- (1917) Stage: Translated "The Torches", produced on Broadway (earliest Broadway credit). Written by Henri Bataille. Directed by Lester Lonergan (also in cast). Bijou Theatre: 24 Oct 1917-Nov 1917 (closing date unknown/29 performances). Cast: Sara Biala, Richard Carlyle, Paul Doucet, Eugene Du Bois, Jules Epailly [Broadway debut], Harry Hadfield, Ethelbert Hales, Harry Huguenot, Hudson Liston, John S. O'Brien, Amy Ricard, Gladys Wynne. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1920) Stage: Wrote (w/Avery Hopwood) "Ladies' Night", produced on Broadway. Comedy/farce. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 9 Aug 1920-Jun 1921 (closing date unknown/360 performances). Cast: Helen Barnes (as "Tillie"), John Cumberland (as "Jimmy Walters"), Eleanor Dawn (as "Miss Murphy"), Vincent Dennie (as "Bob Stanhope"), Edward Douglas (as "Cort Craymer"), Nellie Filmore (as "Lollie"), Claiborne Foster (as "Dulcy Walters"), Evelyn Gosnell (as "Mimi Tarlton"), Pearl Jardinere (as "Mrs. Green"), Grace Kaber (as "Josie"), Allyn King (as " Alicia Bonner"), Eda Ann Luke (as "Babette"), Julia Ralph (as " A Policewoman"), Mrs. Stuart Robson (as "Mrs. Shultz"), Adele Rolland (as "Suzon"), Charles Ruggles (as "Fred Bonner"), Fred Sutton (as "A Fireman"), Judith Vosselli (as "Rhoda Begova"). Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1921) Stage: Adapted book for "Bluebeard's Eighth Wife", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Based on the French of Alfred Savoir. Directed by Lester Lonergan and Robert Milton. Ritz Theatre: 19 Sep 1921-Feb 1922 (closing date unknown/155 performances). Cast: Barry Baxter (as "Albert De Marceau"), Edmund Breese (as "John Brandon"), Ina Claire (as "Monna"), Jules Epailly (as "M. Kay"), Leonore Harris (as "Mlle. George"), Anne Meredith (as "Lucienne"), Ernest Stallard (as "The Marquis de Briac"), Philip Tonge (as "A Secretary"). Produced by William Harris Jr. NOTE: Filmed as Bluebeard's 8th Wife (1923), Bluebeard's Eighth Wife (1938).
- (1927) Stage: Adapted book foro "Sam Abramovitch", produced on Broadway. Written by François Porché. National Theatre: 18 Jan 1927-Jan 1927 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Richard Abbott, Charles Adams, Mark Adams, Kirk Ames (as "Second Clerk"), Ainsworth Arnold (as "Prof. Ranke"), Harry Barker, Maud Brooks, Edward Chodorov (as "An Italian Immigrant"), Ruth Chorpenning (as "Aunt Miriam" / Zmira"), Julia Cohn, Gerald Cornell, John Davis, Pedro de Cordoba (as "Sam Abromovitch"), Vyvyan Dobbie, Fred J. Fairbanks, Mary Fowler, William Frederic, Richard Freeman, Leah Hanna, Arthur Hohl (as "Moses Rosenfeld"), Ernest Howard, Lee Kohlmar (as "Wolf Joseph"), Will Marsh, Kate Morgan, George Offerman Jr., Marie Offerman, Lillian Okun, Adele Ronson, Charles MacLean Savage, Charles Walters, Edna Washburn. Produced by Anne Nichols.
- (1928) Stage: Wrote (w/Lester Lonergan [also director]) "The Golden Age", produced on Broadway. Longacre Theatre: 24 Apr 1928-Apr 1928 (unknown closing date/6 performances). Cast: John Anthony, Walton Butterfield, Leila Frost, Donald Gallaher, Selene Johnson, David Landau (as "Clifford Barnes"), George F. Marion, Warren McCullom, Diantha Pattison (as "Golden Voice"), Warren William. Produced by John Tuerk.
- (1928) Stage: "Get Me in the Movies", produced on Broadway. Comedy/farce.
- (1929) Stage: Adapted book for "Fioretta", produced on Broadway. Musical/romantic comedy/operetta. Music / lyrics by George Bagby and G. Romilli. Book by / Production Supervised by / Produced by Earl Carroll. Additional lyrics by Grace Henry [final Broadway credit], Jo Trent and Billy Rose. Music orchestrated by Domenico Savino. Musical Direction by Hans Fredhoven. Choreographed by LeRoy Prinz. Directed by Clifford Brooke and Edgar J. MacGregor. Earl Carroll Theatre: 5 Feb 1929-11 May 1929 (111 performances). Cast: Dorothy Knapp (as "Fioretta Pepoli"), Violet Arnold, Lionel Atwill (as "Count Matteo Di Brozzo"), Faith Bacon, Paul Banker, Vic Banks, William Billinghurst, Jack Boggs, Lilian Bond (as "Rosamanda" / "Ensemble"), Jay Brennan, Fanny Brice (as "Marchesa Vera Di Livio"), Dorothy Britton, Leo Bronson Louise Brooks (as "Lucetta" / "Ensemble"), Catherine Clark, G. Davison Clark, Charles Columbus, Elsie Connor, Dorothy Corrigan, Dorice Covert, Rita Crane, Evelyn Crowell, Frank Cullen, Frances Delacy, Sylvia Derby, Leon Dumbadse, Leon Errol (as "Julio Pepoli"), Jackson Fairchild, Stuart N. Farrington, Cpl. Frank Fiore, Dorothea Frank, Geranium, David Gerry, Harry Goldberg, Betty Goodwin, Gean Greenwald, Giovanni Guerreri, Roy Hansen, Marion Harcke, Angeline Hassel, Virginia Hawkins, George Houston (as "Orsino", aka "Count di Rovani"), Charles Howard, Stanley Howard Ensemble, Margaret Joyce, Theo Karle, Nelda Kincaid, Carol Kingsbury, Martin Le Roy, Bob Lee, Jack Leps, August Lindauer, Wallace Magill, Margaret Manners, John Marlowe, Doris Maye, Russell McLelland, Ida Michaels, Odessa Morgan, Alphonso Mullarkey, Armin Muller, Ordoni Muzzi, Charles Naylor, Leo Pardello, Ruth Patterson, Elsie Pedrick, Irma Philbin, Rae Powell, John Roland, Leonard Ross, Louis Ruff, Albert Sanchez, Blanche Satchell, Hugh Saunders, Sidney Schlesser, Rose Shaw, Martin Sheppard, Autumn Simms, Nelson Snow, Rita Stone, Clement Taylor, Peggy Taylor, Ernest Tello, Benjamin Tilberg, Leonard Trion, Costanza Venturella, Ethel Jane Walker, Dow Walling, J. Allen Ware, Vivian Wilson, John Zimmerman. NOTE: The quintessential flop of Broadway history. This was Carroll's first attempt at one of his own script adaptations. He made the critical error in casting his girlfriend, Miss Knapp, in the lead role in a musical. Knapp couldn't (and didn't) sing in the production and was ridiculed by critics. Carroll's principal backer, Mrs. Anne Warren Weightman Penfield, lost her $350,000 investment in this show.
- (1945) Stage: "Good Night, Ladies", produced on Broadway.
- (1937) Novel: "The Affair of the Syrian Dagger".
- (1932) Novel: "The Butterfly Murders".
- (1937) Novel: "The Affair of the Malacca Stick".
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