- (1896 - 1926) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1896) Stage Play: The Mummy. Farce. Written by George Day and Allen Reed. Cast: Virginia Bernard (as "Cleopatra"), Amelia G. Bingham (as "Hattie Van Tassell Smythe") [Broadway debut], Robert Hilliard (as "Ramses II").
- (1897) Stage Play: Captain Imprudence. Comedy. Written by Edwin Milton Royle [earliest Broadway credit]. American Theatre: 4 Jan 1897- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Amelia G. Bingham (as "Mrs. Trigg"), Ellen Burg Edeson (as "Lucretia Bugg"), McKee Rankin (as "Major Hannibal Bugg"), Edwin Milton Royle (as "Capt. Willard Shields"), Selena Fetter Royle (as "Jovita Talamanca").
- (1899) Stage Play: At the White Horse Inn. Farce. Written by Sydney Rosenfeld. Based on the German of Oskar Blumenthal and Gustaf Kadelburg. Wallack's Theatre: 6 Feb 1899- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Amelia G. Bingham, Leo Ditrichstein, Joseph Holland, Miriam Nesbitt [Broadway debut].
- (1899) Stage Play: The Cuckoo. Farce. Written by Charles H. Brookfield. Based on "Decore" by Henri Meilhac. Wallack's Theatre: 3 Apr 1899- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Amelia G. Bingham, Joseph Holland, Thomas A. Wise. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1900) Stage Play: Hearts Are Trumps. Melodrama. Written by Cecil Raleigh. Garden Theatre: 21 Feb 1900- May 1900 (closing date unknown/93 performances). Cast: Edwin Arden, Amelia G. Bingham, May Buckley [Broadway debut], Jessie Busley, William Cullington, Philip Cunningham, Henry Davis, Cecil B. DeMille [Broadway debut], Nora Dunblane, Carl Eckstrom, Marian Gardiner, Ruby Hayes, Sidney Herbert, E.M. Holland, Florence Howard, N.L. Jelenko, S. Miller Kent, Wano Lamonthe, Harry Lewis, Claire McDowell, Eleanor Moretti, Etta Morris, Christie Neville, Sara Perry, Florence Robinson, Kate Robinson, Helen Rogers, Meta Rogers, Carl St. Aubyn, Grant Stewart, Grace Van Bentheysen, Pauline Von Arnold, Joe Weber, Wales Winter. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1901) Stage Play: The Climbers. Drama. Written and directed by Clyde Fitch. Bijou Theatre: 21 Jan 1901- Jun 1901 (closing date unknown/163 performances). Cast: Amelia Bingham, Clara Bloodgood, George Boniface, Madge Carr Cook, Minnie Dupree, Robert Edeson, Lillian Eldredge, John Flood, Ferdinand Gottschalk (as "Johnny Trotter"), Ysobel Haskins, Annie Irish, Mr. Kinard, Florence Lloyd, Maude Monroe, Edward Moreland, Henry Stokes, James Bennett Sturgis, Frederick Wallace, Henry Warwick, Frank Worthing, Harry Wright. Produced by Amelia G. Bingham.
- (1902) Stage Play: Lady Margaret. Comedy. Adapted from the French by Edward E. Rose. Bijou Theatre: 27 Jan 1902- Feb 1902 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Edward Abeles, Amelia G. Bingham, Edith Blair, Verner Clarges, Madge Carr Cook, Arnold Daly, Miss De Rondamayo, Robert Dudley, Minnie Dupree, Bijou Fernandez, Alfred Fisher, Marion Gardiner, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Annie Irish, Annie Morton, T. Roberts, Harriett Sawyer, Cora Tanner, Alice Theiss, Charles Walcot, Harold Walsh, Henry Warwick, Ivah Wills, Evelyn Wood, Frank Worthing. Produced by Amelia G. Bingham.
- (1902) Stage Play: A Modern Magdalen. Drama. Written by C. Haddon Chambers. Directed by Max Freeman. Bijou Theatre: 29 Mar 1902- May 1902 (closing date unknown/73 performances). Cast: Amelia G. Bingham, Arthur Byron, Madge Carr Cook, Charlotte Dandiege, Henry E. Dixey, Robert Dudley, Adele Farrington, Alfred Fisher, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Joseph Holland, Gordon Johnston, Wilton Lackaye, William Moore, Lucille Spinney, Lillian Thatcher, Lillian Wright.
- (1903) Stage Play: The Frisky Mrs. Johnson. Drama. Written by Clyde Fitch. Based on "Mme. Flirt" by Paul Gavault and Georges Berr. Directed by Clyde Fitch. Princess Theatre: 9 Feb 1903- Apr 1903 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: William L. Abingdon, F. Owen Baxter, Amelia G. Bingham, Madge Carr Cook, Minnie Dupree, Alfred Fisher, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Wilton Lackaye (as "Jim Morley'), Richard Lambart, Ernest Lawford [Broadway debut], George S. Probert, Alison Skipworth, Charles H. Wentz, Lillian Wright. Produced by Amelia G. Bingham. Note: Filmed as The Frisky Mrs. Johnson (1920).
- (1904) Stage Play: Olympe. Drama. Written by Pierre Decourcelle. From the novel by Alexandre Dumas. Directed by Eugene W. Presbrey. Knickerbocker Theatre: 18 Jan 1904- Feb 1904 (closing date unknown/21 performances). Cast: William L. Abingdon, Amelia G. Bingham, Myron Calice, Edgar L. Davenport, Amy Denton, Thomas F. Fallon, Bijou Fernandez, Frank Fullham, Louise Galloway, J.H. Gilmour, Jean Hayden, Charles Haynes, Fred Herford, Gilbert Heron, Edith Hinkle, Harry Hyde, H.S. Marvin, Dorothy Russell, George Schaeffer, Harold M. Shaw, Ralph Stillwell, Ivy Troutman [Broadway debut], Adelyn Wesley, Basil West, Henry Woodruff. Produced by Amelia G. Bingham.
- (1904) Stage Play: The Climbers. Drama (revival). Written by Clyde Fitch. Princess Theatre: 14 Nov 1904- Dec 1904 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Grace Barton (as "Jessica Hunter"), Amelia G. Bingham (as "Mrs. Sterling"), Grace Chester (as "Miss Sillerton"), Walter Colligan (as "Dr. Steinart"), Harry Earl (as "Richard Sterling, Jr."), Frank Edwards (as "Leonard"), Maud Evans (as "Marie"), Roy Fairchild (as "Johnny Trotter"), Thomas F. Fallon (as "Godesby"), Mrs. Goldfinch (as "Miss Hunter"), Charles Hayne (as "Jordan"), William Joulins (as "Footman"), David Proctor (as "Frederick Mason"), Moselle Tatum (as "Clara Hunter"), Fred Thomas (as "Servant"), Ivy Troutman (as "Miss Godesby"), Charles Watson (as "Ryder"), Adelyn Wesley (as "Mrs. Hunter"), Henry Woodruff (as "Edward Warden"), Frank Worthing (as "Richard Sterling"), Marie Wright (as "Tompson"). Produced by Amelia G. Bingham.
- (1905) Stage Play: Mademoiselle Marni. Comedy/drama. Written by Henri Dumay. Directed by Max Freeman. Wallack's Theatre: 6 Mar 1905- Apr 1905 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: A. Albertson, Katharine Baker, James Barrows, Amelia G. Bingham (as "Fabienne Marni"), Maggie Breyer, Mlle. Antoinette Cantareuil, Grace Chandler, Edward L. Clark, Nellie Clarke, Walter Colligan, James Cooley, Frazer Coulter, Dore Davidson, Hazel Davis, Frederic De Belleville, Gwendolyn Dow, Thomas F. Fallon, Max Freeman, Grace Fuller, Charles Goodwin, Augusta Greenleaf, Hattie Haley, George Hammond, Charles Hayne, Brandon Hurst, Alber Inesnel, Henry Jones, W.P. Kitts, Henry Kolker, Amy Lesser, Sylvia Lynden, C.P. Martin, Mohammet, Hiram Montaine, Edith Mullen, James Peva, C.H. Pillsbury, Flora Prince, Ellen Reif, May Robertson, Madge Ryan, Topsy Siegrist, W.T. Simpson, Rose Thomas, Frederic L. Tiden, C.P. Watson, Mlle. Yram. Produced by arrangement with Henry W. Savage. Produced by Amelia G. Bingham.
- (1905) Stage Play: Oliver Twist. Written by J. Comyns Carr. Based on the novel by Charles Dickens. Fifth Avenue Theatre: 13 Nov 1905- unknown (unknown performances). Cast [as known]: Amelia G. Bingham (as "Nancy"), J.E. Dodson (as "Fagan").
- (1906) Stage Play: Jeanne D'arc. Tragedy. Written by Lawrence Marston and R.E.H. Greene. Fifth Avenue Theatre: 23 Apr 1906- unknown (unknown performances). Cast [as known]: Amelia G. Bingham.
- (1907) Stage Play: The Lilac Room. Written by Beulah Marie Dix and Evelyn Greenleaf Sutherland. Directed by Amelia G. Bingham. Weber's Music Hall: 3 Apr 1907- Apr 1907 (closing date unknown/4 performances). Cast: Gertrude Augarde, Amelia G. Bingham, Charles Butler, Harold De Becker, Rosalie Dupre, Jessie F. Glendinning, Charles P. Hammond, Joseph Mann, Herbert McKenzie, Frederick Powell, Madelaine Powell, L.E. Weed. Produced by Amelia G. Bingham.
- (1913) Stage Play: The New Henrietta. Comedy. Written by Bronson Howard. Revised by Victor Mapes and Winchell Smith. Directed by Joseph Brooks. Knickerbocker Theatre: 22 Dec 1913- Feb 1914 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: William H. Crane (as "Nicholas Van Alstyne/Old Nick"), Amelia G. Bingham (as "Mrs. Cornelia Opdyke"), Malcolm Bradley, Halbert W. Brown, Lyster Chambers (as "Mark Turner, Nick's son-in-law"), Patricia Collinge (as "Agnes Gates, Nick's Ward"), Eileen Errol, Douglas Fairbanks (as "Bertie Van Alstyne, Nick's Son"), Arthur Stuart Hull (as "Dr. George Wainwright"), J.H. Huntley, Edward Poland, Zeffie Tilbury (as "Hattie, A strange young woman"), Bud Woodthorpe. Produced by Charles Frohman and Klaw & Erlanger. Note: Filmed as The Saphead (1920).
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content