- (1904 - 1923) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1904) Stage Play: The Light That Lies in Woman's Eyes. Comedy. Written by E.A. Southern. Criterion Theatre: 25 Jan 1904- Feb 1904 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: John Adams, Oscar Baldwin, May Barton, Walter Biddle, Arthur Bauer [credited as Arthur Bower] (Broadway debut), Frederick Burt, Hugh Chatham, William Courtenay, Stanley Dark, Grace Darley, Laurence Eddinger, Sumner Gard, Thomas Gibson, Elizabeth Goodall, Margaret Gordon, Virginia Harned, Ethel Healy, Henry Jewett, Gregory Kelly, Thomas Kelly, Harry Lewis, J. Hartley Manners, Theodore Marston, Amy Meers, Reginald Perkins, Louise Phillips, Fanny Addison Pitt, James Reed, Sydney F. Rice, Eleanor Sanford, Eugene Santley, Mabel Snider, Estelle Solone, Robert Sutphin, Emma Thompson, Martha Wilde, Ethel Winthrop [Broadway debut]. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1904) Stage Play: Camille [The Fate of a Coquette] (Revival). Written by Alexandre Dumas, fils. Harlem Opera House (moved to The Garrick Theatre from 9 May 1904- close): 18 Apr 1904- May 1904 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Arthur Bauer [credited as Arthur Bower], Frederick Burt, Hugh Chatham, Frederic Courtenay, William Courtenay, Stanley Dark, Laurence Eddinger [credited as Lawrence Eddinger], Virginia Harned, Henry Jewett, Harry Lewis, Norman MacDonald, J. Hartley Manners, Fanny Addison Pitt, Sidney Rice, Ethel Winthrop.
- (1905) Stage Play: 'Op-o'-Me Thumb. Written by Frederick Fenn and Richard Bryce. Empire Theatre: 6 Feb 1905- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Maude Adams, A.S. 'Pop' Byron, May Galyer, Margaret Gordon, Violet Rand, Ethel Winthrop. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1907) Stage Play: The Witching Hour. Melodrama. Written by Augustus Thomas [credited as Augustus Thomas]. Hackett Theatre: 18 Nov 1907- May 1908 (closing date unknown/212 performances). Cast: Freeman Barnes, W.E. Butterfield, Morgan Coman (as "Clay"), Janet Dunbar (as "Viola Campbell"), Jennie A. Eustace (as "Helen Whipple"), Mr. Fawnsgaines, Harry S. Hadfield, Samuel E. Hines (credited as S.E. Hinds] [Broadway debut], Thomas P. Jackson, John Mason (as "Jack Brookfield"), George Nash (as "Frank Hardmuth"), Adelaide Nowak, William Sampson, E.L. Walton, Russ Whytal [credited as Russ Whytall], Ethel Winthrop. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert. Note: Filmed by Paramount Pictures as The Witching Hour (1934).
- (1909) Stage Play: The Lottery Man. Written by Rida Johnson Young. Bijou Theatre: 6 Dec 1909- May 1910 (closing date unknown/200 performances). Cast: Janet Beecher (as "Helen Heyer"), Louise Galloway, Harry S. Hadfield, Helen Lowell, Robert MacKay, Mary Leslie Mayo, Cyril Scott (as "Jack Wright"), Wallace Sharpe, Ethel Winthrop. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert. Note: Filmed by F. Ray Comstock Photoplay Company [distributed by Unity Sales Corp.] as The Lottery Man (1916), and by Paramount Pictures as The Lottery Man (1919) [considered lost as of Jul 2014].
- (1913) Stage Play: Blackbirds.
- (1915) Stage Play: Three of Hearts. Written by Martha Morton [final Broadway credit]. Based on "Hearts and Masks" by Harold McGrath. 39th Street Theatre: 3 Jun 1915- Jun 1915 (closing date unknown/20 performances). Cast: William Caryl, Arthur L. Cogliser, Ralph Collier, William Devereaux, Julia Hay, Arthur Jordon, Schuyler Ladd, Cecil Magnus, George Nash, Robert Rogers, Maurice Schonfeild, George H. Shelton, G.M. Takahash, Ethel Winthrop, Frank J. Woods, Blanche Yurka. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1915) Stage Play: Sadie Love. Written by Avery Hopwood. Gaiety Theatre (moved to The Harris Theatre 17 Jan 1916- close): 29 Nov 1915- Feb 1916 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: Betty Callish, Pedro de Cordoba, John Ivan, Alwyn Lewis, John Lyons, William Morris, Marjorie Rambeau, Ivy Troutman, Franklyn Underwood, Ethel Winthrop. Produced by Oliver Morosco. Note: Filmed by Paramount Pictures as Sadie Love (1919).
- (1916) Stage Play: Shirley Kaye. Written by Hulbert Footner. Hudson Theatre: 25 Dec 1916- Mar 1917 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: George Backus, Lee Baker, Corinne Barker, Victor Benoit, Kitty Brown, Ronald Byram, Helen Erskine, Elsie Ferguson, William Holden, William Lennox, Mrs. Jacques Martin, Douglas Patterson, Ethel Winthrop, Lawrence Wood. Produced by Klaw & Erlanger. Note: Filmed by Clara Kimball Young Film Corporation [distributed by Select Pictures Corporation] as Shirley Kaye (1917) [considered lost as of Jul 2014].
- (1921) Stage Play: Nemesis. Melodrama. Written by Augustus Thomas [credited as Augustus Thomas]. Hudson Theatre: 4 Apr 1921- May 1921 (closing date unknown/56 performances). Cast: Charles P. Bates, Roland Bottomley (as "Dr. Simpson"), Emmett Corrigan (as "Mr. Kallan"), John Craig, Robert Cummings (as "Officer Conlon"), Pedro de Cordoba (as "Mr. Jovaine"), Jennie Dickerson, Clayton Frye, Marie Goff, Jerry Hart, Howard Nugent, Frank M. Readick, Olive Tell (as "Marcia Kallan"), John M. Thoughton, Ethel Winthrop (as "Mrs. Purdy"), Eleanor Woodruff. Produced by George M. Cohan.
- (1923) Stage Play: Dumb-bell. Comedy. Written by J.C. Nugent and Elliott Nugent. Belmont Theatre: 26 Nov 1923- Nov 1923 (closing date unknown/2 performances). Cast: Jessie Crommette, Kenneth MacKenna (as "Ted Strone"), John Daly Murphy (as "Jones"), J.C. Nugent (as "Romeo"), Ruth Nugent, Gladys Wilson, Ethel Winthrop (as "Mrs. Stone") [final Broadway role]. Produced by Richard Herndon.
- (1923) Stage Play: The Sporting Thing To Do. Comedy. Written by Thompson Buchanan. Directed by Oliver Morosco and Clifford Brooke. Ritz Theatre: 19 Feb 1923- Mar 1923 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: James K. Applebee (as "Rev. Dr. Clegg"), Bertha Belmore (as "Mrs. Suzanne Clegg"), William 'Stage' Boyd (as "Jack Thornton"), Walker Dennett (as "Colonel Thornton"), Mary Fisher (as "Miss Simpson"), Robert Hudson Thomas Kennedy"), Clara Joel (as "Eleanor Ainsworth"), Della Johnson (as "Mandy"), Jack Raffael (as "Judge McLean"), H. Reeves-Smith (as "Jim Loundsbury"), Emily Stevens (as "Jean Thornton"), Ethel Winthrop (as "Mrs. Thornton") [final Broadway role]. Produced by Oliver Morosco.
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