- (1903) Stage: Produced (as Al Woods; earliest Broadway credit; w/Sam Harris) "The Evil That Men Do" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by Theodore Kremer. American Theatre: 29 Oct 1903-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown.
- (1904) Stage: Produced (as Al Woods; w/Sam Harris, P.H. Sullivan) "The Errand Boy" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Material by George Totten Smith. Musical Direction by Edwin L. Walker. Featuring songs with lyrics by Edward P. Moran. Haverly's 14th Street Theatre: 31 Oct 1904-5 Nov 1904 (8 performances). Cast: M.J. Anderson, William Arcall, Rose Beaumont, Clem Bevans, May Bishop, Florence Brooks, Maud Cecil, W.S. Cetti, Charles Clovet, Marguerite Cogan, Dave Coogan, Helena DaNourie, Dave Davis, Abbot Davison, Sylvia Diamond, Frank C. Evans, Ida Gerard, Rose Gilday, Amy Gillette, Edith Hart, William S. Hart, Lola Hilton, Francis King, Blanche Latell, William Lawrence, Mary Lloyd, Marcia Loraine, Joe Mack, Agnes Marsh, Lilyan Marsh, J.A. Mullen, Pauline Pearl, Kitty Pope, Charles Saxon, E.R. Scrimshaw, Frankie Seymour, Lizzie Southwalk, Richard Stubbs, Florinne Sweetman, Mark Tomsen, Billie B. Van, Gladys Walker, Stella Warner, Nettie Wheeler, W.E. Whitehall.
- (1906) Stage: Produced (billed as "Al Woods") "Chinatown Charlie" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by Owen Davis. American Theatre: 5 Mar 1906-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown.
- (1906) Stage: Produced (as Al Woods) "Chinatown Charlie" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by Owen Davis. American Theatre: 5 Mar 1906- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown.
- (1906) Stage: Produced "The Gambler of the West" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by Owen Davis. American Theatre: 28 Jul 1906-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown.
- (1906) Stage: Produced (as Al Woods) "A Marked Woman" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by Owen Davis. West End Theatre: 10 Dec 1906-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown.
- (1906) Stage: Produced "Nellie, the Beautiful Cloak Model" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by Owen Davis. West End Theatre: 31 Dec 1906-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown.
- (1907) Stage: Produced (as Al Woods) "The King and Queen of Gamblers" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by Owen Davis. American Theatre: 27 Jul 1907-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown.
- (1907) Stage: Produced (as Al Woods) "A Chorus Girl's Luck in New York" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by Owen Davis. Haverly's 14th Street Theatre: 3 Aug 1907-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown.
- (1907) Stage: Produced (as Al Woods) "Convict 999" on Broadway. Thriller. Written by John Oliver. Thalia Theatre: 5 Aug 1907-Unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown.
- (1907) Stage: Produced (as Al Woods) "The Great Express Robbery" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Owen Davis. American Theatre: 12 Aug 1907-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown.
- (1907) Stage: Producedf (as Al Woods) "Edna, the Pretty Typewriter" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by John Oliver. American Theatre: 26 Aug 1907-Unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown.
- (1907) Stage: Produced (as Al Woods) "Broadway After Dark" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by John Oliver. Thalia Theatre: 9 Sep 1907-5 Oct 1907 (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown.
- (1907) Stage: Produced "Since Nellie Went Away" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Owen Davis. American Theatre: 28 Oct 1907-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown.
- (1907) Stage: Produced (as Al Woods) "Deadwood Dick's Last Shot" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Owen Davis. Haverly's 14th Street Theatre: 23 Dec 1907-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown.
- (1910) Stage: Produced "The Girl with the Whooping Cough" on Broadway. Written by Hugh Stanislaus Stange. New York Theatre: 25 Apr 1910-May 1910 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: George Anderson, Nena Blake, May Boley, Edward Burton, Blanche Gordon, Eleanor Gordon, John Harvey, Jack Henderson, Charles P. Morrison, Dan Moyles, George Richards, Amelia Summerville, Valeska Suratt, Dallas Welford, Vida Whitmore.
- (1910) Stage: Produced "New York" on Broadway. Written by William Hurlbut. Bijou Theatre: 17 Oct 1910-Oct 1910 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Florence Burdett, Frank Craven, Laura Nelson Hall, Orrin Johnson, Mary Shaw, Vaughan Trevor, Mortimer Weldon, Frances Whitehouse.
- (1910) Stage: Produced "The Girl in the Taxi" on Broadway. Farce. Based on the French original by Anthony Mars. Written by Hugh Stanislaus Stange. Featuring songs by Benjamin Hapgood Burt. Directed by Carter DeHaven (also in cast as "Bertie Stewart"). Astor Theatre: 24 Oct 1910-3 Dec 1910 (48 performances). Cast: Jeannette Bageard (as "Mariette"), Fremont Benton (as "Mary Peters"), Frederick Bond (as "John Stewart"), Joseph Clark (as "Policeman"), Morgan Coman (as "Percy Peters"), Frank Farrington (as "Walter Watson"), Max Freeman (as "Alexis"), John Glendinning (as "Frederick Smith"), Laura Guerite (as "Mignon"), Clifford Heckinger (as "Dr. Paul"), Jessie Millward (as "Clara Stewart"), Jerome Nelson (as "Emile"), Katherine Smythe (as "Rosie"), Grace Walton (as "Mademoiselle Irma").
- (1911) Stage: Produced "The Fascinating Widow" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Lyrics by Otto A. Harbach. Musical Director: August Kleinecke. Music orchestrated by William Redfield. Additional lyrics by Sam M. Lewis, E. Ray Goetz, Irving Berlin and Vincent Bryan. Additional music by Irving Berlin and Vincent Bryan. Choreographed by Jack Mason. Directed by George F. Marion. Liberty Theatre (moved to The Grand Opera House from 13 Nov 1911 to close): 11 Sep 1911-Nov 1911 (closing date unknown/65 performances). Cast: Natalie Alt, Marie Baxter, Blanche Burnham, Charles W. Butler, Julian Eltinge, Gladys Feldman, Edward Garvie, June Mathis, Jean Morrell, Louise Orth, Carrie E. Perkins, Dorothy Sanders, Natalie Seymour, James Spottswood (as "Tuthill Leffingwell"), James E. Sullivan, Lionel Walsh, Frank Wentworth, Dorothy Wilcox, Winona Winter.
- (1911) Stage: Produced "Gypsy Love" on Broadway. Musical/operetta. Music by Franz Lehár. Book / lyrics by Harry B. Smith and Robert B. Smith. From the German of Dr. A.M. Willner and Robert Bodanzky. Musical Director: Louis F. Gottschalk. Scenic Design by Ernest Albert. Costume Design by Mme. Sotager, Paul Pieret and Mueltzer. Directed by George F. Marion. Globe Theatre: 17 Oct 1911- 11 Nov 1911 (31 performances). Cast: Arthur Albro (as "Jozsi"), Charlotte Allen (as "Chorus"), Winifred Ayers (as "Chorus"), Portia Belmont (as "Chorus"), Dodo Bernard (as "Chorus"), George L. Bickel (as "Mikel"), Clara Boley (as "Chorus"), Marion Brown (as "Chorus"), Walter Brown (as "Chorus"), Geraldine Burton (as "Chorus"), John Carleton (as "Chorus"), Edna Caruthers (as "Chorus"), Lou Chalmers (as "Chorus"), Albert Cody (as "Chorus"), Billie Davenport (as "Chorus"), Reana Davis (as "Chorus"), May Delaney (as "Chorus"), Frankie DeMar (as "Chorus"), Frances Demarest (as "Ilma"), Anna Deneny (as "Chorus"), Mildred DeSilva (as "Chorus"), Valleaux Elliott (as "Chorus"), Edgar Evans (as "Chorus"), Ethel Evans (as "Chorus"), Ethel Fawcett (as "Chorus"), Charlotte Fielding (as "Chorus"), Gertrude Fielding (as "Chorus"), Madeline Frain (as "Chorus"), Marguerite Frances (as "Chorus"), Jean Hague (as "Chorus"), Alie Hall (as "Chorus"), Anton Hanschmann (as "Dimitri"), Josephine Harmon (as "Magda" / "Chorus"), Albert Hart (as "Moschu"), Carl Hayden (as "Fedor"), Christopher Hayes (as "Chorus"), Constance Hoag (as "Chorus"), Leuvine Jacques (as "Chorus"), Fred Kallgren (as "Chorus"), Marie Kennedy (as "Chorus"), Ber Kirsch (as "Chorus"), Irving LaPato (as "Chorus"), Albert Macklin (as "Chorus"), Naomi Malone (as "Chorus"), Orilla Mars (as "Etta"), Rose Maxwell (as "Chorus"), Helen McAdam (as "Chorus"), Willis McClellan (as "Chorus"), Harry McDonough (as "Niklas"), Alice Melrose (as "Chorus"), Katherine Melton (as "Chorus"), Peggy Merritt (as "Chorus"), Elinor Miles (as "Chorus"), Lucie Mitchell (as "Sacha"), James C. Morris (as "Chorus"), Grace Nelson (as "Chorus"), Maurice Newmann (as "Chorus"), Peggy O'Neil (as "Chorus"), Phyllis Partington (as "Zorika"), Alma Pickard (as "Chorus"), Robert G. Pitkin (as "Kaspar"), Will P. Plummer (as "Chorus"), Alice Randolph (as "Chorus"), Virginia Rhode (as "Chorus"), Fred Robinson (as "Chorus"), Lillian Rockwell (as "Chorus"), Ray Ruddy (as "Chorus"), Kittie Saville (as "Fancha"), Charles Schuler (as "Chorus"), Tom Shannon (as "Chorus"), Robert Smith (as "Henry"), Arthur Snyder (as "Chorus"), Charles Staples (as "Chorus"), Jule Sutherland (as "Chorus"), Marguerite Sylva (as "Zorika"), James T. Taylor (as "Chorus"), Marion Thompson (as "Chorus"), Gertrude Thurston (as "Chorus"), Fred Turner (as "Chorus"), Jean Wallace (as "Chorus"), Lillian Wallace (as "Chorus"), Marion Watts (as "Chorus"), Dorothy Webb (as "Lila"), Pearl Wilkinson (as "Chorus").
- (1911) Stage: Produced "The Littlest Rebel" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by Edward Peple. Liberty Theatre: 14 Nov 1911-Jan 1912 (closing date unknown/55 performances). Cast: Dustin Farnum (as "Lt. Col. Morrison"), William Farnum (as "Mr. Cary"), Roy Gordon, Percy Haswell (as "Mrs. Cary"), T.E.B. Henry, John C. Hickey, Franklyn Horton, Walter Horton, M.A. Kelly, Fred Kley, Charles Lawrence, John C. Leslie, William B. Mack (as "Gen. Grant"), Mary Miles Minter (as "Virgie Cary"), Frederick Morris, John Sharkey, George Thatcher.
- (1912) Stage: Produced (w/H.H. Frazee) "Modest Suzanne" on Broadway. Musical/operetta. Music by Jean Gilbert [earliest Broadway credit]. Book / lyrics by Harry B. Smith and Robert B. Smith. Adapted from the French of Maurice Desvallières and Antony Mars. Based on the German of Georg Okonkowski. Musical Director: Louis F. Gottschalk. Costume Design by Mme. Francis. Scenic Design by Dodge and Castle. Directed by George F. Marion. Liberty Theatre: 1 Jan 1912-20 Jan 1912 (24 performances). Cast: Lillian Baker (as "Chorus"), Portia Belma (as "Chorus"), Harriet Burt (as "Rose"), J. Campbell (as "Chorus"), Claudia Clark (as "Mina"), W.S. Clark (as "Chorus"), Alice Clayton (as "Chorus"), Lester Corrish (as "Gustave" / "Chorus"), Bertha Dehan (as "Chorus"), H. Durham (as "Chorus"), Sallie Fisher (as "Suzanne"), Stanley G. Ford (as "Baron Dauvray"), A. Frewn (as "Chorus"), Gertrude Gibbons (as "Chorus"), Mildred Gibson (as "Chorus"), Mabelle Glynn (as "Chorus"), William Glynn (as "Gendarme" / "Chorus"), D. Haverty (as "Police Sergeant" / "Chorus"), H. Hoffman (as "Chorus"), G. Hughes (as "Chorus"), John L. Kearney (as "Monsieur Pomeral"), Bessie Lawlor (as "Chorus"), Charlotte Leslay (as "Mariette"), Florence Martin (as "Jacqueline"), Mabel Merlin (as "Chorus"), J. Miller (as "Chorus"), Millie Murray (as "Phrynette"), Marcia Nash (as "Chorus"), D. O'Leary (as "Chorus"), Kathryn Osterman (as "Baroness Delphine Dauvray"), Arthur Stanford (as "Rene"), Helen Steeves (as "Chorus"), Virginia Steinhardt (as "Chorus"), Dorothy Stoy (as "Chorus"), Kitty Swagne (as "Chorus"), Ernest Torrence (as "Prof. Charcot"), Roy Torry (as "Chorus"), Catherine Ursprung (as "Chorus"), Josie Ursprung (as "Chorus"), Corrine Uzzell (a "Tina"), Sherman Wade (as "Alexis"), Ezra Walck (credited as Ezra C. Walck; as "Emil"), Gorgette Warren (as "Chorus"), Lawrence Wheat (as "Hubert"), Joseph Zaino (as "Felix"). Produced by A.H. Woods and H.H. Frazee.
- (1912) Stage: Produced "Tantalizing Tommy" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Book by Michael Morton and Paul Gavault (adapted from his play "La Petite Chocloatiere"). Music by Hugo Felix. Lyrics by Adrian Ross. Musical Director: Hans S. Linne. Directed by George F. Marion. Criterion Theatre: 1 Oct 1912-26 Oct 1912 (31 performances). Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1912) Stage: Produced "The Woman Haters" on Broadway. Musical/operetta.
- (1913) Stage: Produced "Potash and Perlmutter" on Broadway. Written by Montague Glass [earliest Broadway credit] and Charles Klein. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 16 Aug 1913-Sep 1915 (closing date unknown/441 performances). Cast: Barney Bernard (as "Abe Potash"), Alexander Carr (as "Mawruss Perlmutter"), Marguerite Anderson (as "Irma"), Fred Carter, Leo Donnelly, Louise Dresser (as "Ruth Snyder"), Grace Fielding, Edward Gillespie, Stanley Jessup, Joseph Kilgour (as "Feldman"), Lee Kohlmar, Dorothy Landers, Gertrude Millington, Albert Parker (as "Boris Andrieff"; final Broadway role), Arthur J. Pickens, Russell Pincus, Dore Rogers. Produced by A.H. Woods. NOTES: (1) One of the biggest hits on Broadway prior to WWI. (2) Filmed as Potash and Perlmutter (1923).
- (1914) Stage: Produced "The Yellow Ticket" on Broadway.
- (1914) Stage: Produced "The Crinoline Girl" on Broadway. Musical comedy/farce/melodrama. Book by Otto A. Harbach. Music by Percy Wenrich [earliest Broadway credit]. Lyrics by Julian Eltinge (also in cast as "Tom Hale"). Musical Director: J. Albert Brown. Directed by John Emerson. Knickerbocker Theatre (moved to The Standard Theatre from 14 Dec 1914-close): 16 Mar 1914-Dec 1914 (closing date unknown/96 performances). Cast: Herbert Corthell (as "Jerry Ainsley"), Edwin Cushman (as "William"), Walter Horton (as "John Lawton"), Helen Luttrell (as "Dorothy Ainsley"), Joseph S. Marba (as "Smith"), Herbert McKenzie (as "Lord Robert Bromleigh"), Charles P. Morrison (as "Richard Ainsley"), Augusta Scott (as "Marie"), James C. Spottswood (as "Charles Griffith"), Maidel Turner (as "Alice Hale"), Edna Whistler (as "Rosalind Bromleigh ).
- (1914) Stage: Produced "The High Cost of Loving" produced on Broadway. Adapted from the German by Frank Mandel. Theatre Republic (moved to The 39th Street Theatre from 16 Dec 1914-close): 25 Aug 1914-unknown (75 performances). Cast: George Anderson, Nicholas Burnham, Wilfred Clarke, Lew Fields, Alice Fischer, George Hassell, Charlotte Ives, James Lackaye, Ernest Lambart, Vivian Martin, Amy Sumers, Helen Tracy.
- (1914) Stage: Produced "Innocent" on Broadway. Written by George Broadhurst. Directed by Edward Elsner and George Broadhurst. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 9 Sep 1914-Dec 1914 (closing date unknown/109 performances). Cast: Allen Atwell, Burt Castle, Claire Coste, Harold De Becker, Leo De Valery, Pauline Frederick, Kenneth Hunter, Hardee Kirkland, Julian L'Estrange, Arthur Lewis, John Miltern, Louis Morrell, George Probert, George Seybolt. NOTE: Filmed as Innocent (1918).
- (1914) Stage: Produced "He Comes Up Smiling" on Broadway.
- (1914) Stage: Produced "Kick In" on Broadway.
- (1914) Stage: Produced "Big Jim Garrity" on Broadway. Written by Owen Davis. New York Theatre: 16 Oct 1914-Nov 1914 (closing date unknown/27 performances). Cast: Janet Dunbar, John Emerson, John Flood, Amelia Gardner, Katherine La Salle, Willis Martin, John Mason, Roger McWade, Guy Nichols, William Sampson, Frank M. Thomas [Broadway debut]. NOTE: Filmed as Big Jim Garrity (1916).
- (1914) Stage: Produced "The Song of Songs" on Broadway. Written by Edward Sheldon. From the novel by Hermann Sudermann. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 22 Dec 1914-Jun 1915 (closing date unknown/191 performances). Cast: Maud Allan, Claus Bogel, R.A. Brandon, Romaine Callender, John Coss, Dorothy Donnelly, Irene Fenwick, Ernest Glendinning, Cyril Keightley, John Mason, Rita Otway, Helena Rapport, Eleanor Seybolt, William Stone, Grace Wall, Forrest Winant, Thomas A. Wise.
- (1915) Stage: Produced "Common Clay" on Broadway.
- (1915) Stage: Produced "Cousin Lucy" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Written by Charles Klein. Music by Jerome Kern. Lyrics by Schuyler Green. Musical Director: August Kleinecke. Additional music by August Kleinecke and Percy Wenrich. Music orchestrated by Frank Sadler. Additional lyrics by Edward Madden. Choreographed by Dave Bennett. Directed by Robert Milton. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 27 Aug 1915-2 Oct 1915 (43 performances). Cast: J.W. Ashley (as "Broad"), James Budd (as "Chauffeur"), Ned Burton (as "James Baldwin"), Claudia Carlstead (as "Ensemble"), Marie Chambers (as "Mrs. Hillary Bronson"), Leo Donnelly (as "Klayburgh"), Julian Eltinge (as "Jerry Jackson"; final Broadway role), Claiborne Foster (as "Dorothy Walbrook"), Henry Friend (as "Policeman"), Edith Hanbury (as "Mrs. Henshaw"), Elsie Marquette (as "Ensemble"), Jane Oaker (as "Queeny"), Lillian Ormonde (as "Ensemble"), Alice Palmer (as "Ensemble"), Irene Palmer (as "Della" / "Ensemble"), Mrs. Stuart Robson (as "Mrs. Wallingford"), Ethel Russell (as "Ensemble"), Grace Russell (as "Ensemble"), Mark Smith (as "Hillary Bronson"), Frank Stevens (as "Expressman"), Edna Stillwell (as "Ensemble"), Olive Tell (as "Angela Baldwin"), Grace Walton (as "Ensemble"), Austin Webb (as "Horace Holden"), Dallas Welford (as "Bister"), Elsie Weller (as "Ensemble").
- (1915) Stage: Produced "The Duke of Killicrankie" / "Rosalind" on Broadway.
- (1916) Stage: Produced "See My Lawyer" on Broadway. Written by Max Marcin. Directed by Frank M. Stammers. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 2 Sep 1915-Sep 1915 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: T. Roy Barnes, Sydney Booth, Inez Buck, Robert Burton, Conrad Cantzen, Jules Ferrar, John Flood, Walter Horton, Harry Lillford, Richard Lyle, Howard Mason, Frank Monroe, John Daly Murphy, Harold Russell, Amy Sumers, Gus Weinberg, Margot Williams. NOTE: Filmed as See My Lawyer (1921)).
- (1915) Stage: Produced "Abe and Mawruss" on Broadway.
- (1916) Stage: Produced "His Bridal Night" on Broadway.
- (1916) Stage: Produced "The Guilty Man" on Broadway. Written by Ruth Helen Davis and Charles Klein. Astor Theatre: 17 Aug 1916-Oct 1916 (closing date unknown/52 performances). Cast: Martin Alsop, Paul Coucet, William Devereaux, Samuel Edwards, Walter Fenner, Irene Fenwick, Clarence Handyside, Gareth Hughes, Thais Lawton, Leonard Mudie, Pinna Nesbit, Stuart Robson, Charles Seiter, Lowell Sherman, Austin Webb, Emily Ann Wellman. NOTE: Klein had died aboard the Lusitania on 7 May 1915.
- (1918) Stage: Produced "Where Poppies Bloom" on Broadway. Written by Roi Cooper Megrue. based on the French of Henry Kistemaekers. Theatre Republic: 26 Aug 1918-Nov 1918 (closing date unknown/104 performances). Cast: Pedro de Cordoba, Will Deming, Paul Doucet, Laurence Eddinger, Jean Gautier, Alfred Hesse, Percival Knight, Frank Nelson, Marjorie Rambeau, Marcel Rousseau, Lewis Stone, Roy Walling.
- (1919) Stage: Produced "Up in Mabel's Room" on Broadway. Written by Wilson Collison and Otto A. Harbach. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 15 Jan 1919-Aug 1919 (closing date unknown/229 performances). Cast: Harry C. Bradley, Lucy Cotton, John Cumberland, Hazel Dawn, Evelyn Gosnell, H. Dudley Hawley, Walter Jones, Enid Markey, Adele Rolland, Frederick Sutton. NOTE: filmed as Up in Mabel's Room (1944), Up in Mabel's Room (1926), Up in Mabel's Room (1944).
- (1917) Stage: Produced (w/Lee Shubert, J.J. Shubert) "Eyes of Youth" on Broadway. Comedy/drama. Written by Charles Guernon and Max Marcin. Directed by Lawrence Marston. Maxine Elliott's Theatre (moved to The 39th Street Theatre from 22 Jul 1918-close): 22 Aug 1917-Aug 1918 (closing date unknown/414 performances). Cast: Marjorie Rambeau (as "Gina Ashling"), Charles S. Abbe (as "Asa Ashling, Father of Gina"), Joseph Adelman (as "Alfred Brooks"; final Broadway role), Walter Armin (as "Picquard"), Robert Barker, Billie Blaisdell, Conrad Cantzen, John H. Elliott, J. Harold Foley, Donald Gallaher, Charles Hampden, Walter Horton, Leonard Ide (as "Louis Anthony, Suitor of Gina"), Ralph Kellard (as "Peter Judson, Suitor of Ashling"), Caroline Leonard, Ethel Mary Oakland, George L. Romain, Clarice Snyder, William Tousey, Frances Victory, Fay Wallace.
- (1917) Stage: Produced "The Scrap of Paper" on Broadway. Written by Owen Davis and Arthur Somers Roche. Criterion Theatre: 17 Sep 1917-Nov 1917 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Ruth Donnelly [Broadway debut], Edward Ellis, Margalo Gillmore, David Glassford, Frederick Hand, Harold Hartsell, H. Dudley Hawley, Robert Hilliard, Edwin Holland, J. Fred Holloway, Carroll McComas, John J. Pierson, Vida Reed, Robert Strange, Russ Whytal. Produced by A.H. Woods. NOTE: Filmed as Living Lies (1922).
- (1917) Stage: Produced "On With the Dance" on Broadway.
- (1918) Stage: Produced "Under Orders" on Broadway. Written by Berte Thomas. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 20 Aug 1918-Jan 1919 (closing date unknown/167 performances). Cast: Shelly Hull (as "Arthur Ford" / "Captain in the American Army" / "Capt. Hartzmann of the Imperial Guards"), Effie Shannon (as "Mrs. Ford" / "Frau Hartzmann").
- (1918) Stage: Produced "An American Ace" on Broadway. Written by Lincoln J. Carter. Directed by Lawrence Marston. Casino Theatre: 2 Apr 1918-Apr 1918 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Richard Barrows, Kate Blair, Marcy Breuer, Claude Cooper, James L. Crane, Camilla Crume, Henry Dawson, James Dyrenforth, Robert Fischer, True S. James, Arthur Klein, Edna Leslie, Sue MacManamy, Frank Marriman, Charles Martin, Joseph McManus, George E. Murphy.
- (1918) Stage: Produced "Friendly Enemies" on Broadway. Written by Samuel Shipman and Aaron Hoffman. Hudson Theatre: 22 Jul 1918-Aug 1919 (closing date unknown/440 performances). Cast: Richard Barbee (as "William Pfeifer"), Sam Bernard (as "Henry Block"), Mathilde Cottrelly (as "Marie Pfeifer"), Felix Krembs (as "Walter Stuart"), Louis Mann (as "Karl Pfeifer"), Natalie Manning (as "Nora"), Regina Wallace (as "June Block").
- (1924) Stage: Produced "The Fake" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Frederick Lonsdale. Directed by Frank Reicher. Hudson Theatre: 6 Oct 1924-Dec 1924 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Marion Allen (as "A Parlormaid"), Frank Conroy (as "The Hon. Gerrard Pillick"), Orlando Daly (as "Ernest Stanton, M.P."), Boyd Davis (as "Watkins"), Reynolds Denniston (as "Sir Thomas Moorgate, M.D."), Evelyn Walsh Hall (as "Mrs. Stanton"), Frieda Inescort (as "Mavis Stanton"), Harry Neville (as "Dr. Hesketh Pointer, M.P."), Una O'Connor (as "A Waitress"), Godfrey Tearle (as "Geoffrey Sands"), Pauline Whitson, John Williams [Broadway debut].
- Playwright: "Lonely Wives" (filmed as Lonely Wives (1931)).
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