- (1900 - 1915) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1900) Stage Play: My Daughter-in-law. Comedy. From the French of Fabrice Carre and Paul Bilhaud. Lyceum Theatre: 26 Feb 1900- Apr 1900 (closing ate unknown/72 performances). Cast: Fannie Brough, Josephine Gautier, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Seymour Hicks, Henry Kemble, J.L. MacKaye, Joseph Maylon, Margaret Robinson, Herbert Standing [Broadway debut], Ellaline Terriss.
- (1903) Stage Play: The Best of Friends. Melodrama. Written by Cecil Raleigh. Academy of Music: 19 Oct 1903- Dec 1903 (closing date unknown/65 performances). Cast: Lionel Barrymore, Frank Burbeck, Richard Bennett, Ralph Delmore, Katherine Grey, Louis Le Bay, Rose Lemoire, Tully Marshall, Thomas McGrath, Prince Miller, Madeleine Rivers, Ray Rockman, Eugene Santley, Herbert Standing, Geoffrey Stein, Joseph Wheelock Jr. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1903) Stage Play: Candida. Comedy. Written by George Bernard Shaw. Musical Director: Frederick W. Ecke. Princess Theatre (during it's run the show moved to Hoyt's Theatre on 4 Jan 1904 and to the Vaudeville Theatre on 11 Jan 1904 until close): 9 Dec 1903- Apr 1904 (closing date unknown/133 performances). Cast: Herbert Carr (as "Mr. Burgess"), Louise Closser Hale [credited as Louise Closser] (as "Miss Proserpine Garnett") , Arnold Daly (as "Eugene Marchbanks"), Dorothy Donnelly (as "Candida"), Dodson Mitchell (as "The Reverend James Mavor Morell"), F. Newton-Lindo (as "The Reverend Alexander Mill"). Replacement actor: Herbert Standing (as "Mr. Burgess"). Produced Arnold Daly. House Manager: Charles Frohman.
- (1904) Stage Play: The Serio-Comic Governess. Written by Israel Zangwill. Lyceum Theatre: 13 Sep 1904- Oct 1904 (closing date unknown/41 performances). Cast: Rose A. Anthon, Jane Boag, Charles Bowser, Kathleen Brown, Nellie Butler, W.J. Butler, Nellie Campbell, Harold De Becker, Nesta De Becker, Julia Dean, Paula Gloy, Ethel Greybrooke, Gilman Haskell, Rose Hubbard, Jean Hubbell, T. Hayes Hunter, Margaret Kensington, Katharine Keppell, George LeSoir, Cecilia Loftus, Fania Marinoff [credited as Fanny Marinoff], Kate Pattison Selton, H. Reeves-Smith, Frederick Reynolds, Earl Ryder, Emmett Shackelford, Herbert Standing, Eva Vincent. Produced by Daniel Frohman.
- (1905) Stage Play: Her Great Match. Comedy. Written by Clyde Fitch. Criterion Theatre: 4 Sep 1905- Nov 1905 (closing date unknown/93 performances). Cast: Charles Cherry, Mathilde Cottrelly (as "H.R.H. Grand Duchess of Hohenhetstein"), Felix Edwardes (as "Frank Wilton"), Maxine Elliott (as "Jo Sheldon"), Madge Girdlestone, Suzanne Perry, Leon Quartermaine, Herbert Standing (as "Augustus Botes"), Hodgson Taylor, Cory Thomas, Nellie Thorne. Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1906) Stage Play: The Dear Unfair Sex. Comedy. Written by Inglis Allen. Directed by Charles Cartwright. Liberty Theatre: 10 Sep 1906- Sep 1906 (closidate unknown/21 performances). Cast: Edna Bert, Charles Cartwright, Charles Dowd, George Giddens, Thomas Graham, Ellis Jeffreys, Alice Johnson, Gerald Lawrence, Nellie Malcolm, G.C. Meakins, Herbert Sleath, Mrs. Sam Sothern, Herbert Standing, Leslie Tearle. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1906) Stage Play: Sir Anthony. Comedy. Written by C. Haddon Chambers. Savoy Theatre: 19 Nov 1906- Dec 1906 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Alice Belmore, Edna Bruna, Verner Clarges, Maud Crichton, Helen Lowell, William Norris, Joseph Tuohy, Olive Wyndham. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1907) Stage Play: Candida. Comedy (revival). Written by George Bernard Shaw. Berkeley Lyceum Theatre: 11 Dec 1907- Jan 1908 (closing date unknown/30 performances). Cast: Holbrook Blinn, Harold M. Cheshire, Arnold Daly, Herbert Standing, Helen Ware, Margaret Wycherly (as "Candida"). Produced by Arnold Daly Repertory.
- (1908) Stage Play: Girls. Comedy. Written by Clyde Fitch. Directed by Clyde Fitch. Daly's Theatre: 23 Mar 1908- Jun 1908 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Fanchon Campbell (as "Mrs. Dennett"), 'Charles Cherry (I)' (as "Edgar W. Holt, Junior partner of the law firm of Sprague & Holt"), Fred Esmelton (as "The Janitor"), Laura Nelson Hall (as "Pamela Gordon, Secretary and Stenographer"), Leslie Kenyon (as "Frank Loot, Clerk with Sprague & Holt"), Harry MacFayden (as "The Postman"), John S. Marble (as "Augustus Dennett"), Ruth Maycliffe (as "Violet Lansdowne, Stenographer and Illustrator"), Edward Morrissey (as "Messenger Boy"), Amy Ricard (as "Kate West, A free lance writer"), Zelda Sears (as "Lucille Purcelle, Elocutionist"), Herbert Standing (as "George H. Sprague, Edgar's partner"). Replacement cast: Elwood Fleet Bostwick (as "The Janitor"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1909) Stage Play: Girls. Comedy (revival). Written by Clyde Fitch. Directed by Clyde Fitch. Hackett Theatre: 8 Feb 1909- Feb 1909 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Fanchon Campbell (as "Mrs. Dennett"), 'Charles Cherry (I)' (as "Edgar W. Holt, a Junior partner of the law firm of Sprague & Holt"), J. Cumberland (as "Frank Loot, a Clerk with Sprague & Holt"), Fred Esmelton (as "The Janitor"), Harry MacFayden (as "The Postman"), John S. Marble (as "Augustus Dennett"), Ruth Maycliffe (as "Violet Lansdowne, Stenographer and Illustrator"), Edward Morrissey (as "Messenger Boy"), Florence Reed (as "Pamela Gordon, Secretary and Stenographer"), Amy Ricard (as "Kate West, A free lance writer"), Zelda Sears (as "Lucille Purcelle, the Elocutionist"), Herbert Standing (as "Frank Loot, Clerk with Sprague & Holt").
- (1909) Stage Play: The House Next Door. Written by J. Hartley Manners. Based on "Die Von Hochsatte" by Ludwig Weller and Leo Walther Stein. Gaiety Theatre: 12 Apr 1909- Jun 1909 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Ruth Chester, Charles Dieam, J.E. Dodson (as "Sir John Cotswold"), Thomas Findlay (as "Sir Isaac Jacobson"), A.T. Hendon, Regan Hughston, William J. Kelley, Fania Marinoff, Eleanor Moretti, Mabel Roebuck, W.H. Sams, Herbert Standing. Produced by Cohan & Harris.
- (1911) Stage Play: Disraeli.
- (1914) Stage Play: To-Night's the Night. Musical comedy. Book by Fred Thompson. Music by Paul Rubens. Lyrics by Paul Rubens and Percy Greenbank. Based on "Les Dominos Roses" by Maurice Hennequin and Alfred Delacour. Musical Director: Frank E. Tours. Additional music by Jerome Kern. Additional lyrics by Desmond Carter. Directed by Austen Hurgon. Shubert Theatre: 24 Dec 1914- 27 Mar 1915 (112 performances). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
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