- (1925) Stage Play: Beware of Widows. Written by Owen Davis. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 1 Dec 1925- Jan 1926 (closing date unknown/55 performances). Cast: Leslie Adams (as "Sam"), Doris Dagmar (as "Molly"), Alan Edwards (as "Jack Waller, M.D."), Madge Kennedy (as "Joyce Bragdon"), M.I. Lee (as "Ching"), Donald MacDonald (as "Bill Bradford"), Beatrice Miles (as "Ruth Chadwick"), Charles Millward (as "Peter Chadwick"), Diantha Pattison (as "Paula Lea"), Bernard A. Reinold (as "Captain Jones"). Produced by Crosby Gaige.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Drums of Jeopardy. Melodrama/mystery. Written by Howard Herrick and Harold McGrath [credited as Harold MacGrath]. Directed by Ira Hards. Gaiety Theatre: 29 May 1922- Jun 1922 (closing date unknown/8 performances. Cast: Reginald Barlow (as "Stepan Gregory"), Marion Coakley (as "Kitty Conover"), John Colvin (as "Stemmler"), William Courtleigh (as "Cutty"), Paul Everton (qv (as "Boris Karlov"), George Frenger (as "Antonio Bernini"), George Golden (as "Chauffeur"), C. Henry Gordon (as "John Hawksley") [Broadway debut], Victor Harrison (as "Dr. Richard Harrison"), Emmet O'Reilly (as "Kuroki"), Bernard A. Reinold (as "Edward Burlingame"), M. Tello Webb (as "Patrick Conroy"). Produced by Alfred E. Aarons. Note: Considering this play was a huge flop, it's remarkable that it enjoyed two film adaptations, albeit produced by second-rung studios. It was filmed by M.H. Hoffman Inc. [distributed by Truart Film Co.] as The Drums of Jeopardy (1923), and by Tiffany Productions as The Drums of Jeopardy (1931). Oddly, neither film version credited Howard Herrick's contribution to the story.
- (1924) Stage Play: Flame of Love. Drama. Written by Maurice V. Samuels and Malcolm La Prade. Morosco Theatre: 21 Apr 1924- May 1924 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Miss Ange, Samuel Baron, Leon Barons, Randolph Beckwith, Romney Brent (as "First Weaver"), LaBelle Cairone, Reginald Carrington (as "Kuzar, a Mandarin"), J. Hammond Dailey, William Dean, Kenneth Diven, Gloria Glayde, Porter Hall (as "Hai-lung"), Hall Higley, Mary Cecilia Hilton, Eve Jounger, Aysa Kass, Gilda Kreegar, Lenita Lane, Lydia Langdon, Charles LaTour, Olaf Laven, Nancy Lee, James Malaidy, Isadore Marcil, Fred McNally, Guido Orlando, Brandon Peters, Roger Phipps, Lynn Pratt, Florence Quinn, Robert Randolph, Bernard A. Reinold (as "Chang-chin"), Robert Resley, Carmen Sanchez, Venus Scularekes, Bertha Stemmerman, Kay Strozzi (as "Men-sin"), Mary Taylor. Produced by G.W. McGregor.
- (1905) Stage Play: Siberia (Revival). Written by Bartley Campbell [posthumous credit]. Academy of Music: 16 Jun 1905- Feb 1905 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Benjamin Ackerman, Noah Beery, Bernard A. Reinold [credited as Adolph Bernard], James T. Bowman, Elliott Dexter, Carl Eckstrom, S.O. Frank, Daniel Gilfether, Felix Haney, Ernest Hastings, Franklyn Roberts, Frederick Roberts, Frank Russell, Burt Tucman, W.C. White, C. Jay Williams. Produced by William A. Brady and Joseph R. Grismer.
- (1903 - 1926) Active on Broadway [credited as Adolph Bernard early in career] in the following productions:
- (1909) Stage Play: The Bridge. Written by Rupert Hughes. Directed by Harrison Grey Fiske. Majestic Theatre: 4 Sep 1909- Oct 1909 (closing date unknown/33 performances). Cast: John L. Arthur, Edward Clayton, June Congrove, Jean Darrach, Katherine Emmett, Albert Gran, Shelly Hull, Merle Maddern, Alfred Paget, Guy Bates Post, Bernard A. Reinold, Leila Repton, Edmund Seraghan, Josephine Sherwood, E.S. Thompson, Charles Tisdale, William Wadsworth, Douglas J. Wood. Produced by Harrison Grey Fiske.
- (1924) Stage Play: Quarantine. Comedy. Written by F. Tennyson Jesse. Revised by Edgar Selwyn. Directed by Edgar Selwyn. Henry Miller's Theatre: 16 Dc 1924- 27 Apr 1925 (151 performances). Cast: Percy Ames (as "Silent Passenger"), Phil Bishop (as "Mr. Dobson"), Sidney Blackmer (as "Tony Blunt"), Jennie Dickerson (as "Mrs. Burroughs"), Edward Eliscu (as "Waiter") [Broadway debut], Charles Esdale (as "Mackintosh Josephs"), Helen Hayes (as "Dinah Partlett"), A.P. Kaye (as "Steward"), Kay Laurell (as "Pamela Josephs"), Beryl Mercer (as "Pinsent"), Olga Olonova (as "Lola de la Corte"), William Postance (as "Mr. Burroughs"), Bernard A. Reinold (as "Doctor"), Mary Scott Seton (as "Miss Larpent"). Produced by Charles L. Wagner and Edgar Selwyn. Note: Filmed by Paramount Pictures as Lovers in Quarantine (1925).
- (1903) Stage Play: Pretty Peggy. Drama. Written by Frances Aymar Mathews [earliest Broadway credit]. Herald Square Theatre: 23 Mar 1903- May 1903 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Anne Albert, Bernard A. Reinold [credited as Adolph Bernard] (Broadway debut), James J. Brown, Edward Burgess, Lily Calder, Sydney Cowell, Justine Cutting, Rose Doyle, Carl Eckstrom, Grace George (as "Peg Woffington"), Ruth Holt (may be Ruth Holt Boucicault, but unconfirmed), William Hungerford, Bertie Keller, Norah Lamison, Frances Leigh, Laura Lemmers, S.E. Lewis, Robert Lorraine, Donald MacLaren, Victor Manley, Addison March, Henry March, Margaret Mayo, Fred G. Swift, George Sylvester, Mary Thomas, Annie Ward Tiffany, Miss Tucker, Albert J. Tucker, Lyman Tucker, Bertha Tucman, Burt Tucman. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1903) Stage Play: Pretty Peggy. Drama [return engagement]. Written by Frances Aymar Mathews. Hoyt's Theatre: 5 Oct 1903- Nov 1903 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Bernard A. Reinold [credited as Adolph Bernard], Grace George (as "Peg Woffington"), Ruth Holt (may be Ruth Holt Boucicault, but unconfirmed), Frances Leigh, Donald MacLaren, Victor Manley, Addison March, Henry March, Margaret Mayo, Vincent Serrano, Fred G. Swift, George Sylvester, Annie Ward Tiffany, Miss Tucker, Albert J. Tucker, Lyman Tucker, Burt Tucman. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1920) Stage Play: The Unwritten Chapter. Drama. Written by Samuel Shipman and Victor Victor. Directed by Robert Milton. Astor Theatre: 11 Oct 1920- Nov 1920 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Robert Barrat (as "Frank Salomon"), Alma Belwin, Clarence Derwent (as "Benjamin Jacobs"), Carl Dietz, Hubert Druce (as "General Howe"), Mattie Ferguson, Leo Frankl (as "Samuel Judah"), Herman Gerold, Arleen Hackett, Louis Hector (as "Capt. Geoffrey Warren"), Paul Irving, Ryder Keane, Frank Kingdon (as "Robert M. Harrington, Sr."), Howard Lang, Louis Mann (as "Haym Salomon"), Mortimer Martini, Harry C. Power, Bernard A. Reinold (as "General De Heister"), Gerald Rogers, Al Sincoff, Alex Tenenholtz, Lucile Watson. Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1920) Stage Play: Deburau. Comedy/tragedy. Written by Harley Granville-Barker. Based on the French of Sacha Guitry. Directed by David Belasco. Belasco Theatre: 23 Dec 1920- Jun 1921 (closing date unknown/189 performances). Cast: Lionel Atwill (as "Jean-Gaspard Deburau"), St. Clair Bayfield (as "A Journalist"), Sallie Bergman (as "Maid"), Frederick Bickel (as "The Promoter"), Marie Bryar (as "Clara"), Rowland Buckstone (as "Laplace"), Lylia Burnand (as "The Unknown Lady"), Rose Coghlan (as "Madame Rabouin") [final Broadway role], Hubert Druce (as "Robillard"), Morgan Farley (as "Charles Deburau"), Eden Gray (as "The Lady with the Lorgnette"), Edmund Gurney (as "Clement"), Joseph Herbert (as "Laurent"), Margot Kelly (as "Justine"), Isabel Leighton (as "Honorine"), Elsie MacKay (as "Marie Duplessis"), Pauline Merriam (as "Madame Rebard"), Helen Reimer (as "The Money Taker"), Bernard A. Reinold (as "Monsieur Bertrand"), John Roche (as "The Young Man") [Broadway debut], Robert Roland (as "Scene Shifter"), George Ryan (as "Master Charles"), John L. Shine (as "A Doctor"), Sidney Toler (as The "Barker"). Produced by David Belasco. Note: Filmed by Warner Bros. as The Lover of Camille (1924) [screenplay adapted by Dorothy Farnum, and by Compagnie Industrielle et Commerciale Cinématographique (CICC) [France] as Deburau (1951), [European distribution by Filmsonor in 1951, no known contemporary US distribution] directed by and starring Sacha Guitry (who was then 66 years old). A TV adaption was aired on French TV in 1982 starring Robert Hirsch.
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