- (1899 - 1921) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1899) Stage Play: The Ghetto. Drama. Written by C.B. Fernald, from the Dutch by Herman Heijermans. Broadway Theatre: 15 Sep 1899- Oct 1899 (closing date unknown/43 performances). Cast: Richard Buhler, Henry Burton, Emmett Corrigan, Samuel Edwards, Bijou Fernandez, Grace Filkins, Robert Paton Gibbs, Joseph Haworth, George Heath, Sidney Herbert [Broadway debut], Harry Holliday, William H. Pascoe, Mrs. McKee Rankin. Produced by Jacob Litt.
- (1899) Stage Play: My Lady's Lord. Comedy. Written by H.V. Hammond. Scenic Design by Edward G. Unitt. Empire Theatre: 25 Dec 1899- Jan 1900 (closing date unknown/25 performances). Cast: E.Y. Backus, J.H. Benrimo, Blanche Burton, John F. Cook, W.H. Crompton, William Faversham, Sidney Herbert, George W. Howard, Jesse Millward, Nat Nazarro Jr., George Osbourne, Sara Perry, Guy Standing, Lillian Thurgate, Joseph Wheelock Jr. 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: To Have and to Hold. Drama. Written by E.F. Boddington. Directed by Edward E. Rose. Knickerbocker Theatre: 4 Mar 1901- Apr 1901 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Lottie Alter, Holbrook Blinn (as "Lord Carnal"), Robert Broderick, J.M. Colville, Dore Davidson, Cecil B. DeMille, Richard Disney, Wallace Erskine, John Findlay, George Forbes, Isabel Garrison, Sidney Herbert, Maud Hosford, Isabel Irving, N.L. Jelenko, S. Miller Kent, Harry Lewis, Robert Loraine [Broadway debut], Claire McDowell, Etta Morris, Florence Robinson, Carl St. Aubyn, Charles Walcott, Joseph A. Weber. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1902) Stage Play: There's Many a Slip. Comedy. Written by Capt. R. Marshall. Directed by Joseph Humphries. Garrick Theatre: 15 Sep 1902- Oct 1902 (closing date unknown/20 performances). Cast: Leo Ditrichstein, James Erskine, Sidney Herbert, Beatrice Irwin, Arthur Merle, Jesse Millward, Harry Rose. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1902) Stage Play: At the Telephone/There's Many a Slip. Garrick Theatre: 2 Oct 1902- Oct 1902 (closing date unknown/20 performances). Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1903) Stage Play: Resurrection. Drama. Written by Henri Bataille. Translated by Michael Morton. Based on the novel by Lev Tolstoy. Victoria Theatre: 17 Feb 1903- 30 Apr 1903 (88 performances). Cast: Blanche Walsh (as "Katusha Maslova"), Ethel Grey Bethel (as "Khorushavka"), Ina Brooks (as "Theodosia"), Little Mary Burroughs (as "Little Girl"), Harvey Cassidy (as "Dry Goods Clerk"), Master George Clarke (as "Little Boy"), John Crane (as "Juror # 1"), N.E. Daignault (as "Usher # 1"), Herbert Darley (as "Bookseller"), Harry De Lorme (as "Judge Ignatz Niphoravitch"), James Du Sang (as "Juror # 2"), Forrest Flood (as "Captain"), May Fredericks (as "Luce"), Florence Gerald (as "Beauty"), Jerome Harrington (as "Novodoroff"), Joseph Haworth (as "Prince Dimitri Neckhludoff"), Sidney Herbert (as "Vladimir Simonson"), Robert Hickman (as "Professor"), Ruth Huthison (as "Korebleva"), R.E. Jamison (as "Kriltzoff"), Augustus Kramer (as "Printer"), Leno Lavaque (as "Grabetzka"), Laura Linden (as "Matrobla"), Robert Lowe (as "Counsellor Mikhline"), James Manley (as "Colonel"), Louise Manning (as "Aunt Mary"), John Moore (as "The Warder"), Irene Oshier (as "Matron"), Charles Parr (as "Usher #2"), Frank Peters (as "Deaf Juror"), Boyd Putman (as "Kolossoff"), Justina Quinn (as "Selinina"), Loretta Quinn (as "Fedka"), Margaret Robinson (as "Nurse"), Hattie Russell (as "Princess Sophia"), Beverly Sitgreaves (as "Princess Marie"), Harriet Sterling (as "Lydia/Carrotts"), Gertrude Tidball (as "Natacha"), Hugo Toland (as "Merchant/Oustinov"), W.M. Travers (as "Wassiellieff"), Mrs. Henry Vandenhoff (as "Karlovna"), May Warde (as "Maid"), Loretta Wells (as "Aunt Sonia"), Howard Woodford (as "Foreman of the Jury"), David M. Wright (as "The Keeper"). Produced by Oscar Hammerstein, Wagenhals and Collin Kemper.
- (1903) Stage Play: A Fool and His Money. Farce.
- (1903) Stage Play: Captain Dieppe. Written by Anthony Hope and Harrison Garfield Rhodes. Herald Square Theatre (moved to The Empire Theatre from 13 Oct 1903- close): 14 Sep 1903- Nov 1903 (closing date unknown/60 performances). Cast: Louis Baker, Constance Bell, Margaret Dale, John Drew, Ernest Glendinning [Broadway debut], Sidney Herbert, O. Kane Hollis, Ethel Hornick, George Howard, Charles Lane, Robert Schable, Alison Skipworth. Produced by Charles Frohman. Note: Filmed as An Adventure in Hearts (1919).
- (1904) Stage Play: Letty. Drama. Written by Arthur Wing Pinero. Hudson Theatre: 12 Sep 1904- Nov 1904 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Albert Cowles, Ivo Dawson, Henri De Barry, William Faversham, Katherine Florence, Frank Goldsmith, Sidney Herbert, Carlotta Nillson, Olive Oliver, Julie Opp, Arthur Playfair, Margery Taylor, Tom Terriss, John C. Tremayne, Wallace Widdicombe, Fritz Williams. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1905) Stage Play: Sherlock Holmes. Drama (revival). Written by William Gillette and Arthur Conan Doyle. Empire Theatre: 6 Mar 1905- Nov 1905 (closing date unknown/56 performances). Cast: Frank Andrews, Sybil Campbell, Henry S. Chandler (as "John"), William Gillette (as Sherlock Holmes), William Courtleigh (as Dr. Watson), Ralph Delmore (as "James Larrabee"), Maude Giroux, Harold Heaton (as "Sir Edward Leighton"), Sidney Herbert, Albert S. Howard (as "Count Von Stahlburg"), Jane Laurel (as "Alice Faulkner"), Harry McArdle (as "Billy"), Quinton McPherson, Soldene Powell (as "Parsons"), Hilda Spong (as "Madge Larrabee"), George Sumner, Jane Thomas (as "Mrs. Faulkner"), W.R. Walters, George W. Wessells (as "Professor Moriarty"), Julius Weyms (as "Lightfoot" McTague"). Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1906) Stage Play: Cymbeline. Romance (revival).
- (1907) Stage Play: The Thief. Written by Henri Bernstein. Book adapted by C. Haddon Chambers. Directed by William Seymour. Lyceum Theatre: 9 Sep 1907- May 1908 (closing date unknown/281 performances). Cast: Cosmo Kyrle Bellew (as "Richard Voysin"), Sidney Herbert (as "M. Zambault"), Leonard Ide (as "Fernand Lagardes"), Margaret Illington (as "Marie-Louise Voysin"), Edith Ostlere (as "Isabelle Lagardes"), Herbert Percy (as "Raymond Lagardes"), Hollister Pratt (as "Servant"). Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1908) Stage Play: The Thief. (Revival). Written by Henri Bernstein. Book adapted by C. Haddon Chambers. Empire Theatre: 3 Sep 1908- Sep 1908 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Sidney Herbert (as "M. Zambault"), Leonard Ide (as "Fernand Lagardes"), Margaret Illington (as "Marie-Louise Voysin"), Edward R. Mawson (as "Isabelle Lagardes"), Bruce McRae (as "Richard Voysin"), Cecil Owen (as "Servant"), Isabel Richards (as "Isabelle Lagardes"). Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1909) Stage Play: Arsene Lupin. Written by Maurice Le Blanc and Francis De Croisset. Lyceum Theatre (moved to The Hudson Theatre from 13 Dec 1909- close): 26 Aug 1909- Jan 1910 (closing date unknown/144 performances). Cast: Anthony Burger, J. Palmer Collins, William Courtenay, J. Crosney Davidson, J. Davis, Harry Dodd, Louis Egan, Arthur Elliott, May Galyer, Ida Greeley-Smith, Virginia Hammond, Charles Harbury, Sidney Herbert, Doris Keane, Lawrence Knapp, Guy Nichols, Hollister Pratt, Alice Putnam, Joseph Robinson, Ivan F. Simpson, Beverly Sitgreaves, Maurice Sloan, Grace Walsh. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1911) Stage Play: The Thief. (Revival). Written by Henri Bernstein. Book adapted by C. Haddon Chambers. Daly's Theatre: 16 Oct 1911- Oct 1911 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Edwin Arden, Charles Francis, Albert Gran, Sidney Herbert, Grace Halsey Mills, Mme. Simone.
- (1911) Stage Play: The Whirlwind. (Revival). Written by Henri Bernstein. Translated by George Egerton. Daly's Theatre: 3 Nov 1911- Nov 1911 (closing date unknown/19 performances). Cast: Edwin Arden, Emmett Corrigan, Wilfred Foster, Charles Francis, Ben Greet, Sidney Herbert, S. Louden, Louise Rial, Mme. Simone, Percival Vivian, Helen Weathersby, G.E. Weller.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Attack. Written by Henri Bernstein, as translated by George Egerton. Garrick Theatre: 19 Sep 1912- Dec 1912 (unknown closing date/100 performances). Cast: Eva Dennison, Wilfred Draycott, Daniel Fitzgerald, Martha Hedman [Broadway debut], Sidney Herbert, Frank Hollins, John Mason, Clinton Preston. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1913) Stage Play: Liberty Hall. (Revival). Written by R.C. Carton. Empire Theatre: 11 Mar 1913- Apr 1913 (closing date unknown/39 performances). Cast: Emily Dodd, Wilfred Draycott, John Dugan, Ada Dwyer, Martha Hedman, Sidney Herbert, Charlotte Ives, Julian L'Estrange, Willis Martin, John Mason, Lennox Pawle, Thomas Wigney Percyval. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1913) Stage Play: Much Ado About Nothing. (Revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Empire Theatre: 1 Sep 1913- Sep 1913 (unknown closing date/24 performances). Cast: Nigel Barry, Mary Boland, Malcolm Bradley, Laura Hope Crews, Herbert Delmar [credited as Herbert Delmore], John Drew, Hubert Druce, Frank Elliott, Fred Eric, Annie Francis, Sidney Herbert, Frank Kemble-Cooper, Rexford Kendrick, Edward Longman, Bertram Marburgh, Walter Soderling, Henry Stephenson. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1913) Stage Play: The Will. Written by J.M. Barrie. Empire Theatre: 29 Sep 1913- Oct 1913 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Mary Boland, John Drew, Fred Eric, Sidney Herbert, Frank Kemble-Cooper, Murray Ross, Walter Soderling. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1917) Stage Play: The Wanderer. Incidental music by Anselm Goetzl. Written by Maurice V. Samuels. Manhattan Opera House: 1 Feb 1917- May 1917 (closing date unknown/108 performances). Cast: Clara Blandick, Lawson Butt, Ernest Cove, Charles Dalton, Janet Dunbar, William Elliott, Elza Fredericks, Macy Harlam, Sidney Herbert, Frederick Lewis, Edward Martyn, Sydney Mather, James O'Neill, Florence Reed, Beverly Sitgreaves, William H. Thompson. Produced by William Elliott, F. Ray Comstock and Morris Gest.
- (1919) Stage Play: Moliere. Written by Philip Moeller. Liberty Theatre: 17 Mar 1919- May 1919 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Willard Barton, Holbrook Blinn (as "Louis XIV"), Margery Card, Vincent Chambers, Paul Doucet (as "Giovanni Lulli"), Elsie Frederic, Alice Gale, James P. Hagen, Sidney Herbert (as "La Fontaine"), Frank Longacre, Henry Miller (as "Moliere"), Wallace Roberts, William Robins, Forrest Robinson, Frederick Roland, Estelle Winwood (as "Armande Bejart").
- (1921) Stage Play: Macbeth. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Arthur Hopkins. Apollo Theatre: 17 Feb 1921- Mar 1921 (closing date unknown/28 performances). Cast: Lionel Barrymore (as "Macbeth, a general of the Scottish army"), Julia Arthur (as "Lady Macbeth") [final Broadway role], E.J. Ballantine (as "Malcolm, son of Duncan"), Stuart Black (as "First Murderer"), Raymond Bloomer (as "Macduff, a nobleman of Scotland"), Lawrence Cecil (as "Sergeant"), Helen Chandler (as "Boy"), Haviland Chappell (as "Caithness, a nobleman"), J. Sayre Crawley (as "Duncan, King of Scotland"), Guy Cunningham (as "Seyton, an officer attending on Macbeth"), Doris Fellows (as "Third Witch"), Burford Hampden (as "Donalbain, son of Duncan"), Sidney Herbert (as "Banquo, a general of the Scottish army"), Lionel Hogarth (as "Ross, a nobleman"), Mary Hughes (as "Fleance, son of Banquo"), Eleanor Hutchison (as "First Witch"), Herbert Jaap (as "Menteith, a nobleman"), Nina Lindsey (as "Second Witch"), Helen Robbins (as "Lady Macduff"), Margherita Sargent (as "Gentlewoman"), Bernard Savage (as "Angus, a nobleman"), Alfred Shirley (as "Lennox, a nobleman"), Albert Shrubb (as "Old Man"), Frank Sylvester (as "Porter"), Henry Vincent (as "Doctor"), John Washburn (as "Siward"), Harry Winston (as "Messenger"). Produced by Arthur Hopkins. Note: This was the production was one of Lionel Barrymore's few failures and notable as the actor's one unsuccessful venture into Shakespeare.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Wandering Jew. Drama. Written by E. Temple Thurston. Knickerbocker Theatre: 26 Oct 1921- Dec 1921 (closing date unknown/69 performances). Cast: Lionel Adams (as "Raymond of Toulouse/Pietro Morelli"), Augustus Anderson (as "A Page/Arnoldo Zapportas"), Melville J. Anderson (as "Phirous/Officer of the Inquisition"), Belle Bennett (as "Ollalla Quintana"), Howard Boulden (as "Alonzo Gastro"), Albert Bruning (as "Andrea Michelotti"), Charles W. Burrows (as "Mario/Councillor"), Bishop Dickinson (as "Godfrey/Officer of the Inquisition"), Sidney Herbert (as "Tazzaro Zapportas") [final Broadway role], Edward Kent (as "Gonzales Ferara"), Adele Klaer (as "Gianello Battadio"), Howard Lang (as "Issacher/Juan de Texeda"), Thais Lawton (as "Rachel"), Miriam Lewes (as "Joanne de Beaudricourt"), Robert Noble (as "Boemond/Al Kazar"), Tyrone Power Sr. (as "Mathathias/The Unknown Knight/Matteo Battadio"), Virginia Russell (as "Maria Zapportas"), Ralph Theodore (as "Du Guesclin"), Helen Ware (as "Judith"), Emmet Whitney (as "Councillor"). Produced by David Belasco and Abraham L. Erlanger.
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