- (1906 - 1936) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1906) Stage Play: The Vanderbilt Cup. Musical comedy. Music by Robert Hood Bowers. Book by 'Sydney Rosenfeld' (qv. Lyrics by Raymond Peck. Musical Director: Robert Hood Bowers. Directed by Hugh Ford [earliest Broadway credit]. Broadway Theatre: 16 Jan 1906- 1 Jun 1906 (143 performances). Cast: Sallie Berg, Henry Bergman (as "Gaspard, an honest French chauffeur"), E.W. Bosher, Aubrey Boucicault, Kate Buckley (as "Gwynne, Bell-girl of the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"), Blanche Chapman, Charles Dow Clark (as "Newt Offut, a hill climber"), Grace Gaylor Clark, Florence M. Constantine, Helena H. Constantine, Edith Decker, Charles Dickson, Henry V. Donnelly, Violet Duval, Bessie Graham, Kate Graham, Gertrude Grant, Grace Griswold, Otis Harlan (as "Theodore Banting, an Equitable attorney at law"), Ella Hatton, Elsie Janis (as "Dorothy Willetts"), Percy Janis, Dorothy Kent, Jacques Kruger, Daisy Leon, F. Newton Lindo, Margaret Love, Kate Mayhew (as "Mrs. Sylvester, Stockholder in the Marjorie Wellington Hotel") [Broadway debut], Marie Messner, Bessie Mills, Blanche Morrell, Lillian Nicholson, George Odell, Elsa Reinhardt, Blanche Rice, Eloise Steele, Helen Weathersby, Muriel Wilbur. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1907) Stage Play: The Vanderbilt Cup. Musical comedy [return engagement]. Music by Robert Hood Bowers. Book by Sydney Rosenfeld. Lyrics by Raymond Peck. Musical Director: Robert Hood Bowers. Directed by Hugh Ford. New York Theatre (moved to The Grand Opera House from 1 Apr 1907- close): 7 Jan 1907- Apr 1907 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: E.W. Bosher (as "Male Quartette"), Jacque Bradley (as "Pearl, Bell-girl of the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"), Helen Case (as "Pansy, lower of the Comic Opera"), Blanche Chapman (as "Miss Carstairs, Dorothy's music teacher and chaperon"), Charles Dow Clark (as "Newt Offut, a hill climber"), Florence M. Constantine (as "Whirlwind Dance Specialty"), Helena H. Constantine (as "Whirlwind Dance Specialty"), Albert Cowles (as "Clerk of the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"), Robert F. Daley (as "Theodore Banting, an Equitable attorney at law"), Hal De Forrest (as "Gaspard, an honest French chauffeur"), Edith Decker (as "Clarinda Larkspur, who objects to a speed limit"), Leona Drew (as "Maude, Bell-girl of the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"), Erma Green (as "Winnifred, Bell-girl of the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"), Mary Greville (as "Mrs. Herkimer, Stockholder in the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"), Grace Griswold (as "Mrs. Willetts, mother of Dorothy/Mrs. Filestrom, Stockholder in the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"), Clarence Handyside (as "Curt Willetts, who "got rich quickly," uncle of Dorothy"), Ella Hatton (as "Kate Croops, the porter"), Elsie Janis (as "Dorothy Willetts"), Percy Janis (as "Leon, waiter at the Garden City Hotel"), Jacques Kruger (as "Mr. Boxwood, President of the Gasoline Trust"), Daisy Leon (as "Marion, Bell-girl of the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"), F. Newton Lindo (as "Arthur, Boxwood's chain-less hopeless"), Lelia Maillon (as "Eloise, Bell-girl of the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"), Kate Mayhew (as "Mrs. Sylvester, Stockholder in the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"), Mr. Mertimer (as "Male Quartette"), Orma Nagle (as "Freda, Bell-girl of the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"), Emma Naylor (as "Inkie North, Western Union Messenger Girl"), Jane Oakes (as "Elaine, Bell-girl of the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"), May Quinette (as "Mrs. Ostrand, Stockholder in the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"), Joan Sawyer (as "Lily, Flower of the Comic Opera"), Arthur Stanford (as "Dexter Joyce, a wine agent"), Eloise Steele (as "Rose, Flower of the Comic Opera/Violet, Flower of the Comic Opera"), Louise Sylvester (as Mrs. Dillenberg, Stockholder in the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"), Mr. Tomasso (as "Male Quartette"), Genevieve Victoria (as "Celeste elevator girl at the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"), Helen Weathersby (as "Mrs. Hillrace, Stockholder in the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"), Middle White (as "Detective in the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"), Mr. Williams (as "Male Quartette"), Birdnye Zuber (as "Gwynne, Bell-girl of the Marjorie Wellington Hotel"). Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1913) Stage Play: The Hundredth Man. Written by Hutcheson Boyd. Wallack's Theatre: 8 Feb 1913 (1 performance). Cast: Charles Dickson, Ruth Fielding [only Broadway appearance], William Frederic, William Harcourt, Arthur Laceby, Kate Mayhew, Louise Randolph, Ralph Stuart, Royal Tracy, Frank Weston. Produced by Sydney Rosenfeld.
- (1913) Stage Play: The Necken/The Guilty Conscience. Drama. Lyceum Theatre: 15 Apr 1913 (1 performance/comprised of two shows). The Guilty Conscience: Written by Robert H. Davis. Cast: Alberta Gallatin, Frederick Perry, William H. Post. The Necken: Written by Elizabeth Crane. Directed by Sydney Rosefeld. Cast: Isabel Calder, George Cameron, Conrad Cantzen, George Currie, Marion Earnshaw, Lawrence Eyre, Lettie Ford, Alberta Gallatin, Emily V. Lawshe, Kate Mayhew, Alice Newell, William H. Post, Ernest Weir, Edith Yeager. Produced by Sydney Rosenfeld.
- (1913) Stage Play: Shadowed. Written by Dion Clayton Calthrop and Cosmo Gordon Lennox. Fulton Theatre: 24 Sep 1913- Sep 1913 (closing date unknown/6 performances). Cast: William Conklin, Charles Francis, V.L. Granville, Eva MacDonald, Olive May, Kate Mayhew, Wilson Melrose, Frank Monroe, Emmett Shackelford, Ivan F. Simpson, Henry Warwick. Produced by James Forbes.
- (1914) Stage Play: Just Herself. Written by Ethel Watts Mumford. Playhouse Theatre: 23 Dec 1914- Jan 1915 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: France Bendsten, Aldrich Bowker, Royal Byron, Malcolm Duncan, Eleanor Gordon, Gregory Kelly, Lydia Lopokova, Kate Mayhew, Henry Morley, Harold Stoddard, Olive Templeton [credited as Olive Temple], Frederic Thomas, Aletha Walters. Produced by Harrison Grey Fiske.
- (1917) Stage Play: Johnny, Get Your Gun. Written by Edmund Lawrence Burke [credited as Edmund Laurence Burke]. Revised by Dorothy Donnelly. Criterion Theatre: 12 Feb 1917- Jul 1917 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: Louis Bennison, Everett Butterfield, Jane Carlton, Roy Cochrane, Tom K. Corliss, Harry Cuscadon, Howard Fay, Lorraine Frost, Robert E. Homans, John Ivan, Carl Massey, Kate Mayhew, M.A. Meyer, Ralph Nairn, Billie Scott, Barton Williams, Rose Winter. Produced by John Cort.
- (1918) Stage Play: The Little Teacher.
- (1920) Stage Play: The Checkerboard.
- (1920) Stage Play: Mecca. Musical.
- (1921) Stage Play: Only 38. Comedy. Written by A.E. Thomas. Directed by Sam Forrest. Cort Theatre: 13 Sep 1921- Dec 1921 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Harry C. Browne, Leon Cunningham, Neil Martin, Kate Mayhew, Ruth Mero, Percy Pollock, Mary Ryan, Helen Van Hoose. Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1922) Stage Play: Billeted. Comedy (revival).
- (1924) Stage Play: The Wonderful Visit. Drama.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Small Timers. Comedy.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Wisdom Tooth. Comedy.
- (1928) Stage Play: The Father. Drama (revival). Written by August Strindberg, as translated by Robert Whittier. Directed by Alan Dinehart. Belmont Theatre: 11 May 1928- May 1928 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Edward Broadley, Alan Dinehart (as "Cavalry Captain"), Edward Everett Hale, Florence Johns, Peggy Keenan, Robert Le Seuer, Kate Mayhew, Albert Reed. Produced by Alan Dinehart and Richard Herndon.
- (1928) Stage Play: The Beaux Stratagem. Comedy (revival). Written by George Farquhar. Prologue by Edgar Lee Masters. Directed by Howard Lindsay. Hampden's Theatre: 4 Jun 1928- Jun 1928 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Robert I. Aitken (as "Soldier"), Fay Bainter (as "Mrs. Sullen"), David Belasco (as "Epilogue"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Soldier"), Joseph Cummings Chase (as "Soldier"), William Courtleigh (as "Gibbet"), Henrietta Crosman (as "Lady Bountiful"), Paul A. Curtis (as "Hounslow"), Harry Grant Dart (as "Traveller"), F.H. Day (as "Servant in the Inn"), Edwin T. Emery (as "Soldier"), Fred Eric (as "Archer"), George B. Fife (as "Traveller"), William Gustafson Soldier"), Ruth Hammond (as "Gipsey"), Lyn Harding (as "Sullen"), O.P. Heggie (as "Sir Charles Freeman"), Raymond Hitchcock (as "Boniface, Landlord of the Inn"), Brian Hooker (as "Traveller"), Pamela Hooker (as "Traveller"), Josephine Hull (as "Servant in the Inn"), Ernest Hunter (as "Soldier"), John C. King Soldier"), Kate Mayhew (as "A Countrywoman"), Patterson McNutt (as "Traveller"), Owen Meech (as "A Countryman"), Helen Menken (as "Dorinda"), Essie Mercedes (as "Traveller"), John Daly Murphy (as "Foigard"), Jack O'Donnell(as "Traveller"), T.C. Pakenham (as "Traveller"), Eric Pape (as "Traveller"), James T. Powers (as "Scrub"), Herbert Ranson (as "Gagshot"), Wilfrid Seagram (as "Aimwell"), James Stanley (as "Soldier"), Frederic Dorr Steele (as "Traveller"), Dorothy Stickney (as "Cherry"), Loren Stout (as "Traveller"), Thompson Sweeny (as "Traveller"), William B. Taylor (as "Soldier"), Raymond Thayer (as "Soldier"), Ray Vir Den (as "Soldier"), Judith Vosselli (as "Traveller"), Reinald Werrenrath (as "Soldier"), John Westley (as "Count Bellair"). Produced by The Players. Note: This play was first performed in New York in 1751 at the Nassau Street Theatre, making it one of the earliest productions ever mounted in the U.S. It was revived again in 1959.
- (1928) Stage Play: Caravan. Melodrama.
- (1928) Stage Play: The Light of Asia. Written by Georgina Jones Walton. Choreographed by Ruth St. Denis. Directed by Walter Hampden. Hampden's Theatre: 9 Oct 1928- Oct 1928 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Dallas Anderson (as "Kondanna"), Gage Bennett (as "King of Koli"), Norbert Cameron (as "Noble"), George Cotton (as "Merchant"), M. D'Arcy (as "A Hillman"), Francis Dears (as "Soldiers"), Forrest Gains (as "Noble"), Thomas Gomez (as "An Old Leper/Assaji"), Evelyn Goodrich (as "Radha/Purna"), C. Norman Hammond (as "Shivamangala"), Walter Hampden (as "Siddhartha"), Gordon Hart (as "Another Astrologer/Vappa"), Isabel S. Hill (as "Nautch Girl"), Harriet Ingersoll (as "Nautch Girl"), Stephen Irving (as "Water Bearer"), Philip Jones (as "Soldier"), Richard Lawrence (as "Water Bearer"), Omar Le Gant (as "A Page"), Jan Lindermann (as "A Hermit"), Judith Lowry (as "Prajapati"), Anna Lubow (as "Kisogatami"), Beatrice Maude (as "Gunga"), Kate Mayhew (as "An Outcaste Woman"), Caroline Meade (as "Draupadi"), Joseph Milton (as "Merchant/A Monk"), Eleanor Mish (as "Chitra"), Anne Mitchell (as "Nautch Girl"), Mabel Moore (as "Queen Maya/Sujata"), LeRoi Operti (as "Ormuzd"), Lou Polan (as "Devadatta, Prince of Koli"), Eugene Powers (as "King of the Sakyas"), Charles Quigley (as "Ananda"), Sri Ragini (as "Nautch Girl"), Edwin Ross Jr. (as "A Citizen"), Ernest Rowan (as "Channa"), Franklin Salisbury (as "Bhadya"), William Sauter (as "Asita/Mohanna"), Robert C. Schnitzer (as "Merchant"), Freddie Stange (as "Rahula"), William Thornton (as "An Attendant"), Ingeborg Torrup (as "Yashodara"), Cecil Yapp (as "Visvamitra"). Produced by Walter Hampden.
- (1929) Stage Play: Vermont. Written by A.E. Thomas. Directed by Sam Forrest. Erlanger's Theatre: 7 Jan 1929- Jan 1929 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: John T. Doyle (as "Henry Carter"), Thomas V. Gillen (as "John Carter"), Harold Healy (as "William Burr"), Allyn Joslyn (as "James Belden"), Kate Mayhew (as "Jane Selden"), Theodore Newton (as "Hanson"), Phyllis Povah (as "Ann Carter"), Frank Rowan (as "Charles Carter"), Mark Sullivan (as "Al Farley"), Ring Thomas (as "Robert Walker"), Jack Williams (as "Donovan"). Produced by George M. Cohan.
- (1929) Stage Play: Jonesy. Comedy.
- (1930) Stage Play: Uncle Vanya. Drama (revival). Written by Anton Chekhov, as adapted by Rose Caylor. Directed by Jed Harris. Booth Theatre: 22 Sep 1930- Oct 1930 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Eduardo Ciannelli (as "Ilya Ilyich Telegin, Waffles"), Walter Connolly (as "Ivan Petrovich Voinitsky, Vanya"), Lillian Gish (as "Yelena Andreyevna"), Isabel Irving (as "Maria Vasilyevna Voinitskaya"), Harold Johnsrud (as "Servant"), Kate Mayhew (as "Maryina, Nanny"), Osgood Perkins (as "Mikhail lvovich Astrov"), Eugene Powers (as "Alexander Vladimirovich Serebryakov"), Joanna Roos (as "Sofya Alexandrovna, Sonya"). Produced by Jed Harris.
- (1930) Stage Play: Uncle Vanya. Drama (revival). Written by Anton Chekhov, as adapted by Rose Caylor. Booth Theatre: 22 Sep 1930- Oct 1930 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Produced by Jed Harris.
- (1932) Stage Play: Peacock. Comedy.
- (1933) Stage Play: Uncle Tom's Cabin. Melodrama. Written by G. L. Aiken. Musical program directed by Harry Gilbert. Revised by A.E. Thomas. Based on the novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe. Musical program prepared by Edward T. Emery. Directed by Earle Boothe. Alvin Theatre: 29 May 1933- Jun 1933 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Fay Bainter (as "Topsy"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Simon Legree"), Lyster Chambers (as "Haley"), Joseph Cummings Chase, George Christie (as "Mr. Wilson"), Russel Crouse (as "Ensemble"), Owen Culbertson, Francis H. Day, Pedro de Cordoba (as "George Harris"), Elizabeth Dewing, Malcolm Duncan, Mrs. Edward D. Dunn, Edward Delaney Dunn (as "Ensemble") [final Broadway role], Minnie Dupree (as "Aunt Ophelia"), Edwin T. Emery (as "Second Bidder"), Essie Emery, Sylvia Field (as "Marie"), William Fisher, Harry Gilbert, Ernest Glendinning (as "St. Clare"), Eleanor Goodrich, Harold W. Gould (as "Skeggs, the Auctioneer"), Harry Gresham (as "Quimbo"), Amy Groesbeck, Burford Hampden, Oswald Hering, Richard Hoffmann, Frederick Jagel, John C. King, John Knight, John Kramer, Wright Kramer, Ben Lackland (as "Sambo"), Roy Le May, Nancy Levering, Gene Lockhart (as "Gumption Cute"), Kathleen Lockhart (as "Ensemble"), Cecilia Loftus (as "Aunt Chloe"), Alice MacKenzie, Edward McNamara (as "Phineas Fletcher"), Oswald Marshall, Kate Mayhew (as "Aunt Hagar"), Harold McGee, Samuel Merwin, Earl Mitchell, T.H. Montgomery, John Daly Murphy (as "Marks"), Patricia O'Connell, Janice O'Connell, Patricia O'Connell, Paul Parks, George Riddell, Elisabeth Risdon (as "Eliza"), Lois Shore, Florence Short, Otis Skinner (as "Uncle Tom"), James Stanley, Harold Staton, W.B. Taylor, Raymond Thayer, Grenville Vernon, John Barnes Wells, Frank Wilcox (as "George Fisk"). Produced by The Players Club.
- (1934) Stage Play: The Joyous Season. Comedy.
- (1934) Stage Play: The Farmer Takes a Wife. Comedy. Written by Frank B. Elser [final Broadway credit] and Marc Connelly. Based on the novel "Rome Haul" by Walter D. Edmonds. Stage Manager: Albert Cowles [final Broadway credit]. Directed by Marc Connelly. 46th Street Theatre: 30 Oct 1934- Jan 1935 (closing date unknown/104 performances). Cast: Wylie Adams (as "Conductor"), Walter Ayres (as "Fry"), Joe M. Fields (as "Riley"), Henry Fonda (as "Dan Harrow"), James Francis-Robertson (as "Joe Teetham"), Ruth Gillmore (as "Mrs. Howard"), Margaret Hamilton (as "Lucy Gurget"), Frank Knight (as "Calder"), Mabel Kroman (as "Ivy"), Lewis Martin (as "Luke"), Kate Mayhew (as "Gammy Hennessy"), Mary McQuade (as "Della"), Bert J. Norton (as "Howard"), Charles F. O'Connor (as "Otway"), Larry Oliver (as "Lucas"), Gibbs Penrose (as "Jotham Klore"), Francis Pierlot (as "Sol Tinker"), Ralph Riggs (as "am Weaver"), Robert Ross (as "Stark"), Morton Stevens [credited as Morton L. Stevens] (as "Harry Emory"), Joseph Sweeney (as "Mr. Fisher"), June Walker (as "Molly Larkins"), Herb Williams (as "Fortune Friendly"), Jay Young (as "Yazey"). Produced by Max Gordon.
- (1935) Stage Play: A Journey By Night. Drama. Written by Arthur Goodrich from the German of Leo Perutz. Directed by Robert B. Sinclair. Shubert Theatre: 16 Apr 1935- Apr 1935 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Sarah Allen (as "Guest at the Night Bar"), Hobart Amory (as "Guardsman"), George Barr (as "Policeman"), Mimi Bontemps (as "Hedwig"), Jane Buchanan (as "Janet Fleming"), Eduardo Ciannelli (as "Max"), Martin Corne (as "Guest at the Night Bar"), Tom Coyle Guest at the Night Bar"), Isabel Delehanty (as "Trudie"), Ann Dere (as "Guest at the Night Bar"), Annette Downes (as "Vilma"), Harold Eidelseim (as "Guest at the Night Bar"), Jack Hartley (as "Schimke"), Nicholas Joy, Elizabeth Kendall (as "Anna"), Waldemar Klavun (as "Otto"), Jerome Leng (as "Guest at the Night Bar"), Greta Maren (as "Claire"), Kate Mayhew (as "Weinigl"), Joseph McInerney (as "Police Officer"), John Meehan (as "Guest at the Night Bar"), Fuller Mellish (as "Fritz"), Mary Murray (as "Hilda"), P. Phillips (as "Guest at the Night Bar"), Francis Pierlot (as "Adolph"), John Ray (as "Guest at the Night Bar"), Otis Schaeffer (as "Lisa"), James Stewart (as "Carl"), Beatrice Swanson (as "Julie"), Richard Taber (as "Ferdie"), Albert Dekker (as "Franz Urban") [credited as Albert Van Dekker], Frank Wilcox (as "Warren Fleming"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1936) Stage Play: Alice Takat. Drama. Written by José Ruben, from the Hungarian of Dezso Szomory. Directed by Frank Merlin. John Golden Theatre: 10 Feb 1936- Feb 1936 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Percy Ames (as "Homer Horeb") [final Broadway role], A.G. Andrews (as "Fritz"), Florence Auer (as "Mrs. Dubra") [final Broadway role], Al Baron (as "A Patient"), Mady Christians, Leo Curley (as "Professor Glotz"), Florence Earle (as "Miss Haus"), John Emery (as "George Kroos"), Lloyd Gough (as "Max Durak"), Russell Hardie, Nicholas Joy (as "Zuard Takat"), Arnold Korff (as "Prof. Tardy Kroos"), Kate Mayhew (as "Mrs. Helvet") [final Broadway role], Howard Emmett Rogers, Peggy Shannon (as "Kitty Linderman"), Edna West (as "Mrs. Baneyi"), Marjorie Wood (as "Mrs. Gantz"). Produced by Ed Wynn.
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