- (1899 - 1934) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1899) Stage Play: Mlle. Fifi. Farce. Manhattan Theatre: 1 Feb 1899- closing date unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Louise Beaudet (as "Mlle. Fifi") [Broadway debut], Aubrey Boucicault, Rose Coghlan, Grace George. Produced by William A. Brady and Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- (1917) Stage Play: Flo-Flo. Musical comedy. Book by Frédérique De Grésac. Music by Silvio Hein. Lyrics by Edward A. Paulton and Fred De Gresac. Musical Director: Theodore Stearns. Featuring songs with lyrics by George Edwards. Featuring songs by Hugo Frey. Musical Staging by David Bennett. Directed by Walter Brooks. Cort Theatre: 20 Dec 1917- 29 Jun 1918 (220 performances). Produced by John Cort.
- (1919) Stage Play: One Night in Rome. Drama. Written by J. Hartley Manners. Criterion Theatre: 2 Dec 1919- Jun 1920 (closing date unknown/107 performances). Cast: Barry Baxter (as "Denby Wragge"), Louise Beaudet (as "Mrs. Redlynch"), Marie Bianchi (as "La Bambina"), Helen Blair (as "Zephyr"), Valentine Clemow (as "Aenea"), H. Cooper Cliffe (as "Mr. Justice Millburne"), Thomas Coffin Cooke (as "Gresham"), Olin Field (as "Kiara"), Greta Kemble-Cooper (as "Iola"), George Majeroni [credited as Giorgio Majeroni] (as "Signor Diranda"), Philip Merivale (as "Richard Oak"), Mrs. Felix Morris (as "Mrs. Oak"), John Davenport (as "Seymour Bikra"), Laurette Taylor (as "L'Enigme"). Produced by George C. Tyler. Note: Filmed by Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corporation [later known as MGM] as One Night in Rome (1924).
- (1921) Stage Play: Nature's Nobleman. Farce. Written by Samuel Shipman and Clara Lipman. Directed by Louis Mann. Apollo Theatre: 14 Nov 1921- Jan 1922 (closing date unknown/74 performances). Cast: Louise Beaudet (as "Dora Schnitzler"), Mary Brandon (as "Rose Brand"), Leonard Doyle (as "Fred Tanner"), Allyn Gillyn [credited as Allyn Gillyn] (as "Josephine Johnson"), Hans Hansen (as "Wilhelm Brand"), Frances Harland (as "Freda"), Kenneth Lee (as "Shag"), Helen Lowell (as "Belle Brand"), Louis Mann (as "Carl Schnitzler"), Sue McManamy (as "Effie Schnitzler"), John Roche (as "Dan Schnitzler"), Clarke Silvernail (as "Morgan Rockefeller Wells"), Morgan Wallace (as "Charles Johnson"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1928) Stage Play: White Lilacs. Musical. Music by Karl Hajos. Book by Harry B. Smith. Lyrics by Harry B. Smith. Original German book by Sigurd Johannsen. Musical Direction by Pierce de Reeder. Additional music by Maurice Ruebens and Sammy Timberg. Additional lyrics by David Goldberg and J. Keirn Brennan. Ensembles directed by Vaughn Godfrey. Directed by George F. Marion. Shubert Theatre (moved to Jolson's 59th Street Theatre from 8 Oct 1928- close): 10 Sep 1928- 12 Jan 1929 (136 performances). Cast: Catherine Allen (as "Ensemble"), Melba Alter (as "Louison/One of Trio"), Louise Beaudet (as "Catherine"), Helen Bishop (as "Ensemble"), Grace Brinkley (as "Delphine Potocka"), John Campbell (as "Ensemble"), Madeline Clancy (as "Ensemble"), Charles Croker-King (as "Giacomo Meyerbeer"), William Demarest (as "Ensemble"), Diana Doering (as "Ensemble"), Edwin Drake (as "Ensemble"), Eliz Fergusson (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Forsythe (as "Ensemble"), Mae Golding (as "Ensemble"), William Hall (as "Ensemble"), Maurice Holland (as "Gaston de Flavigny"), DeWolf Hopper Sr. (as "Dubusson"), Frank Horn (as "Prince Obelenski/Ensemble"), Juanita (as "Juanita"), Ernest Lawford (as "Heinrich Heine"), Vivian Lynn (as "Ensemble"), Wallace Magill (as "Ensemble"), Eva Mascagno (as "Mlle. Taglioni"), Steven McNulty (as "Ensemble"), Odette Myrtil (as "Madame George Sand"), Phyllis Newkirk (as "Marquise De Mours/One of Trio"), Paco (as "Paco"), Helen Page (as "Ensemble"), Louise Randolph (as "Ensemble"), Phil Reep (as "Ensemble"), Guy Robertson (as "Frederic Chopin"), Allan Rogers (as "Luselle"), Vernon Rudolph (as "Franz Liszt/Ensemble"), Edna Starck (as "Ensemble"), Franklin Van Horn (as "Balzac"), Douglas Vincent (as "Ensemble"), Frank Weiner (as "Ensemble"), Charlotte Woodruff (as "Countess D'Agoult/One of Trio"), Dora Zommerowna (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1934) Stage Play: Mother Lode. Drama. Written by Dan Totheroh and George O'Neil. Directed by Melvyn Douglas. Cort Theatre: 22 Dec 1934- Dec 1934 (closing date unknown/9 performances). Cast: Ivan Arbuckle (as "Yank"), Frank Baer (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Bayley (as "Ensemble"), Louise Beaudet (as "Mrs. Schiller") [final Broadway role], Beulah Bondi (as "Mrs. Kate Hawkins "), Roland Bottomley (as "Lord Berkeley Beresfield"), Barbara Brown (as "Ensemble"), Orrin Burke (as "Irish Johnnie"), Dorothea Cadwallader (as "Ensemble"), Frank Camp (as "Thomas Carter"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Frank O'Malley"), Cynthia Dane (as "Ensemble"), Clifford Dempsey (as "Whiskey Truman, Later, Sen. Truman"), Melvyn Douglas (as "Carey Ried "), Alice Dowd (as "Ensemble"), Willis Duncan (as "Ensemble"), Edythe Elliott (as "Mrs. Thomas Carter"), Gertrude Flynn (as "Julia Musette"), William Franklin (as "Cassius, A Sailor"), Helen Freeman (as "Madame Lorska"), Helen Gahagan (as "Hannah Hawkins"), Al Guin (as "Ensemble"), Carolyn Hun (as "Ensemble"), J. James (as "Ensemble"), Lida Kane (as "Mother O'Brien"), Robert Kellard (as "A Young Man" / "Slim"), George Lamar (as "Curley/Dick Condon"), Frank Lambert (as "Ensemble"), Lenore Lonergan (as "Clarissa Ried"), Lester Lonergan III (as "Little Breeches"), Booth Ried (as "A Man"), Jean Marwood (as "Ensemble"), Barbara O'Neil (as "A Woman"), Arvid Paulson (as "Sing"), Paul Porter (as "Ensemble"), Franklin Reber (as "Ensemble"), Mary Reilly (as "Ensemble"), Tex Ritter (as "Red Dog" / "Another Man"), C. Russell Sage (as "Speed Jake" / "Mike"), 'Robert Shayne (I)' (as "Horace Fields"), Einar Svalbe (as "Swede, A Lieutenant"), Valerie Tempest (as "Ensemble"), Robert Thorne (as "Pious Pete"), John Troughton (as "Brutus"), Rosalie Van der Stucken (as "Ensemble"), Lillian Walker (as "A Young Woman/Another Woman"), Kate Warriner (as "Evelyn"), Sam Worth (as "Ensemble"). Produced by George Bushar and John Tuerk. Note: Filmed as Yellow Dust (1936)).
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