- (1913 - 1929) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1913) Stage Play: The Doll Girl. Musical. Music by Leo Fall, from a Viennese libretto by Leo Stein and A.M. Willner. Choreographed by Edward Royce [earliest Broadway credit]. Globe Theatre: 25 Aug 1913- 8 Nov 1913 (88 performances). Cast: Adrienne Allen (as "Chorus"), Edith Allen (as "Chorus"), Louise Astor (as "Chorus"), Veronique Banner (as "Toto"), Edith Barr (as "Chorus"), Barbara Bel Babas (as "Francine"), Florence Brodbelt (as "Cora"), Edith Burch (as "Chorus"), Carolyn Burke (as "Chorus"), Richard Carle (as "Marquis de la Tourelle"), M.A. Carpenter (as "Chorus"), Alice Carrington (as "Chorus"), Maude Christie (as "Chorus"), Edward Coleman (as "Chorus"), Constance Crane (as "Chorus"), Matthew Crosson (as "Chorus"), Roger Davis (as "Chorus"), Radford D'Orsay (as "Chorus"), Helen Dudley (as "Belle"), Clara Eckstrom (as "Madame Merlin"), Robert Evett (as "Tiborius"), Helen Fell (as "Chorus"), Emily Francis (as "Mlle. Poche"), W.G. Freeman (as "Chorus"), Mabel Gebeau (as "Chorus"), Adelaide Hall (as "Chorus"), Ethel Hamilton (as "Chorus"), Edith Hardlow (as "Perinne"), Laura Harland (as "Chorus"), Charles Hartman (as "Chorus"), Veola Harty (as "Heloise"), Fannie Hasbrouck (as "Chorus"), David Heilbrunn (as "Chorus"), Carl C. Judd (as "Marcel/Chorus"), Mazie King (as "Dance Specialty"), Victor Le Roy (as "Pierre/Chorus"), Lillian LeRoy (as "Lily"), Blanche Lipton (as "Chorus"), Selma Mantell (as "Chorus"), Charles McNaughton (as "Buffon"), Ethel Milton (as "Chorus"), Marion Mobsy (as "Mme. Laurent"), Anna Monette (as "Chorus"), Ralph Nairn (as "Daudalon"), James B. O'Reilly (as "Chorus"), Alice Palmer (as "Suzette"), David Romaine (as "Chorus"), Eugene Shepherd (as "Chorus"), Cheridah Simpson (as "Mme. Prunier"), James A. Smith (as "Chorus"), Theodore Stein (as "Chorus"), John W. Walker (as "Chorus"), Letha Walters (as "Madame Bichon"), Dency Watson (as "Chorus"), Dorothy Webb (as "Yvette"), Will West (as "Romeo Talmi"), Hattie Williams (as "Rosalilla"). Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1913) Stage Play: The Marriage Market. Musical. Music by Viktor Jacobi [earliest Broadway credit], from the original Hungarian libretto by Max Brody and Franz Martos. Directed by Edward Royce. Knickerbocker Theatre (moved to The Grand Opera House on 8 Dec 1913- close): 22 Sep 1913- Dec 1913 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Frank Adair (as "Captain on the "Mariposa"), Marie Annis (as "Dolores"), Donald Brian (as "Edward Fleetwood"), Edwin Burch (as "Hi-Ti"), Viola Cain (as "Peach"), Gene Cole (as "Dora"), Arthur Dauche (as "Tabasco Ned"), Winship Fink (as "Shorty"), Venita Fitzhugh (as "Mariposa Gilroy"), Irene Hopping (as "Dolly"), Percival Knight (as "Lord Hurlingham"), Moya Mannering (as "Emma"), Carroll McComas (as "Kitty Kent"), George T. Meech (as "Senator Abe K. Gilroy"), Arthur Metcalfe (as "Cheyenne Harry"), Guy Nichols (as "Bald-Faced Sandy"), Arthur Reynolds (as "Blinker"), Cissie Sewell (as "A Middy"), C. Vandiveer (as "Mexican Bill"), Elizabeth Wood (as "Pansy"). Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1914) Stage Play: The Laughing Husband. Musical comedy. Book by Arthur Wimperis. Music by Edmund Eysler. Lyrics by Arthur Wimperis. Based on the German "Der lachende ebemann" by Julius Brammer and Alfred Grünwald. Featuring songs by Pedro de Zulueta. Musical Director: Gustave Selzer. Directed by Edward Royce. Knickerbocker Theatre: 2 Feb 1914- 14 Mar 1914 (48 performances). Cast: Gertrude Andea (as "Chorus"), Roy Atwell (as "Lutz Nachtigall"), Marie Barbara (as "Chorus"), Nigel Barry (as "Hans Zimt"), Betty Callish (as "Hella Bruckner"), Dorothy Chesmond (as "Marie"), Jeanne Crane (as "Chorus"), Jessie Crane (as "Chorus"), Frances Demarest (as "Etelka"), Leonard Feiner (as "Baldrian"), Venita Fitzhugh (as "Dolly"), George Fredericks (as "Chorus"), Marie George (as "Chorus"), William Gibney (as "Chorus"), Josephine Harriman (as "Dancer"), Beatrice Hoover (as "Chorus"), Constance Hunt (as "Chorus"), Josie Intropodi (as "Lucinda"), Frank Kenny (as "Chorus"), Regina Knott (as "Chorus"), Margaret Langdon (as "Chorus"), O.L. Love (as "Chorus"), Jack Mehl Chorus"), Bert B. Melville (as "Wiedehopf"), Margurete Milford (as "Chorus"), Florence Moll (as "Chorus"), George Mortimer (as "Chorus"), Kenneth Munro (as "Chorus"), John Daly Murphy (as "Herr von Basewitz"), Yetla Nicoll (as "Chorus"), William Norris (as "Mr. Rosenrot"), Genevieve O'Hara (as "Dancer"), Irene Palmer (as "Juliette"), Beatrice Percell (as "Chorus"), Paul Pollock (as "Chorus"), Courtice Pounds (as "Ottokar Bruckner"), Quentin Todd (as "Dancer"), Eve Turner (as "Chorus"), Fred Walton (as "Andreas Pipelhuber"), Gustav Werner (as "Count Selztal"), Dorothy West (as "Chorus"), Evelyn Wildner (as "Chorus"), Gertrude Wilson (as "Chorus"). Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1916) Stage Play: Betty. Musical. Book by Frederick Lonsdale and Gladys Unger. Lyrics by Adrian Ross and Paul A. Rubens. Musical Director: William Daly. Additional numbers by Ernest Steffan and Merlin Morgan. Featuring songs by Harry Tierney, Jean Schwartz, Silvio Hein and Benjamin Hapgood Burt. Featuring songs with lyrics by Benjamin Hapgood Burt, Percy Greenbank, Edgar Leslie and William Jerome. Directed by Edward Royce. Globe Theatre: 3 Oct 1916- 25 Nov 1916 (63 performances). Cast: Isabel Adams (as "Ensemble"), Edna Bates (as "Lady Charlotte Knowles"), Marie Baxter (as "Ensemble"), Marie Benedict (as "Lily/Ensemble"), James Black (as "Ensemble"), Marna Blanchard (as "Lady Violet Chichester/Ensemble"), J. Brush (as "Ensemble"), Sam Burbank (as "Hillier"), Ethel Burke (as "Ensemble"), Cecile Conway (as "Ensemble"), Florence Cripps (as "Lady Majoribanks"), Master Crumpton (as "Alf"), Peggy Dana (as "Ensemble"), Marion Davies (as "Jane"), Eileen Dennes (as "Estelle"), Doc Donnelly (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Duncan (as "Ensemble"), Opal Essent (as "Ensemble"), Allen Fagan (as "Cedric"), Isabel Falconer (as "Ensemble"), Grace Ford (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Germaine (as "Hon. Patience Pemberton/Ensemble"), Herbert Goff (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Harrigan (as "Ensemble"), Annette Herbert (as "Ensemble"), Joseph Herbert (as "Duke of Crowborough"), Raymond Hitchcock (as "Lord D'Arcy Playne"), William Holbrook (as "Ensemble"), A. Homme (as "Ensemble"), Ida Howe (as "Ensemble"), Jessie Howe (as "Ensemble"), Ron Hoyer (as "Ensemble"), Rokey Johnson (as "Ensemble"), Justine Johnstone (as "Chicquette"), Frank Keller (as "Ensemble"), Esther Lee (as "Ensemble"), Kitty Lindley (as "Ensemble"), Master Lowrie (as "David Playne"), Lotta Morse (as "Ensemble"), Walter Mozee (as "Ensemble"), Prudence O'Shea (as "Lady Paula Colquhuoun/Ensemble"), Peter Page (as "Achille Jotte"), Eugene Revere (as "Lathers/Tregellan"), Lillian Rice (as "Pansy/Ensemble"), Alice Roberts (as "Ensemble"), Fred Rockwell (as "Ensemble"), A. Roland (as "Ensemble"), Gertrude Roland (as "Ensemble"), Joseph Santley (as "Gerard"), Mona Sartoris (as "Ensemble"), Ivy Sawyer (as "Betty"), Lydia Scott (as "Lady Mary Manzies/Ensemble"), Verda Shelberg (as "Mrs. Rawlins"), Eleanor St. Clair (as "Hon. Mrs. Partarlington"), Mildred St. Clair (as "Ensemble"), Katherine Stewart (as "Dora"), Anna Stone (as "Daisy/Ensemble"), Virginia Taylor (as "Ensemble"), Joseph Tierney (as "Ensemble"), Henry Vincent (as "The Hon. Victor Halifax"), Bunny Wendell (as "Lady Cholmondley"), Jean White (as "Ensemble"), Peggy Williamson (as "Ensemble"), Jacquelin Woods (as "Ensemble"), Louise Worthington (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1916) Stage Play: The Century Girl. Musical revue. Music by Victor Herbert and Irving Berlin (also lyrics) and Henry Blossom. Musical Direction by Louis F. Gottschalk [final Broadway production] and Max Hoffmann. Additional music by Helen Trix, L. Wolfe Gilbert, Carey Morgan and James Kendis. Additional lyrics by Helen Trix, Harry B. Smith, L. Wolfe Gilbert, Carey Morgan, James Kendis and Elsie Janis. Directed by Edward Royce and Leon Errol. Century Theatre: 6 Nov 1916- 28 Apr 1917 (200 performances). Cast: Dave Abrams, Geraldine Alexander, Annette Bade, Adelaide Bell, Sam Bernard, Helen Borden, May Borden, Clara Carroll, Marjorie Cassidy, Miss Chase, Mildred Colby, Evelyn Conway, Arthur Cunningham, Miss Curtis, Hazel Dawn, Miss DeBeers, Ethel Delmar, Miss Dewey, Semone D'Herlys, Harland Dixon, Ethel Donaldson, James Doyle, Miss Ellison, Francis Ellsworth, Martha Erlich, Eileen Errol, Leon Errol, Madeline Fairbanks, Marion Fairbanks, Miss Feltes, Miss Field, Irving Fisher, Mildred Fisher, Elizabeth Gardiner, Miss Greete, Flo Hart, Hilda Hirsch, Miss James, Elsie Janis, Agnes Jepson, Harry Kelloski, Evelyn Kerner, Katherine Kohler, Miss Le Grande, May Leslie, Hazel Lewis, Ruby Lewis, Miss Logan, Miss Loring, Miss Mack, Miss Mackenzie, Eva Magnus, Vera Maxwell, Gus Minton, Miss Montague, Margaret Morris, Kathryn Perry, Miss Reeves, Yvonne Shelton, John Slavin, Lilyan Tashman (as "Empress Josephine"), Miss Wallace, Miss Whitney. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. and Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1917) Stage Play: Have a Heart. Musical comedy. Music by Jerome Kern. Material by Guy Bolton and P.G. Wodehouse. Lyrics by Guy Bolton and P.G. Wodehouse. Musical Direction by Gus Salzer. Music orchestrated by Frank Saddler. Additional lyrics by Schuyler Greene, James Kendis, Charles Bayha and Jerome Kern. Additional music by James Kendis and Charles Bayha. Directed by Edward Royce. Liberty Theatre: 11 Jan 1917- 17 Mar 1917 (76 performances). Cast: Flavia Arcaro (as "Mrs. Pyne"), Annette Besuden (as "Ensemble"), Belle Bowman (as "Ensemble"), James Bradbury (as "Matthew Pyne"), Walter Burke (as "Ensemble"), Dazie Burton (as "Ensemble"), Will Cobb (as "Ensemble"), William Deacon (as "Ensemble"), Joseph Del Puente (as "Yussuf"), Helen Donohue (as "Ensemble"), Louise Dresser (as "Dolly Brabazon"), Grace DuBoise (as "Ensemble"), Helen Eby-Rock (as "Ensemble"), Arthur Eley (as "Ensemble"), Peggy Fears (as "Georgia"), Margaret Fritts (as "Ensemble"), Charmain Furlong (as "Ensemble"), Marjorie Gateson (as "Lizzie O'Brien"), Roy Gordon (as "Captain Charles Owen"), Mabel Guilford (as "Ensemble"), Thurston Hall (as "Rutherford Schoonmaker"), Marie Hollywell (as "Ensemble"), Earl Jordon (as "Ensemble"), Eugene Keith (as "Detective Baker"), Helen Lane (as "Ensemble"), Donald MacDonald (as "Ted Sheldon"), Alice Maurice (as "Ensemble"), Rosalie Mellette (as "Ensemble"), Paul Mountaney (as "Ensemble"), Leonora Novasio, Martha Parsons (as "Ensemble"), Doris Predo (as "Ensemble"), Bert Pullaney (as "Ensemble"), Eugene Revere (as "Maitre d'Hotel"), Jules Rigoni (as "Ensemble"), Anne Sands (as "Ensemble"), Will Smith (as "Ensemble"), Billy B. Van (as "Henry"), Eileen Van Biene (as "Peggy Schoonmaker"), Roy Wells (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Henry W. Savage.
- (1917) Stage Play: Oh, Boy. Musical comedy. Book by Guy Bolton and P.G. Wodehouse. Music by Jerome Kern. Lyrics by Guy Bolton and P.G. Wodehouse. Musical Director: Max Hirschfeld. Music orchestrated by Frank Saddler. Directed by Edward Royce. Princess Theatre (moved to The Casino Theatre from 19 Nov 1917- close): 20 Feb 1917- 30 Mar 1918 (463 performances). Cast: Marie Carroll (as "Lou Ellen Carter"), Austin Clark (as "Mr. Olaf Lauder"), Patrice Clark (as "Miss Iona Saxon"), Jeannette Cook (as "Miss Lottie Limmut"), Louise Cook, Marion Davies (as "Jane Packard"), Dorothy Dickson (as "Dance Specialty"), David Douglass, Ethel Forde (as "Miss Anna Thorpe"), Hal Forde (as "Jim Marvin"), Alden Glover Jr. (as "Mr. Ivan L. Ovanerve"), Evelyn Grieg (as "Miss Rhoda Byke"), Joseph Hadley (as "Mr. Will Hooper Rupp"), Augusta Haviland (as "Mrs. Carter"), Leo Howe, Kathryn Hurst (as "Miss Wanda Farr"), Carl Hyson (as "Dance Specialty"), Justine Johnstone (as "Polly Andrus"), Lillian Lavonne (as "Miss Annie Olde-Knight"), Clarence Lutz (as "Mr. Hugo Chaseit"), Carl Lyle (as "Briggs"), Stephen Maley (as "Constable Simms"), Margaret Mason (as "Miss Sheila Ryve"), Frank McGinn (as "Judge Daniel Carter"), Florence McGuire (as "Miss Georgia Spelvin"), Jack Merritt (as "A Club Waiter"), Ralph O'Brien (as "Mr. Phelan Fyne"), Edna May Oliver (as "Miss Penelope Budd"), Tom Powers (as "George Budd"), Kathryn Rahn (as "Miss Lotta Noyes"), Lillian Rice (as "Miss Billie Dew"), Marjorie Rolland (as "Miss B. Ava Little"), Anna Stone (as "Miss Inna Ford"), Anna Wheaton (as "Jackie Simpson"), Charles Yorkshire (as "Mr. Phil Ossify"). Produced by William Elliott and F. Ray Comstock. Note: Filmed as Oh Boy! (1919).
- (1917) Stage Play: Leave It To Jane. Musical comedy. Music by Jerome Kern. Material by Guy Bolton and P.G. Wodehouse. Lyrics by P. G. Wodehouse. from "The College Widow" by George Ade. Musical Direction by John McGhie. Music orchestrated by Frank Saddler. Directed by Edward Royce. Longacre Theatre: 28 Aug 1917- 19 Jan 1918 (167 performances).
- (1917) Stage Play: Kitty Darlin'. Musical/romance. Book by Otto A. Harbach. Music by Rudolf Friml. Based on the play "Sweet Kitty Bellairs" by David Belasco, based on the novel by Egerton Castle. Musical Director: William Axt. Directed by Edward Royce. Casino Theatre: 7 Nov 1917- 17 Nov 1917 (14 performances). Cast: Edith Appleton, Rose Benedict, Frank Bradley, Peggy Brandon, Josephine Bryan, N.P. Bryan, Jane Buchanan, George Callahan, Helen Christie, Molly Christie, Bert Clark, H. Clark, Mary Comerford, S. Critcheson, Eleanor Daniels, Grace Dean, R.G. Elliott, C. Enisman, Sidonie Espero, Doris Faithful, Worthe Faulkner, Juanita Fletcher, Patricia Frewen, Glen Hall, Florence Haynes, Jackson Hines, Gertrude Hogan, William Hovel, Fayette Howard, Anton Ingaroa, Clare King, Olive Kingston, Louis LaVie, Charlotte Lenox, Shirley Love, Margaret May, Yetla Nicol, Alice Nielsen, Albert Noome, Ann Page, Walter Palm, Benjamin Rogers, H. Jess Smith, Muril Smither, Frank Sparling, Jeanne Sparry, R. St. John, Erna Steinway, Edwin Stevens (as "Colonel the Honorable Henry Villiers") [final Broadway role], Mary Lee Stevens, Ruby Thomas, B. Tieman, Peggy Troland, Edward Watson, Frank Westerton. Produced by William Elliott, F. Ray Comstock and Morris Gest. Note: Filmed by London Film Productions [US distributor: Cosmofotofilm] as The Incomparable Mistress Bellairs (1914), Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as Sweet Kitty Bellairs (1916) and by Warner Bros. as Sweet Kitty Bellairs (1930).
- (1917) Stage Play: Going Up. Musical comedy. Book by Otto Hauerbach. Music by Louis A. Hirsch. Lyrics by Otto A. Harbach. Based on "The Aviator" by James Montgomery. Musical Director: Gus Salzer. Music orchestrated by Frank Saddler. Directed by Edward Royce and James Montgomery. Liberty Theatre: 25 Dec 1917- 26 Oct 1918 (351 performances). Cast: Charles Andrews, Willard F. Barger, Ed Begley (as "Sam Robinson"), Lee Campbell, Jeanette Cook, Frank Craven (as "Robert Street"), Phoebe Crossley, Edith Day, Henry Dempsey, Ruth Donnelly (as "Miss Zonne"), Beatrice Dwight, Allen K. Fagen, Edgar Gates, Harold Grau (as "Ensemble"), Nancy Griffith, Lillian Gurley, Arthur Stuart Hull (as "James Brooks"), Louise Kelley, Joseph Lertora, Paul Lester, Kitty Mahoney, Vivian May, Thomas Maynard, Josephine McNichol, Donald Meek (as "F.H. Douglas"), Helen Miller, Alexander Morrissey, Helen Neary, Catherine O'Neil, Frank Otto (as "Hopkinson Brown"), John Park, Eleanor Pendleton, Grace Peters, Emily Russ, Eunice Sizer, Neida Snow, Marion Sunshine, Francois Vaulry, Maurice Walker, Mary Ward, Virginia Watson, Richard Weeman. Produced by Cohan & Harris.
- (1918) Stage Play: Oh, Lady! Lady! Musical comedy. Book by Guy Bolton and P.G. Wodehouse. Music by Jerome Kern. Musical Director: Max Hirschfeld. Music orchestrated by Frank Saddler. Costume Design by Harry Collins. Scenic Design by Clifford Pember. Conducted by Max Hirschfeld. Directed by Robert Milton and Edward Royce. Princess Theatre (moved to The Casino Theatre from 17 Jun 1918- close): 1 Feb 1918- 10 Aug 1918 (219 performances). Cast: Edward Abeles (as "Spike Hudgins"), Dorothy Allan (as "Miss Sal Munn"), Constance Binney (as "Parker"), Billie Booker (as "Miss Marie Schino"), Bobby Brewster (as "Miss Lotta Pommery"), Harry C. Browne (as "Hale Underwood"), Charles Columbus (as "Mr. C. Ollie Flower"), Margaret Dale (as "Mrs. Farrington"), May Elsie (as "Miss Della Catessen"), Harry Fisher (as "William Watty"), Mildred Fisher (as "Miss Mollie Gatawaney"), Bettie Gereaux (as "Miss Virginia Hamm"), Charles Hartmann (as "Mr. B. Russell Sprout"), Edna Hettler (as "Miss Marion Etta Herring"), Irving Jackson (as "Mr. Con Kearney"), Elsie Lewis (as "Miss Hallie Butt"), Reginald Mason (as "Cyril Twombley"), Carroll McComas (as "May Barber"), Gypsy Mooney (as "Miss C. Ella Rhy"), J. Randall Phelan (as "Mr. H. Ash-Brown "), Carl Randall (as "Willoughby Finch"), Mildred Roland (as "Miss Barbara O'Rhum"), Vivienne Segal (as "Mollie Farrington"), Florence Shirley (as "Fanny Welch"), Jeanne Sparry (as "Miss Clarette Cupp"), Mabel Stanford (as "Miss May Anne Ayes"), Janet Velie (as "Miss Cassie Roll"), Jack Vincent (as "Mr. Stewart Prune"), William Walsh (as Mr. Artie C. Hoke"), Lois Whitney (as "Miss Lettice Romayne"). Produced by F. Ray Comstock and William Elliott.
- (1918) Stage Play: Rock-a-Bye Baby. Musical comedy. Book by Edgar Allan Woolf and Margaret Mayo. Based on the farce "Baby Mine" by Margaret Mayo. Music by Jerome Kern. Lyrics by Herbert Reynolds. Musical Director: Frank Tours. Choreographed by Robert Marks. Directed by Edward Royce. Astor Theatre: 22 May 1918- 3 Aug 1918 (85 performances). Cast: Gus Baci (as "Finnegan"), Mae Carmen (as "Weenie"), Constance Carper (as "Constance"), Sydney Chon (as "Bellboy"), Ruth Collins (as "Kiddie"), Frank Derr (as "Chauffeur"), Dorothy Dickson (as "Dorothy Manners"), H. Nelson Dickson (as "Weenie's Father"), Louise Dresser (as "Aggie Jinks"), Florence Eldridge (as "Florence") [Broadway debut], Evelyn Ferris (as "Evelyn"), Alan Hale (as "Monte Laidlaw"), Edna Hibbard (as "Zoie Hardy"), Claire Hillier (as "Kiddie"), Carl Hyson (as "Archie Drummond"), Olive Jacqueline (as "Olive"), Walter Jones (as "Jimmy Jinks"), Frances Kaufman (as "Frances"), Arthur Lipson (as "Pasquale"), Albertine Marlowe (as "Albertine"), Janet McIlwaine (as "Janet"), Eddy Meyers (as "George Westbury"), Frank Morgan (as "Alfred Hardy"), Edna Munsey (as "Madam Tentelucci"), Claire Nagle (as "Maid"), Bert Pullaney (as "Waiter"), Norah Sprague (as "Norah"), Phil Stanton (as "Waiter"), Charlotte Wakefield (as "Charlotte"), Gladys White (as "Gladys"), Lilyan White (as "Lilyan"), Clothilde Woods (as "Clothilde"). Produced by Selwyn & Co.
- (1918) Stage Play: The Canary. Musical comedy. Music by Ivan Caryll and Irving Berlin. Based on the French by Georges Berr and Louis Verneuil. Book by Harry B. Smith. Based on a novel by Frederic Mauzens. Musical Director: Harold Vicars. Additional music by Jerome Kern, William B. Kernell and Harry Tierney. Additional lyrics by Harry Clarke, P.G. Wodehouse, Anne Caldwell, Richard Fechheimer, Benjamin Hapgood Burt and Clifton Crawford. Scenic Design by Joseph Urban. Costume Design by Schneider-Anderson Company, Brooks Costume Company, Dowling and Griffiths and Gladys Monkhouse. Directed by Frederick G. Latham and Edward Royce. Globe Theatre: 4 Nov 1918- 15 Mar 1919 (152 performances). Cast: Isabel Adams (as "Chorus"), Sidney Ayres (as "Chorus"), Edna Bates (as "Mrs. Beasley"), Kay Beach (as "Chorus"), Wilmer Bentley (as "Rico"), Florence Bruce (as "Chorus"), Martine Burnley (as "Chorus"), Joseph Cawthorn (as "Timothy"), Evelyn Conway (as "Chorus"), Sheila Courtney (as "Chorus"), Peggy Dana (as "Chorus"), Evelyn Des Roches (as "Chorus"), Harland Dixon (as "Fleece"), James Doyle (as "Dodge"), Dorothy Duncan (as "Chorus"), Maude Eburne (as "Mary Ellen"), George Egan (as "A Minister"), Peggy Eleanor (as "Chorus"), Doris Faithful (as "Chorus"), Elsie Gordon (as "Chorus"), Pauline Hall (as "Chorus"), Sam Hardy (as "Ned Randolph"), Dorothy Harrigan (as "Chorus"), Louis Harrison (as "Dr. Dippy"), Helen Lovett (as "Chorus"), George Mack (as "Mr. Trimmer"), Albertine Marlowe (as "Chorus"), Lorraine Nelson (as "Chorus"), Marietta O'Brien (as "Chorus"), Lester Ostrander (as "Chorus"), Mary Philips (as "Chorus"), Peg Raymond (as "Chorus"), Corinth Rice, Muriel Riley (as "Chorus"), Julia Sanderson (as "Julie"), Mona Sartoris (as "Chorus"), Mildred Sinclair (as "Chorus"), Peggy Smith (as "Chorus"), Frank Snyder (as "Chorus"), Elsa Thomas (as "Chorus"), Clare Vernon (as "Chorus"), Charlotte Wakefield (as "Chorus"), George Wharton (as "Chorus"), Gladys White (as "Chorus"), Jean White (as "Chorus"), Lillian White (as "Chorus"), Peggy Williams (as "Chorus"), Esther Worth (as "Chorus"). Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1918) Stage Play: Oh, My Dear! Musical. Book by Guy Bolton and P.G. Wodehouse. Directed by Edward Royce. Princess Theatre (moved to the 39th Street Theatre on 21 Apr 1919- close): 27 Nov 1918- May 1919 (closing date unknown/189 performances).
- (1919) Stage Play: Come Along. Musical comedy. Based on material by Bide Dudley. Directed by Edward Royce. Nora Bayes Theatre (moved to the 39th Street Theatre on 12 May 1919- close): 8 Apr 1919- 17 May 1919 (47 performances).
- (1919) Stage Play: She's a Good Fellow. Musical comedy. Music by Jerome Kern. Book by Anne Caldwell. Music and lyric of "Jubilo" founded on "Kingdom Comin'" by Henry Clay Work. Lyrics by Anne Caldwell. Directed by Fred G. Latham and Edward Royce. Globe Theatre: 5 May 1919- 16 Aug 1919 (120 performances). Cast: Helen Allen, Marie Ayres, Florence Bruce, Martine Burnley, Arline Chase, Alexander Clark, Lucille Darling (as "Ensemble"), Rosetta Duncan (as "Mazie Moore"), Vivian Duncan (as "Betty Blair"), Alice Earle (as "Ensemble"), Florence Edney (as "Miss Busby"), Nellie Fillmore, Pauline Hall (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Hollis (as "Ensemble"), Olin Howland (as "Chester Pollard"), Beatrice Hughes (as "Ensemble"), Elsie Lawson (as "Zizi Sumarez"), Helen Lovett (as "Ensemble"), Gertrude Maitland (as "Mrs. Franklin"), James C. Marlowe (as "Admiral Franklin"), Florence Martin (as "Ensemble"), Eleanor Mathison (as "Ensemble"), Phyllis Munday (as "Ensemble"), Grace O'Connor (as "Ensemble"), Anna Orr (as "Lavinia Lee"), Hildah Reeder (as "Ensemble"), Joseph Santley (as "Robert McLane"), Ivy Sawyer (as "Jacqueline Fay"), Scott Welsh (as "Billy Hopkins"), Lillian White (as "Ensemble"), Genevieve Willment (as "Ensemble"), Irene Wilson (as "Ensemble"), Jay Wilson (as "McVey"). Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1919) Stage Play: Apple Blossoms. Musical/operetta.
- (1919) Stage Play: Irene. Musical comedy. Music by Harry Tierney. Lyrics by Joe McCarthy. Based on a play by James Montgomery. Musical Director: Gus Salzer. Costume Design by Lucile and Finchley. Scenic Design by H. Robert Law Studios and Clifford Pember. Directed by Edward Royce. Vanderbilt Theatre: 18 Nov 1919- 18 Jun 1921 (675 performances). Produced by Carle Carlton and Joseph McCarthy. Cast: Edith Day (as "Irene O'Dare"), Walter Regan (as "Donald Marshall"), Bobbie Watson (as "Madame Lucy"), Abner Barnhart (as "Ensemble"), Arden Benlian (as "Ensemble"), Harry Blake (as "Ensemble") [Broadway debut], Cornelia Burchell (as "Ensemble"), Arthur Burckly (as "J.P. Bowden"), Robert Burns (as "Ensemble"), Hobart Cavanaugh (as "Robert Harrison"), Austin Clark (as "Ensemble"), Walter Croft (as "Clarkson"), Vivian Davidson (as "Ensemble"), Betty De Grasse (as "Ensemble"), Marion Dockerill (as "Ensemble"), George Eising (as "Ensemble"), Irene Enright (as "Ensemble"), Josephine Kernell (as "Ensemble"), Ethel Kinley (as "Ensemble"), Lillian Lee (as "Mrs. Cheston"), John Litel [credited as John B. Litel] (as "Lawrence Hadley") [Broadway debut], Erica Mackay (as "Ensemble"), Bernice McCabe (as "Eleanor Worth"), John McSorley (as "Ensemble"), Constance Melville (as "Ensemble"), Gladys Miller (as "Jane Gilmour"), Helen Miller (as "Ensemble"), Florence Mills (as "Mrs. Marshall"), Margaret Moore (as "Ensemble"), Adele Ormiston (as "Ensemble"), Eva Puck (as "Helen Cheston"), Edna Ross (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Walters (as "Mrs. O'Dare") [Broadway debut], Al Watson (as "Ensemble"), Alfred Watson (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Whitmore (as "Ensemble"). Replacement actors: Irene Dunne (as "Irene O'Dare"), Jeanette MacDonald (as "Debutante"). Produced by Carle Carlton and Joseph McCarthy. Note: Filmed as Irene (1926), and more notably by Imperadio Pictures Ltd. as Irene (1940) [distributed by RKO Radio Pictures].
- (1920) Stage Play: Lassie. Musical comedy.
- (1920) Stage Play: Ziegfeld Follies of 1920. Musical revue/spectacle. Music by Irving Berlin, Dave Stamper, Gene Buck, Joseph J. McCarthy, Harry Tierney and Victor Herbert. Lyrics by Irving Berlin, Dave Stamper, Gene Buck, Joseph J. McCarthy, Harry Tierney and Victor Herbert. Musical Direction by Frank Tours. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh, Charles Grant, Stephen Jones and Frank Saddler. Featuring songs with lyrics by James Montgomery, Bert Kalmar, Harry Ruby, Gus Van, Joe Schenck, Eddie Cantor, Mac Emery, King Zany, George Fairman, Alex Gerber, Abner Silver, Jack Yellen, Abe Olman, Roger Lewis and Ernie Erdman. Tableaux by Ben Ali Haggin. Directed by Edward Royce. New Amsterdam Theatre: 22 Jun 1920- 16 Oct 1920 (123 performances). Cast: Delyle Alda, William Blanche, Fanny Brice, Lillian Broderick, Eddie Cantor, Jane Carroll, Juliet Compton, Olive Cornell, Eleanor Dell, Jack Donohue, Ray Dooley, Emily Drange, Doris Eaton, Mary Eaton, W.C. Fields, Edna French, Eva Grady, Bernard Granville, Ethel Hallor, Margaret Irving, Jerome & Herbert, Alta King, Phebe Lee, Gladys Loftus, Jack Mahan, Albertine Marlowe, Beatrice Milner, Moran and Mack, Margaret Morris, Betty Morton, Carl Randall, Jessie Reed, Helen Shea, John Steel, Avonne Taylor, Van and Schenck, Olive Vaughn, Charlotte Wakefield, Florence Ware, Charles Winninger, Addison Young. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1920) Stage Play: Kissing Time. Musical comedy. Music by Ivan Caryll. Book by George V. Hobart. Lyrics by Philander Johnson, Clifford Grey and Irving Caesar. Additional lyrics by George V. Hobart. Additional music by William Daly. Music orchestrated by Ivan Caryll and Claude MacArthur. Musical Director: Max Steiner. Based on a libretto by Adolf Philipp and Edward A. Paulton. Scenic Design by D. Frank Dodge and William Castle. Directed by Edward Royce. Lyric Theatre (moved to The Astor Theatre from 8 Nov 1920- close): 11 Oct 1920- 4 Dec 1920 (65 performances). Cast: Ellen Best (as "Georgette"), Frank Bryant (as "Francois Chandon"), Primrose Caryll (as "Tashi"), Evelyn Cavanaugh (as "Specialty Dancer"), Frances Chase (as "Suzanne"), Harry Coleman (as "Emile Grossard"), John C. Daly (as "Gaston Burgundy"), Frank Doane (as "Armond Moulanger"), Cora D'Orsay (as "Jeannette"), Charles Edwards (as "Anatole Absinthe"), Paul Frawley (as "Robert Perronet"), Margaret Green (as "Helene"), Carl Hyson (as "Paul Pommery"), Allen C. Jenkins (as Charles Moet"), Eleanor Ladd (as "Virginia"), Shirley Latham (as "Loie"), Georgia Lynne (as "Rose-Marie"), Jessie Lynne (as "Babette"), Dorothy Maynard (as "Mimi"), Thomas Maynard (as "George Bacardi"), William McGurn (as "Henri Martel"), William Norris (as "Polydore Cliquot"), Fred Packard (as "Raphael Sauterne"), Rose Page (as "Dolores"), Edith Taliaferro (as "Clarice"), Ruby Vernon (as "Maxine"), Norma Eve Warrington (as "Vivienne"), May Whitney (as "Diane"), De Forrest Woolley (as "Pierre Martini"). Produced by Empire Producing Corp.
- (1920) Stage Play: Sally. Musical comedy. Music: Jerome Kern, Victor Herbert. Book by Guy Bolton. Lyrics: Clifford Grey, P.G. Wodehouse. Scenic Design by Joseph Urban. Costume Design by Alice O'Neil. Directed by Edward Royce. New Amsterdam Theatre: 21 Dec 1920- 22 Apr 1922 (561 performances). Cast: Leon Errol (as "Connie/A Waiter at the Alley Inn/ Duke of Czechogovinio"), Marilyn Miller (as "Sally of the Alley/A Foundling/Mme. Nookerova/A Wild Rose/Premiere Star of the Follies"), Baby Dot, Alice Akers, Frank Bages, Jack Barker, Earl Barroy, Minerva Bartz, Wade Boothe, Alma Braham, Walter Catlett (as "Otis Hooper, A Theatrical Agent"), Agatha DeBussy, Barbara Dean, Dolores, Emily Drange, Dorothy Fenron, Irving Fisher, Miss Freeland, Mary Hay, Alfred P. James, Alta King, Frank Kingdon (as "Richard Farquar"), Sylvia Kingsley, Miss Maide, Mary McDonald, Gladys Montgomery, Rita Murphy, Henrietta Orville, Virginia Otis, Jacques Rebiroff, Stanley Ridges (as "Jimmie Spelvin"), Phil Ryley, Sonia Shand, Billie Stanfield, Dolly Tigue, Shirley Vernon, Vivian Vernon, Blossom Vreeland, Betty Williams. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- (1921) Stage Play: Ziegfeld Midnight Frolic. Revue. Directed by Edward Royce. Ziegfeld Roof: 1 Feb 1921- unknown (unknown performances). Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1921) Stage Play: Ziegfeld 9 O'clock Frolic. Musical revue. Directed by Edward Royce. Danse de Follies: 8 Feb 1921- Mar 1921 (closing date unknown/35 performances). Cast: Annette Bade, Edythe Baker, Virginia Bell, The Fairbanks Twins (Madeline Fairbanks, Marion Fairbanks) [final Broadway credit as act], Franklyn Farnum [credited as Frank Farnum], Eleanor Griffith, Jack Hanley, Herbert Hoey, Kathlene Martyn, Oscar Shaw, Anna Wheaton, Princess White Deer. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1921) Stage Play: Ziegfeld Follies of 1921. Musical revue. Dialogue by Channing Pollock, Willard Mack and Ralph Spence. Lyrics by Gene Buck and Buddy G. DeSylva. Music by Victor Herbert, Rudolf Friml and Dave Stamper. Musical Direction by Frank Tours. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh and Stephen Jones. Featuring songs with lyrics by Henry Creamer, J. Turner Layton, Grant Clarke, James F. Hanley, Channing Pollock, Blanche Merrill, Leo Edwards, Ballard MacDonald, Harry Carroll, Albert Willemetz, Jacques Charles, Buddy G. DeSylva, Gus Mueller, Buster Johnson, Andrew Sterling, Harry von Tilzer and Edward P Moran. Featuring songs by Elsie White and Henry Busse. Directed by Edward Royce. Globe Theatre: 21 Jun 1921- 1 Oct 1921 (119 performances). Cast: Marie Astrova, Miss Barnett, Emma Beresbach, Ethel Blaire, Eva Brady, Fanny Brice (as "Principal"), Evelyn Campbell, Betty Carsdale, Margery Chapin, Hazel Chappel, Miss Chase, John Clarke, Darling Twins, Peggy Davis, Ray Dooley, Phil Dwyer, Charles Eaton, Mary Eaton (as "Principal"), Marguerite Falconer, W.C. Fields (as "Principal," and "M. Le Duc de Chateau Briand"), Consuelo Flowerton, Edna French, Pearl Germonde, Diana Gordon, Raymond Hitchcock, Herbert Hoey, Miss Hughes, Helen Hunt, Albert Innis, Frank Innis, Keene Twins, Miss Leigh, Mary Lewis, Doris Lloyd, Gladys Loftus, Madelyn Lombard, Miss Lomp, Mandal Brothers, Irene Marcellus, Albertine Marlowe, Vera Michelena, Mary Milburn, Beatrice Milner, Geneva Mitchell, Mlle. Mitti, Madilyn Morrissey, Florence O'Denishawn, Charles O'Donnell, Jessie Reed, Anastasia Reilly, Frances Reveaux, Miss Rolph, Gertrude Seldon, Peggy Stohl, Janet Stone, Avonne Taylor, M. Tillio, Van and Schenck, Edna Wheaton, Helen Lee Worthing. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1921) Stage Play: The Love Letter. Musical comedy. Directed by Edward Royce.
- (1921) Stage Play: Good Morning Dearie. Musical comedy. Music by Jerome Kern. Lyrics by Anne Caldwell. Book by Anne Caldwell. Musical Direction by Victor Baravalle. Music orchestrated by Stephen Jones. Directed by Edward Royce. Globe Theatre: 1 Nov 1921- 26 Aug 1922 (347 performances). Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1922) Stage Play: Orange Blossoms. Musical comedy. Music by Victor Herbert. Book by Frédérique De Grésac. Based on the play "La Passarelle" by Fred De Gresac and Francis de Croisset [final Broadway credit]. Lyrics by Buddy G. DeSylva. Musical Director: Gus Salzer. Scenic Design by Norman Bel Geddes [earliest Broadway credit]. Costume Design by Paul Poiret and Earl Benham. Fulton Theatre: 19 Sep 1922- 9 Dec 1922 (95 performances). Cast: Abner Barnart, Frank Curran, Maurice Darcy, Evelyn Darville, Edith Day, Vera DeWolfe, Emily Drange, Fay Evelyn, Robert Fischer, Thomas Fitzpatrick, Eden Gray, Alta King, Phyllys Le Grand, Mary Lucas, Gayle Mays, Clinton Merrill, Robert Michaelis, Denny Murray, Dagmar Oakland, Elva Pomfret, Hal Skelly, Queenie Smith (as "Tillie/Dancer"), Pat Somerset, Diana Stegman, Oliver Stewart, Nancy Welford, Jack Whiting. Produced by Edward Royce.
- (1923) Stage Play: Irene. Musical comedy (revival). Directed by Edward Royce.
- (1923) Stage Play: Cinders. Musical comedy. Music by Rudolf Friml. Book by Edward Clark. Lyrics by Edward Clark. Musical Director: Victor Baravalle. Directed by Edward Royce. Dresden Theatre: 3 Apr 1923- 28 Apr 1923 (31 performances). Cast: George Bancroft (as "Great Scott"), Abner Barnhart (as "Cliff"), Louise Bateman (as "Simone"), Roberta Beatty (as "Mrs. Delancey Hoyt"), John H. Brewer (as "Major Dummond"), Edith Campbell-Walker (as "Mme. Duval"), Frank Curran (as "Frank"), Margaret Dale (as "Mrs. Horatio Winthrop"), Evelyn Darville (as "Julie"), Vera DeWolfe (as "Cecelia"), Thomas Fitzpatrick (as "Butler"), Nathaniel Gennes (as "Nat"), Elaine Gholson (as "Yvette"), Eden Gray (as "Ninette"), Thomas Green (as "Thomas"), Fred Hillebrand (as "Slim Kelly"), Harry Howell (as "Harry"), Eugene Jenkins (as "Gene"), Kitty Kelly (as "Tottie"), Alta King (as "Hortense"), Lillian Lee (as "Miss Breckenridge"), Estelle Levelle (as "Lottie"), Mary Lucas (as "Geraldine"), Mildred Lunnay (as "Dancer"), Gertrude McDonald (as "Dancer"), Denny Murray (as "Denny"), Dagmar Oakland (as "Mathilde"), Dewitt Oakley (as "Dewitt"), Elva Pomfret (as "Dancer"), Sydney Reynolds (as "Dancer"), Ralph Riggs (as "Dancer"), Queenie Smith (as "Tillie Olsen"), Diana Stegman (as "Annabelle"), W. Douglas Stevenson (as "John Winthrop"), Nancy Welford (as "Cinders"), Jack Whiting (as "Bruce"), Katherine Witchie (as "Dancer"). Replacement actor: Walter Regan (as "John Winthrop"). Produced by Edward Royce.
- (1923) Stage Play: Sally. Musical comedy [Return engagement]. Music by Jerome Kern and Victor Herbert. Additional lyrics by Anne Caldwell, P.G. Wodehouse and Buddy G. DeSylva. Butterfly Ballet music by Victor Herbert. Material by Guy Bolton. Lyrics by Clifford Grey. Lyrics for "Look For the Silver Lining" by Buddy G. DeSylva. Directed by Edward Royce. New Amsterdam Theatre: 17 Sep 1923- 6 Oct 1923 (24 performances). Cast: Leon Errol (as "Connie"), Marilynn Miller, Walter Catlett (as "Otis Hooper"), Mae Daw, Agetha DeBussy, Bernardine DeGraves, Bobby Deane, Floyd English, Felice, Paul Frawley, Joan Gardner, Alfred P. James, Ethel Kelly, Frank Kingdon (as "Richard Farquar"), Kathlene Martyn, Mary McDonald, Jacques Rabiroff, Virginia Ray, Phil Ryley, Pauline Schaefer, Billie Stanfield, Vivian Vernon, Betty Williams. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1923) Stage Play: Kid Boots. Musical comedy ["A Musical Comedy of Palm Beach and Golf"]. Music by Harry Tierney. Material by William Anthony McGuire and Otto A. Harbach. Lyrics by Joseph McCarthy. Musical Direction by Louis Gress. Music orchestrated by Frank E. Barry. Directed by Edward Royce. Earl Carroll Theatre: (moved to The Selwyn Theatre from 1 Sep 1924 to close): 31 Dec 1923- 21 Feb 1925 (489 performances). Cast: Eddie Cantor (as "Kid Boots, Caddy Master"), Mary Eaton, Jack Andrews, Dove Atkinson, Robert Barrat (as "Randolph Valentine"), Beth Beri, William Blett, Eugenie Brew, Violet Brown, Marie Callahan, Eleanor Dell, Doris Dixon, Harland Dixon, Elizabeth Dougher, Juanita Erickson, Rass Erickson, Paul Everton, Harry Fender, Joan Gardner, Mareta George, Pearl Germond, Thomas Green, Betty Grey, Eunice Hall, Carlos Hatvary, Jobyna Howland, Sonia Ivanoff, Gladys Keck, Lloyd Keyes, Lily Kimari, Sylvia Kingsley, Edna Locke, Jessie Madison, William Maguire, Alma Mamay, Muriel Manners, Morton McConnachie, Frances McHugh (as "Lady of the Ensemble"), Madelyn Morrisey, Victor Munroe, Dennis Murray, Polly O'Claire, George Olsen, John Patterson, Jessie Payne, Elva Pomfret, Violet Regal, Waldo Roberts, John Rutherford, Evelyn Sayers, Harry Short, Carolyn Smith, Robert Spencer, Diana Stegman, Katharine Stuart, Ayres Tavitt, Mrs. Taylor, Carola Taylor, Ethelind Terry, Blossom Vreeland, Dick Ware, Florence Ware, Rella Winn, Velma Ziegler, Frank Zolt. Replacement actor: Eddie Dowling (as "Gentleman of the Ensemble") [31 Dec 1923- 31 Aug 1924]. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. Note: This production was one of the biggest hits of the Roaring 20's and is considered by many critics to be the quintessential Jazz Age Broadway musical.
- (1924) Stage Play: Annie Dear. Musical comedy. Directed by Edward Royce.
- (1925) Stage Play: Louie the 14th. Musical comedy. Music by Sigmund Romberg. Based on material and lyrics by Arthur Wimperis. Based on a German play by Paul Frank and Julius Wilhelm. Musical Director: Gus Salzer. Music orchestrated by Emil Gerstenberger. Scenic Design by Gretl Urban. Directed by Edward Royce. Cosmopolitan Theatre: 3 Mar 1925- 5 Dec 1925 (319 performances). Cast: Mabel Baade Ensemble"), Al Baron (as "Spud/Ensemble"), Lee Baron (as "Ensemble"), Ida Barry (as "Ensemble"), Elsie Behrens (as "Ensemble"), Marguerite Boatwright (as "Ensemble"), Louise Brooks (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Brown (as "Ensemble"), Louis Casavant (as "The Major Domo"), Lawrence Chrow (as "Ensemble"), Joan Clement (as "Ensemble"), Vera Colburn (as "Ensemble"), Norman Colvin (as "Ensemble"), Walter Costello (as "Ensemble"), Jack Cronin (as "Ensemble"), Warren Crosby (as "Ensemble"), Morton Croswell (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Dahm (as "Ensemble"), Lilyan Dawn (as "Ensemble"), Simone De Bouvier (as "Marie Pochard"), Agatha DeBussy (as "Ensemble"), Anna May Denehy (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Dickerson (as "Ensemble"), Carmine DiGiovanni (as "Ensemble"), Catherine Doucet [credited as Catherine Calhoun Doucet] (as "Madame Trapmann"), J.W. Doyle (as "Paul Trapmann"), Edouard Durand (as "Francois Pochard"), Leon Errol (as "Louie Ketchup"), Ruth Fallows (as "Ensemble"), Peggy Fears (as "Ensemble"), Harry Fender (as "Captain William Brent, A.E.F"), John Fluco (as "Ensemble"), Neel Francis (as "Ensemble"), Florentine Gosnova (as "Florentine"), Frederick Graham (as "The Village Cure/Dominique Dindon"), Camille Griffith (as "Ensemble"), Sam Guncharoff (as "Ensemble"), Helen Haines (as "Ensemble"), Ned Hamlin (as "Ensemble"), A. Havrilla (as "Bob/Ensemble"), Haal Hennessy (as "Ensemble"), Helen Herendeen (as "Ensemble"), Owen Hervey (as "Ensemble"), Alfred James (as "General Chanson/Aristide Brissac"), Maryland Jarbeau (as "Ensemble"), Edna Johnson (as "Ensemble"), Ethel Kelly (as "Ensemble"), Therese Kelly (as "Ensemble"), Teddy King (as "Ensemble"), Virginia King (as "Ensemble"), Leslie Kingdon (as "Ensemble"), Albert Kouiznetzoff (as "Ensemble"), Marie Lambert (as "Ensemble"), Margaret Langhorne (as "Ensemble"), Evelyn Law (as "Evelyn"), Jack Leahy (as "Ensemble"), Nyo Lee (as "Ensemble"), Rona Lee (as "Ensemble"), Joseph Lertora (as "Captain Gallifet"), Dorothy Lesley (as "Ensemble"), Catherine Littlefield (as "Ensemble"), Jessie Madison (as "Ensemble"), Pauline Mason (as "Patricia Brent"), Charles Mast (as "Sergeant A.E.F./Bill"), William May (as "Ensemble"), Gertrude McDonald (as "Ensemble"), Lelia McGuire (as "Ensemble"), Milek and Kindl (as "Specialty Dancers"), Murray Minehart (as "Ensemble"), Robert Moan (as "Ensemble"), Lucy Monroe (as "Ensemble"), Betty Nevins (as "Ensemble"), Fern Oakley (as "Ensemble"), Florence O'Neill (as "Ensemble"), Consuelo Owens (as "Ensemble"), Doris Patston (as "Colette de Cassagnac"), George Plank (as "Ensemble"), Richard Powell (as "Ensemble"), Anastasia Reilly (as "Ensemble"), Helen Reinecke (as "Ensemble"), Carl Rose (as "Ensemble"), Jack Rouger (as "Ensemble"), Moris Rubin (as "Ensemble"), Elonora Ruggeri (as "Ensemble"), Louise Scott (as "Ensemble"), Gertrude Selden (as "Ensemble"), Ethel Shutta (as "Gabrielle Trapmann"), Al Small (as "Ensemble"), Pearl Sodders (as "Ensemble"), Allen Stevens (as "Ensemble"), Mabelle Swor (as "Ensemble"), Frank Vonne (as "Ensemble"), Judith Vosselli (as "The Comptesse de Bellac"), Morris Wagman (as "Ensemble"), Hugh Wakefield (as "Major the Hon. Harold Byngham, D.S.C, M.C."), Robert Walker (as "Ensemble"), Billy Walsh (as "Ensemble"), Julia Warren (as "Ensemble"), Claire Wayne (as "Ensemble"), Jean Wayne (as "Ensemble"), Lorraine Webb (as "Ensemble"), Al Wyatt (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- (1925) Stage Play: Princess Ida. Musical comedy/operetta. Directed by Edward Royce.
- (1926) Stage Play: No Foolin'. Musical revue. Music by Rudolf Friml. Lyrics by Gene Buck, Irving Caesar and Ballard MacDonald. Featuring songs by James F. Hanley. Book by J.P. McEvoy and James Barton. Musical Director: Alfred Goodman. Music orchestrated by Charles Grant, Steven Jones, Will Vodery and Emil Gerstenberger. Music arranged by Walter Haenschen. Choreographed by John Boyle. Staged by Ben Ali Haggin. Directed by Edward Royce and Walter Wilson. Globe Theatre: 24 Jun 1926- 25 Sep 1926 (108 performances). Cast: Bernice Ackerman, Wilma Ansell, Mabel Baade, Arthur Baer, James Barton, George Baxter, Elsie Behrens, Marian Benda, Beth Berri, (Miss) Blackburne, Louise Brown, Katherine Burke, Lew Christy, Thelma Connor, Velma Connor, Walter Costello, Edna Covey, Jack Cronin, Morton Croswell, Fay Culmer, (Miss) Dale, Clifford Daly, Myrna Darby, Carmine DiGiovanni, Ray Dooley, Alma Drange, Norma Dyal, Kay English, Mary Farrell, Peggy Fears, Irving Fisher, Alys Fitzgerald, Suzanne Fleming, Norma Forrest, Noel Francis, Genesko, Gladys Glad, Paulette Goddard, Ruth Grace, Yvonne Grey, Evelyn Grieg, Owen Harvey, Helen Herendeen, Mary Hopkins, Mary Jane, Flo Kennedy, Charles King, Andrew Knox, Kathleen Krosby, Eleanor Ladd, (Miss) LaMay, Miss Lane, Edna Leedom, Marjorie Leet, Claire Luce, Alice MacKenzie, Joseph Marievsky, (Miss) Mason, Bert McGuinnes, Murray Minehart, George Moeser, Moran and Mack, Edward Mowen, Mary Mulhern, Victor Munro, William Murray, Barbara Newberry, Greta Nissen, Yvonne Occent, Hilda Olsen, Helen O'Shea, Leslie Ostrander, Dorothy Patterson, Katherine Penman, Anastasia Reilly, Miss Shaw, Robert Shields, Lillian Smith, Biddy Somerset, Marion Strasmick, Andrew Tombes (as "Performer"), Polly Walker, Miss Wayne, Dorothy Wegman, Miss Williams, Miss Wilson, Yacht Club Entertainers. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1927) Stage Play: The Merry Malones. Musical comedy. Book by George M. Cohan. Lyrics by George M. Cohan. Music by George M. Cohan. Musical Director: Charles J. Gebest. Music orchestrated by Mike Lake. Directed by Edward Royce. Erlanger's Theatre: 26 Sep 1927- 28 Apr 1928 (216 performances/on hiatus from 11 Mar 1928- 8 Apr 1928). Produced by George M. Cohan.
- (1928) Stage Play: She's My Baby. Directed by Edward Royce.
- (1928) Stage Play: Billie. Musical. Directed by Edward Royce.
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