- (1899) Stage: "The King's Musketeer" on Broadway. Romance. Written by Henry Hamilton. Adapted from the famous romance, "The Three Musketeers" by Alexandre Dumas. Incidental music by Frank Howson. Directed by William Seymour. Knickerbocker Theatre: 13 Mar 1899-unknown (40 performances). Cast: E.H. Sothern (as "Raoul D'Artagnan, a youth from Gascony, age 18"), F. Beamish (as "Servant to M. de Treville"), Edward Belmar (as "D'Estrees, Musketeer of the King's Guard"), Geo. E. Bryant (as "Aramis, Musketeer of the King's Guard"), Rowland Buckstone (as "M. de Trevelle, Captain of King's Musketeers"), R.S. Carrington (as "Jussac, of the Cardinal's Guards"), John J. Collins (as "Le Masle, usher to Richelieu"), Norman Conniers (as "Porthos, Musketeer of the King's Guard"), Edith Crane (as "Clarice, Countess de Winter, known as "Miladi"), Roydon Erlynne (as "Athos, Comte de la Fére, Musketeer of the King's Guard"), Owen Fawcett (as "Mousqueton, servant to Porthos"), C.P. Flockton (as "Comte de Rochefort"), Katherine Florence (as "Gabrielle de Chalus, maid-of-honor to the Queen"), Frank Greppo (as "Bernajoux, of the Cardinal's Guards"), Henry Hyde (as "Le Cahusac, of the Cardinal's Guards"), Daniel Jarrett (as "De Chemerault, Musketeer of the King's Guard"), Bessie Johnson (as "Galliere, page to the Queen"), May Johnson (as "de la Fauconiere, page to the Queen"), Arthur R. Lawrence (as "Cardinal Richelieu, Prime Minister"), Olga McArthur (as "A Nun"), Henry Miller (as "Vernet, spy of Richelieu"), R. Neill (as "De Vieuville, of the Cardinal's Guards"), Norman Parr (as "John Felton, officer in the Duke of Buckingham's household"), Kate Pattison-Selten (as "Mother-Superior, of the convent at Bethune"), Edna Phillips (as "Toinette, maid to the Countess de Winter"), Frank Raymond (as "Bicarat, of the Cardinal's Guards"), Morton Selten (as "Louis XIII, King of France"), Edgar Selwyn (as "Dujart, spy of Richelieu") [Broadway debut], Marshall Stedman as "George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham"), Ernest Tarleton (as "Planchet, servant to D'Artagnan"), Rebecca Warren (as "Anne of Austria, Consort of Louis XIII, Queen of France"). Produced by Daniel Frohman.
- (1900) Stage: "Arizona" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Augustus Thomas. Scenic Design by Walter Burridge and Charles H. Ritter. Herald Square Theatre: 10 Sep 1900- 14 Jan 1901 (140 performances). Cast: Sidney Ainsworth (as "Lt. Young"), Adora Andrews (as "Lena Kellar"), Louise Closser Hale (credited as Louise Closser; as "Miss McCullagh"; Broadway debut), Mattie Earle (as "Mrs. Canby"), Stephen B. French (as "Sam Wong"), Malcolm Gunn (as "Lt. Hallack"), Walter Hale (as "Capt. Hodgman"), Edwin Holt (as "Col. Bonham"), Jane Kennark (as "Estrella Bonham"), George Morehead (as "Maj. Cochran"), Thomas Oberle (as "Sgt. Kellar"), George O'Donnell (as "Dr. Fenlon"), Theodore Roberts (as "Henry Canby"), Eleanor Robson Belmont (credited as Eleanor Robson; as "Bonita Canby"; Broadway debut), Edgar Selwyn (as "Tony Mostano"), Vincent Serrano (as "Lt. Denton"; Broadway debut). Produced by Kirke La Shelle and Fred R. Hamlin. NOTE: Filmed as Arizona (1913), substantially rewritten as Arizona (1918) as a Douglas Fairbanks feature, as Arizona (1931).
- (1901) Stage: "A Gentleman of France" on Broadwawy. Drama/romance. Written by Harriet Ford. Based on the romance of Stanley Weyman. Directed by H. Kyrle Bellew. and Edmund D. Lyons. Wallack's Theatre: 30 Dec 1901-Apr 1902 (closing date unknown/120 performances). Cast: Frank E. Aiken, E.E. Allen, Charles Barron, H. Kyrle Bellew (credited as Kyrle Bellew; as "Gaston de Marsac"), Harry Benton, John Blair, Oscar G. Briggs (credited as Oscar Broggs; Broadway debut), Caroline Butterfield, Simpson Carson, Minna Claussenius, Ada Dwyer, John Flood, Janet Ford, Clarence Handyside, Howell Hansel, Samuel Lewis, J.R. Martin, George Morton, Charles Randall, Eleanor Robson Belmont (credited as Eleanor Robson; as "Mlle. de la Vire"), Edgar Selwyn, T.L. Sill, Charlotte Walker. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1902) Stage: "Sherlock Holmes" on Broadway. Drama (revival). Written by William Gillette and Arthur Conan Doyle. Knickerbocker Theatre: 3 Nov 1902-27 Nov 1902 (28 performances). Cast included: William Gillette (as "Sherlock Holmes"), Herbert Percy ("as Dr. Watson"), Edgar Selwyn. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1903) Stage: "Ulysses" on Broadway. Written by Stephen Phillips. Garden Theatre: 14 Sep 1903-Nov 1903 (closing date unknown/65 performances). Cast: Rose Coghlan (as "Penelope"), Tyrone Power Sr. (as "Ulysses"), William Balfour, Elizabeth Churchill, H. Ogden Crane, Ralph Delmore, Louis Egan, Wayne Gray, H.F. Koser, Harry Luckstone, Bertram Marburgh, William F. Owen, Electra Rule, Lou Vizard. Produced by Charles Frohman. Produced by arrangement with Herbert Beerbohm Tree.
- (1903) Stage: "The Pretty Sister of Jose" on Broadway. Written by Frances Hodgson Burnett. Empire Theatre: 10 Nov 1903-Dec 1903 (closing date unknown/58 performances). Cast: Maud Adams, Henry Ainley Sebastiano, Francis Byrne, Joseph Francoeur, May Galyer, Florence Gelbart, G. Harrison Hunter, George S. Irving, Mrs. W.G. Jones, Joseph Kauffman, Harry Luckstone, Sandol Milliken, Richard Pitman, Charles Pitt, Edgar Selwyn. Produced by Charles Frohman. NOTE: Filmed as The Pretty Sister of Jose (1915).
- (1904) Stage{ "Sunday" on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1905) Stage: "A Doll's House" on Broadway. Drama (revival). Written by Henrik Ibsen. Lyceum Theatre: 2 Mar 1905-May 1905 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Ethel Barrymore (as "Nora Helmer"), Joseph Brennan, Bruce McRae (as "Torvald Helmer"), Sara Perry, Beryl Pullman, Chester Pullman, Helen Pullman, Edgar Selwyn, May Davenport Seymour, Eleanor Wilton. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1905) Stage: "Edmund Burke" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Theodore Burt Sayre. Music by Chauncey Olcott. Lyrics by Chauncey Olcott. Musical Director: Frank A. Mandeville. Featuring songs by Frank A. Mandeville and Theodore H. Northrup. Featuring songs with lyrics by Theodore H. Northrup. Directed by Edgar Selwyn. Majestic Theatre: 2 Oct 1905-28 Oct 1905 (28 performances). Cast: George Brennan (as "Terry"), Eleanor Browning (as "Gabrielle Le Juene"), Verner Clarges (as "Lord Nugent"), Thomas David (as "Sir Hugh Vivian"), Mace Greenleaf (as "Prince of Wales"), Macy Harlam (as "Maurice Desneyer"), Daniel Jarrett (as "Oliver Goldsmith"), Richard Malchien (as "Capt. Gulliver"), Charles Ogle (as "Haversham" / "Slogger Murphy"), Chauncey Olcott (as "Edmund Burke"), Edna Phillips (as "Mary Nugent"), Jack Pickford (as "Lady Phyllis"), Charlotte Milbourne (as "Smith Mona" / "Lord Archie" / "Micky Murphy"), Mary Pickford (credited as Glady Milbourne Smith; as "Lord Bertie"; Broadway debut), Elizabeth Washburne (as "Mrs. O'Grady"). Produced by Augustus Pitou Sr.
- (1906) Stage: "It's All Your Fault" on Broadway. Farce.
- (1906) Stage: "Popularity" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by George M. Cohan.Wallack's Theatre: 1 Oct 1906-Oct 1906 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Tim Cronin, Frederic De Belleville, Lores Grimm, John Jack, Frank Kelly, William Keough, Roy La Rue, Adelaide Manola (as "Gertrude Fuller"), Marcus Moriarty, Edythe Moyer, Sachiro Oida, Florence Rockwell, R. Rogers, Harriet Ross, Thomas W. Ross (as "Robert Rand"), Edgar Selwyn (as "Donald Burnside"), Howard Stevens. Produced by Cohan & Harris.
- (1907) Stage: "The Mills of the Gods" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by George Broadhurst. Directed by George Broadhurst and Frederick Perry. Astor Theatre (moved to The Manhattan Theatre from 1 Apr 1907-close): 4 Mar 1907-Apr 1907 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Harrison Armstrong, S.E. Clarkson, Robert Drouet (as "James Clarke"), Harry Hannon, William Humphrey, Charles Lane, Toby Lyons, David North, Harry W. Reid, Florence Rockwell, Edgar Selwyn (as "Frederick Payton"), Frank Sheridan, Scott Siggins, David Thompson, Joseph Tuohy. Produced by Will J. Block Amusement Company.
- (1906) Stage: "Father and Son" on Broadway. Written by Edgar Selwyn. Majestic Theatre: 24 Sep 1908-Oct 1908 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Nina Ainscoe, Dwight Allen, Edward Chapman, June Chapman, Herbert Corthell, George Derr, Alice Gale, Georgie Lawrence, Madeline Louis (as "Grace"), William Norris (as "Doc Filkins"), Charles Ogle, Nat Royster, George C. Staley (as "Arthur Welby"), John Westley (as "Billy Filkins"). Produced by F. Ray Comstock.
- (1908) Stage: "Pierre of the Plains" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Edgar Selwyn. Based on "Pierre and His People" by Gilbert Parker. Hudson Theatre: 12 Oct 1908-Nov 1908 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Joseph Adelman, Harrison Armstrong, Grace Cleveland, Walter Craven, Paul Dickey, Elsie Ferguson, George Schaeffer, Edward Sherman, Scott Siggins, Richard Sterling, Clifford Stork, Fred Turner. Produced by Henry B. Harris. NOTE: Filmed as Pierre of the Plains (1914), Heart of the Wilds (1918), Pierre of the Plains (1942).
- (1910) Stage: "The Country Boy" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Edgar Selwyn. NOTE: Filmed as The Country Boy (1915).
- (1910) Stage: "I'll Be Hanged If I Do" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Edgar Selwyn and William Collier Sr.. Collier's Comedy Theatre: 28 Nov 1910-Feb 1911 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: William Collier Sr. (as "Percival Kelly"), John B. Adam, Helena Collier-Garrick, Fred Esmelton, Willard R. Feeley, Maude Gilbert, M.L. Heckert, Richard Malchien, Stephen Maley, Paula Marr, Stanley Murphy, James B. Sheeran, Clara Reynolds Smith.
- (1911) Stage: Wrote "The Arab", produced on Broadway. Lyceum Theatre (moved to The Astor Theatre from 9 Oct 1911-close): 20 Sep 1911-unknown (53 performances). Cast: Edna Baker (as "Mary Hilbert"), Thomas Adams, Anthony Andre, Tom Azoon, Victor Benoit, Charles De Forrest, Virginia Hammond, Joseph Kisber, Edward R. Mawson, Virginia Rankin, Joseph Rawley, Sam Russell, James Seeley, Edgar Selwyn (as "Jamil Abdullah Azam"), Abraham Seror, Jules Unger, Ethel Von Waldron, Walter Wilson. Produced by Henry B. Harris. NOTE: Filmed as The Arab (1915), The Arab (1924), The Barbarian (1933).
- (1912) Stage: "The Wall Street Girl" on Broadway. Musical. Music by Karl Hoschna. Book by Margaret Mayo and Edgar Selwyn. Lyrics by Benjamin Hapgood Burt. Musical Director: William Lorraine. Additional music by Benjamin Hapgood Burt, Al Piantadosi, Nat Ayer, Henry I. Marshall, Jean Schwartz, Silvio Hein, M.J. Fitzpatrick, Earle C. Jones and Charles Daniels. Additional lyrics by Earle C. Jones, Charles Daniels, Joseph McCarthy, A. Seymour Brown, Alfred Bryan, Grant Clarke, Stanley Murphy and Edward Madden. Scenic Design by H. Robert Law Studios. Costume Design by Cora MacGeachy. Choreographed by Gus Sohlke. Directed by Charles Winninger [earliest Broadway credit]. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 15 Apr 1912-1 Jun 1912 (56 performances). Cast: William Bourn (as "Harris" / "Chorus"), Lilette Boyce (as "Chorus"), Herbert A. Burnham (as "Chorus"), William P. Carleton (as "Dexter Barton"), Ethelyn Clark (as "Chorus"), Mabel Clarke (as "Chorus"), Gladys Clifton (as "Chorus"), Leo E. Crook (as "Chorus"), Wellington Cross (as "Lawrence O'Connor"), John Day (as "Chorus"), Marie Earle (as "Chorus"), Yewell Fields (as "Chorus"), Anna Ford (as "Chorus"), Gladys Fox (as "Chorus"; Broadway debut), Helene French (as "Glen Underwood"), Harry Gilfoil (as "James Greene"), Mary F. Greene (as "Chorus"), Edna Hettler (as "Chorus"), Fred Howard (as "Chorus"), Catherine Hurst (as "Grace Sinclair"), Frankie James (as "Chorus"), Lois Josephine (as "Sunshine Reilly"), Edith Kimball (as "Chorus"), Grace Kimball (as "Chorus"), Maude Knowlton (as "Mrs. Williams"), Irene LeMay (as "Chorus"), Cleo LeMoyne (as "Trixie Allen"), Gordon R. Newman (as "Chorus"), Clarence Oliver (as "Bertie Longman"), Paul Porter (as "Rev. Dr. Leonard"), Harry C. Powers (as "Chorus"), S.J. Rawson (as "Specialty"), Blanche Ring (as "Jemina Greene"), Cyril Ring (as "Jordan"), Will Rogers (as "Specialty"), Katherine Sainpolis (as "Mazie Blackburn"), Bessie Sessions (as "Chorus"), Ralph Shipman (as "Simons" / "Chorus"), Florence Shirley (as "Pearl Williams"; Broadway debut), Charles Silber (as "Pinch"), Alice Sullivan (as "Chorus"), Robert Thurston (as "West" / "Chorus"), Helen Turner (as "Edythe Torrant"), Jack Wellekens (as "Walker" / "Chorus"), Helen Williams (as "Chorus"), Charles Winninger (as "John Chester"; Broadway debut), Estelle Wood (as "Chorus"). Produced by Frederick McKay.
- (1913) Stage: "Nearly Married" on Broadway. Written by Edgar Selwyn. Gaiety Theatre: 5 Sep 1913-Dec 1913 (closing date unknown/123 performances). Cast: Jane Grey (as "Betty Lindsay"), Bruce McRae (as "Harry Lindsay"), Virginia Pearson (as "Hattie King"), John Westley (as "Dick"), Mabel Acker, Delmar E. Clark, Robert Fisher, Schuyler Ladd, Georgia Lawrence, Harry Loraine, William Phinney, Ruth Shepley, Mark Smith. Produced by Cohan & Harris. NOTE: Filmed as Nearly Married (1917).
- (1915) Stage: "Rolling Stones" on Broadway. Written by Edgar Selwyn. NOTE: Filmed as Rolling Stones (1916).
- (1918) Stage: "The Crowded Hour" on Broadway. Written by Edgar Selwyn and Channing Pollock. Selwyn Theatre: 22 Nov 1918-Mar 1919 (closing date unknown/139 performances). Cast: Franklyn Ardell, Andy Aubrey, John Black, Michelette Burani, Orme Caldara, Henry Call, Jane Cowl, Jules Epailly, Mabel Godding, Sidney Hall, George LeSoir, Christine Norman, Burni Prevost, Cyril Raymond, Rae Selwyn, Henry Stephenson, Edward Tierney. Produced by Selwyn & Co. NOTE: Filmed as The Crowded Hour (1925).
- (1919) Stage: "Wedding Bells" on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1919) Stage: "Curiosity" on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1920) Stage: "The Mirage" on Broadway. Melodrama.
- (1922) Stage: "The Blue Kitten" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Directed (w/Leon Errol, Julian Mitchell. Material / lyrics by Otto A. Harbach and William Carey Duncan. Music by Rudolf Friml. Based on a French farce by Gustave Quinson and Yves Mirandeis. Musical Direction by Herbert Stothart. Directed by Edgar Selwyn, Leon Errol and Julian Mitchell. Selwyn Theatre: (moved to The Earl Carroll Theatre from 1 May 1922-close): 13 Jan 1922-13 May 1933 (140 performances). Cast: Bernice Ackerman, Betty Barlow, Joseph Brennan, Chester Brown, Joseph Cawthorn, Eleanor Dell, Frisco Devere, Ted Grant, George Griffiths, Bill Hawkins, Leo Howe, Robert Hurst, Gladys Jordan, May Cory Kitchen, Grace La Rue, George Le Soir, Helen Lewis, Violet Lobell, Lillian Lorraine, William L. Mack, Lorraine Manville, Helen McDonald, Victor Morley, Blanche Morton, Lester New, Jean Newcombe, Jeanne Osborne, Carola Parson, Evelyn Pluntadore, Ann Ross, Penny Rowland, Beatrice Savage, Boris Scott, Douglas Stevenson, Peggy Stohl, Dorothy Stokes, Frances Stone, Marion Sunshine, Dallas Welford, Frances Wing, Robert Woolsey (as "Octave"). Produced by Arthur Hammerstein.
- (1922) Stage: "The Exciters" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Martin Brown. Directed by Edgar Selwyn. Times Square Theatre: 22 Sep 1922-Oct 1922 (closing date unknown/43 performances). Cast: Marsh Allen, Tallulah Bankhead, Alan Dinehart (as "Dan MacGee"), Sidney Dudley, Florence Flinn, Echlin Gayer, Roy Gordon, Jerry Hart, Robert Hyman, Frederick Karr, Wright Kramer, Thais Lawton, Aline MacMahon, Enid Markey, Albert Marsh, Chester Morris, Edwin Walter. Produced by The Selwyns.
- (1923) Stage: "Anything Might Happen" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Edgar Selwyn. Directed by Edgar Selwyn. Comedy Theatre: 20 Feb 1923-Apr 1923 (closing date unknown/63 performances). Cast: Estelle Winwood (as "Helen Springer"), Roland Young (as "Richard Keating"), C. Haviland Chappell (as "A Doorman" / "Howard Matthews"), Florence Clarke (as "Miss Craig"), Helen Cromwell (as "Agnes Farrington"), Ruth Findlay (as "Gladys Barry"), Isabel Garrison (as "Mrs. Barry"), Leslie Howard (as "Hal Turner"), George LeSoir (as "Maitre D'Hotel"), Arthur Lubin (as "A Waiter" / "A Young Man"), Lucia Moore (as "Mrs. Springer"), Montague Rutherford (as "Weeks"), Joan Treffrey (as "Agnes Farrington"). Produced by Selwyn & Co.
- (1924) Stage: "Dancing Mothers" on Broadway. Written by Edgar Selwyn and Edmund Goulding. Booth Theatre: 11 Aug 1924-May 1925 (closing date unknown/312 performances). Cast: Rodolfo Badaloni (as "Charley"), Alison Bradshaw (as "A Young Woman"), Hugh Brooke (as "Second Young Man"), Edward Brooks (as "A Young Man"), Grace Burgess (as "Mrs. Barnes"), Joan Cockram (as "Blondy"), Michael Dawn (as "Kenneth Cobb"), Alven Dexter (as "Escort"), Helen Eby-Rock (as "Marie"), John Halliday (as "Gerald Naughton"), George Harcourt (as "Mr. Williams"), Helen Hayes (as "Catherine 'Kittens' Westcourt"), Elsie Lawson (as "Irma Raymond"), Albert Marsh (as "Second Waiter"), Arthur Metcalfe (as "Davis"), Norma Mitchell (as "Mrs. Zola Massarcne"), Ella Peroff (as "Second Young Woman"), Henry Stephenson (as "Hugh Westcourt"), Timothy Thomas (as "Clarence Houston"), Lewis Waller (as "Andrew"), Adin Wilson (as "McGuire"), Mary Young (as "Ethel Westcourt"). Produced by Edgar Selwyn. NOTE: Filmed as Dancing Mothers (1926).
- (1924) Stage: "Dear Sir" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Music by Jerome Kern. Book by Edgar Selwyn. Lyrics by Howard Dietz. Musical Director: Gus Salzer. Music orchestrated by Allan K. Foster. Choreographed by David Bennett. Directed by David Burton. Times Square Theatre: 23 Sep 1924-4 Oct 1924 (15 performances). Cast: Joseph Allen (as "Peters"), June Baldwin, Ida Berry, William Boren, Hazel Bunting, Betty Campbell, Helen Carrington, Walter Catlett (as "Andrew Bloxom"), Austin Clark, Ritchy Craig, Clifford Daly, Regina Daw, Marion Donnelly, Josephine Dunn(as "Ensemble") [Broadway debut], Victoire Dutel, Dorothy Fitzgibbon, Raymond Hall, Madeline Janis, Norman Jefferson, Janearl Johnson, Katherine Kohler, Trudy Lake, Ainsley Lambert, Lovey Lee, Arthur Lipson (as "Louis, Maitre d'Hotel at Sherry's"), Clair Lipton, Claire Luce (as "Clair"), Kathlene Martyn, Margery Martyn, John McCullough, Beth Meakins, Francis Murphy, Helen Orb, Evelyn Plumador, Geraldine Reavard, Dorothea Richmond, Rita Royce, Frank Schulze, Oscar Shaw (as "Laddie Munn"), Allen Stevens, George Sweet, Genevieve Tobin (as "Dorothy Fair"), Julia Warren, Peggy Watts, William Wilder, Billy Wilson, Devah Worrell. Produced by Philip Goodman.
- (1924) Stage: Directed "Quarantine" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by F. Tennyson Jesse. Revised by Edgar Selwyn. Henry Miller's Theatre: 16 Dec 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"), 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 as Lovers in Quarantine (1925).
- (1925) Stage: "Something to Brag About" on Broadway. Comedy/farce. Directed by Edgar Selwyn. NOTE: Filmed as Baby Face Harrington (1935).
- (1926) Stage: "The Adorable Liar" on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1926) Stage: Produced "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Anita Loos and John Emerson. Directed by Edgar Selwyn. Times Square Theatre: 28 Sep 1926-Mar 1927 (closing date unknown/199 performances). Cast: Katherine Brook (as "Miss Chapman"), Grace Burgess (as "Lulu"), Grace Cornell (as "Ann Spoffard"), Roy Gorham (as "William Gwynn"), Grace Hampton (as "Lady Beekman"), William T. Hayes (as "Old Spoffard"), Edna Hibbard (as "Dorothy Shaw"), Bruce Huntley (as "H. Gilbertson Montrose"), G.P. Huntley (as "Sir Francis Beekman"), Mrs. Jacques Martin (as "Mrs. Spoffard"), Frank Morgan (as "Henry Spoffard"), Edwina Prue (as "Dickie"), Vivian Purcell (as "Connie"), Ruth Raymonde (as "Gloria Atwell"), Georges Romain (as "Robert Broussard"), Adrian Rosely (as "Louis Broussard"), Arthur S. Ross (as "Gus Eisman"), Harold Thomas (as "Harry"), June Walker (as "Lorelei Lee"), Daniel Wolf (as "Leon"). NOTE: Filmed as Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) (Charles Lederer significantly re-wrote the screenplay).
- (1926) Stage: "A Proud Woman" on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1927) Stage: "The Barker" on Broadway. Written by Kenyon Nicholson. Directed by Priestly Morrison. Biltmore Theatre: 18 Jan 1927-Jul 1927 (closing date unknown/221 performances). Cast: George Barbier (as "Col. Gowdy"), Raymond Bramley (as "Doc Rice"), Claudette Colbert (as "Lou"), Norman Foster (as "Chris Miller"), Florence Gerald (as "Maw Benson"), Philip Heege (as "T-Bone"), Ross Hertz (as "A Hick"), May Hopkins (as "Cleo"; final Broadway role), Walter Huston (as "Nifty Miller"), Albert Hyde (as "Pop Morgan"), John Irwin (as "Sailor West"), Nakoloilani (as "Hawaiian Trio"), Pakalaka (as "Hawaiian Trio"), Pakuakini (as "Hawaiian Trio"), Al Roberts (as "Hap Spissell"), Eleanor Winslow Williams (as "Carrie"). Produced by Charles L. Wagner, in association with Edgar Selwyn.
- (1928) Stage: "Eva the Fifth" on Broadway.
- (1928) Stage: "Possession" on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1928) Stage: "Redemption" on Broadway (revival).
- (1929) Stage: "Other Men's Wives" on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1930) Stage: "Strike Up the Band" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Music by George Gershwin. Lyrics by Ira Gershwin. Book by Morrie Ryskind. Based on a libretto by George S. Kaufman. Musical Director: Hilding Andersson. Scenic Design by Raymond Sovey. Costume Design by Charles Le Maire. Featuring the Orchestra of Red Nichols. Members of Red Nichols' Orchestra: Benny Goodman, Glenn Miller, Gene Krupa, Jimmy Dorsey and Jack Teagarden. Choreographed by George Hale. Directed by Alexander Leftwich. Times Square Theatre: 14 Jan 1930-28 Jun 1930 (191 performances). Cast: Virginia Barnes (as "Soisette, in the dream" / "Chorus"), Robert Bentley (as "Richard K. Sloane"), Ethel Britton (as "Suzette, in the dream" / "Chorus"), Doris Carson (as "Anne Draper"), Bobby Clark (as "Man About Town" / "Col. Holmes, in the dream"), Dudley Clements (as "Horace J. Fletcher"), Joyce Coles (as "Premiere Danseuse, in the dream"; Broadway debut), Walter Fairmont (as "Sergeant, in the dream" / "Chorus"), Jerry Goff (as "Jim Townsend"), Ethel Kenyon (as "Myra Meade"), Maurice Lapue (as "Doctor" / "Herr Konrad, in the dream"), Paul McCullough (as "Man About Town" / "Gideon, in the dream"), Marion Miller (as "Doris Dumme, in the dream" / "Chorus"), Blanche Ring (as "Mrs. Grace Draper"), Margaret Schilling (as "Joan Fletcher"), Gordon Smith (as "Timothy Harper"). Produced by Edgar Selwyn.
- (1941) Stage: "The Wookey" on Broadway.
- Playwright: "For Better, For Worse". NOTE: Filmed as For Better, for Worse (1919).
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