the Man" on Broadway. Drama. Based on "Les Miserables" by Victor Hugo. Adapted by / Directed by Wilton Lackaye [earliest Broadway credit]. Manhattan Theatre: 20 Dec 1906-Feb 1907 (closing date unknown/54 performances). Cast: John Beck, Claudia Carson, Joseph Chaillee, Fred Esmelton [Broadway debut], Louise Everts, Thomas F. Fallon, Arthur Foster, Gretchen Hartman, Edwin Holland, D. Ito, Percy Johns, Miss Kaste, Wilton Lackaye (as "Jean Valjean"), William Lamp, Harry Lane, Ralph Lansing, Jeffreys Lewis, Ada Long, Melbourne MacDowell, Tilden Mercer, B. Miller, James Mortimer, William Naughton, John D. O'Hara, Thomas Parker, F. Pollard, Jewell Power, Ethel Quimby, Richard Remmek, Fanny Reynolds, Sara Sanderson, Agnes Savage, Josephine Sherwood (as "Fantine"), George Ward.
- (1907) Stage: Produced "Divorcons". Comedy (revival). Written by Victorien Sardou and Emile DeNajac. Directed by Frank Hatch. Wallack's Theatre: 15 Apr 1907-Jun 1907 (closing date unknown/54 performances). Cast: Ruth Benson (as "Mme. De Brionne"), Evelyn Carter Carrington (as "Mme. De Valfontaine"), Justine Cutting (as "Mlle. De Lusigan"), Edward Fielding (as "Bastien"), Max Freeman (as "Joseph"), Grace George (as "Cyprienne"), Robert T. Haines (as "M. de Gratinac"), Laura Lemmers (as "Josepha"), Charles Stanley (as "M. Bafourlin"), A.H. Stuart (as "M. Clavynac"), Richard Wilson (as "Jamarot"), Frank Worthing (as "M. des Prunelles").
- (1907) Stage: Produced "Othello" on Broadway. Drama/tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. New Amsterdam Theatre: 29 Apr 1907-unknown (unknown performances). [Production played in repertory with "Richelieu", "Julius Caesar", "The Merchant of Venice", "King Richard III", "Macbeth", "King Lear"]. Cast [as known]: Robert B. Mantell (as "Othello"), Marie Booth Russell (as "Desdemona").
- (1907) Stage: Produced "King Lear" on Broadway. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. New Amsterdam Theatre: 29 Apr 1907-unknown (unknown performances/Production played in repertory with "Richelieu", "Julius Caesar", "The Merchant of Venice", "King Richard III", "Macbeth", "Othello"). Cast [as known]: Robert B. Mantell (as "King Lear of Britain"), Marie Booth Russell.
- (1907) Stage: Produced "Macbeth" on Broadway. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. New Amsterdam Theatre: 29 Apr 1907-unknown (unknown performances/Production played in repertory with "Richelieu", "Julius Caesar", "The Merchant of Venice", "King Richard III", "King Lear", "Othello"). Cast [as known]: Robert B. Mantell (as Macbeth, a general of the Scottish army"), Marie Booth Russell (as "Lady Macbeth").
- (1907) Stage: Produced "King Richard III" on Broadway. Historical drama (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. New Amsterdam Theatre: 29 Apr 1907-unknown (unknown performances/Production played in repertory with "Richelieu", "Julius Caesar", "The Merchant of Venice", "Macbeth", "King Lear", "Othello"). Cast [as known]: Robert B. Mantell (as "Richard, Duke of Gloucester, afterwards Richard III, brother to the King"), Marie Booth Russell (as "Lady Anne, widow of Edward, son to King Henry VI; afterward married to Richard).
- (1907) Stage: Produced "The Merchant of Venice" on Broadway. Comedy (revival/production played in repertory with "Richelieu", "Julius Caesar", "King Richard III", "Macbeth", "King Lear", "Othello"). Written by William Shakespeare. New Amsterdam Theatre: 29 Apr 1907-unknown (unknown performances). Cast [as known]: Robert B. Mantell (as "Shylock, a Jewish moneylender"), Marie Booth Russell (as "Portia, an heiress in Belmont").
- (1907) Stage: Produced "Julius Caesar" on Broadway. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. New Amsterdam Theatre: 29 Apr 1907-unknown (unknown performances/Production played in repertory with "Richelieu", "The Merchant of Venice", "King Richard III", "Macbeth", "King Lear", "Othello"). Cast [as known]: Robert B. Mantell (as "Julius Caesar"), Marie Booth Russell (as "Portia").
- (1907) Stage: Produced "Richelieu" on Broadway (revival). Written by Sir Edward George Bulwer-Lytton. New Amsterdam Theatre: 29 Apr 1907-unknown (unknown performances; played in repertory with "Julius Caesar", "The Merchant of Venice", "King Richard III", "Macbeth", "King Lear", "Othello"). Cast: Robert B. Mantell (as "Richelieu"), Marie Booth Russell (as "Julie De Mortimer"), Finley Beere, Franklin Bendsten, Aileen Bertelle, Jackson Briggs, Gordon Burby, Walter Campbell, Margaret Grey, Alfred Hastings, Lillian Kingsbury, Guy Lindsley, Francis McGinn, Cecil Owen, George Stillwell.).
- (1907) Stage: Produced "Divorcons" on Broadway. Comedy (revival). Written by Victorien Sardou and Emile DeNajac. Lyceum Theatre: 15 Aug 1907-Sep 1907 (closing date unknown 29 performances). Cast: Unknown. Produced by William A. Brady. NOTES: (1) Filmed as Divorcons (1912), Divorcons (1915). (2) A French TV adaption was produced in 1980 for the long running Au théâtre ce sour [aired 19 Sep 1980].
- (1908) Stage: Produced (w/Joseph R. Grismer) "All for a Girl" on Broadway. Written by Rupert Hughes. Bijou Theatre: 22 Aug 1908-Sep 1908 (closing date unknown/33 performances). Cast: John E. Brennan, Carlos Constantine, W.J. Constantine, Jane Corcoran, 'Harriet Otis Dellenbaugh', Emil De Varney, Douglas Fairbanks (as "Harold Jepson"), Robert A. Fischer, Samuel M. Forrest, Ernest Mack, Adelaide Manola (as "Antoinette Hoadley"), Percy Plunkett, Florence Robertson, Ruth Shepley.
- (1908) Stage: Produced (w/Joseph R. Grismer) "A Gentleman from Mississippi" on Broadway. Written by Harrison Garfield Rhodes and Thomas A. Wise. Bijou Theatre: 29 Sep 1908-Sep 1909 (closing date unknown/407 performances). Cast: Ernest Baxter, E.H. Bender, Frederick Bock, W.J. Brady, Charles Chappelle, Hal De Forrest, Douglas Fairbanks (as "Bud Haines"), Henry Gibson, Charles Johnson, Donald MacKintire, M.W. Rale, Charles Sedgwick, Harry Stubbs, Sue Van Duzer, Stanhope Wheatcroft, Thomas A. Wise (as "William H. Langdon"). NOTE: Filmed as A Gentleman from Mississippi (1914).
- (1908) Stage: Produced "The Man Who Stood Still" on Broadway. Written by Jules Eckert Goodman. Circle Theatre: 15 Oct 1908-Dec 1908 (closing date unknown/61 performances). Cast: P.S. Barrett, Edith Browning, Mathilde Cottrelly, Nat Daniels, Robert A. Fischer, Frank Julian, H.A. La Motte, Corinne Malvern, Gladys Malvern, Louis Mann, Herman Marum, Lillian Sinnott, Geoffrey Stein, James Vincent, Emily Ann Wellman.
- (1909) Stage: Produced "A Woman's Way" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Thompson Buchanan. Hackett Theatre: 22 Feb 1909-May 1909 (closing date unknown/112 performances). Cast: Ruth Benson, Gardner Burton, Evelyn Carrington, Reginald Carrington, Fred Esmelton, Mary Fermier, Edward Fielding, Grace George (as "Marion Stanton"), Henry Miller, Jewel Power, Charles Stanley, Dorothy Tennant (as "Mrs. Blakemore"), Robert Warwick, Frank Worthing (as "Howard Stanton").
- (1909) Stage: Produced "Divorcons" on Broadway. Comedy (revival). Written by Victorien Sardou and Emile DeNajac. Hackett Theatre 25 Feb 1909 (1 performance). Cast: Grace George, Grace George Acting Co.
- (1909) Stage: Produced "Othello" on Broadway. Drama/tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. New Amsterdam Theatre: 8 Mar 1909-unknown (unknown performances/played in repertory with "Romeo and Juliet", "King Lear", "King Richard III", "Richelieu", "Louis XI", "King John", "Macbeth", "Hamlet", "The Merchant of Venice"). Cast [as known]: Robert B. Mantell (as "Othello"), Marie Booth Russell (as "Desdemona").
- (1909) Stage: Produced "The Merchant of Venice" on Broadway. Comedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. New Amsterdam Theatre: 8 Mar 1909-unknown (unknown performances/played in repertory with "Romeo and Juliet", "King Lear", "King Richard III", "Richelieu", "Louis XI", "King John", "Macbeth", "Hamlet", "Othello"). Cast [as known]: Robert B. Mantell (as "Shylock, a Jewish moneylender"), Marie Booth Russell (as "Portia, an heiress").
- (1909) Stage: Produced "Hamlet" on Broadway. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. New Amsterdam Theatre: 8 Mar 1909-unknown (unknown performances/played in repertory with "Romeo and Juliet", "King Lear", "King Richard III", "Richelieu", "Louis XI", "King John", "Macbeth", "The Merchant of Venice", "Othello"). Cast [as known]: Robert B. Mantell (as "Hamlet, son to the late, and nephew to the present King"), Marie Booth Russell (as "Ophelia, daughter to Polonius").
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