- (1912 - 1930) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1912) Stage Play: Sumurun. Written by Friedrich Freksa. Casino Theatre: 16 Jan 1912- Mar 1912 (closing date unknown/62 performances). Cast: Grete Bendorff (as "First Lady of the Harem"), Paul Conradi (as "The Sheik"), Marie Dina (as "Lady of the Harem"), Franz Dworsky (as "The Slave Dealer"), Camilla Eibenschütz (as "Sumurun, the favorite wife of the Sheik"), Fritz Feher (as "Nur-al-Din, a cloth merchant"), Hans Felix (as "The Young Sheik, the Sheik's son"), Susanne Herzog (as "Sumurun's Maid"), George Hoetzel (as "The Janitor of The Bazaar"), Albert Karchow (as "The Chief Eunuch"), Leopoldine Konstantin (as "The Beautiful Slave of Fatal Enchantment"), Emil Lind (as "The Hunchback"), Ernst Matray (as "Nur-al-Din's Attendant"), Nicol (as "A Negro"), Marietta Reimer (as "Second Lady of the Harem"), Rosa Remi (as "Lady of the Harem"), Gretchen Ritter (as "Lady of the Harem"), Louis Seel (as "Another Attendant of Nur-al-Din"), Gretchen Suse (as "Lady of the Harem"), Marie Von Bülow (as "An Old Woman, a relative of the Hunchback"). Produced by Winthrop Ames [earliest Broadway credit].
- (1912) Stage Play: The Pigeon. Written by John Galsworthy. Little Theatre: 12 Mar 1912- May 1912 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Reginald Barlow (as "First Humble Man"), Arthur Barry (as "Sir Thomas Hoxton"), A.M. Botsford (as "Rory Megan"), Albert Easdale (as "Second Humble Man"), Pamela Gaythorne (as "Guinevere Megan"), Wallie Howe (as "Edward Bertley"), Thomas Louden (as "Alfred Calway") [Broadway debut], Wilfred North (as "A Police Constable"), Frank Reicher (as "Ferrand"), Louise Seymour (as "Ann Wellwyn"), Sidney Valentine (as "Timson"), Russ Whytal (as "Cristopher Wellwyn"). Produced by Winthrop Ames. Note: First production to be performed in Ames' new 300-seat theatre. Over the years it has been expanded to 597 seats and is now known as The Helen Hayes Theatre.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Terrible Meek. Written by Charles Kennedy. Little Theatre: 19 Mar 1912- Apr 1912 (closing date unknown/39 performances/note: repertory production; rotated with "The Flower of the Palace of Han"). Cast [as known]: Reginald Barlow, 'Edith Wynne Matthison (I)', Sidney Valentine. Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Flower of the Palace of Han. Written by Lois Laloy and Charles Kennedy. Little Theatre: 19 Mar 1912- Apr 1912 (closing date unknown/39 performances/note: repertory production; rotated with "The Terrible Meek"). Cast: Reginald Barlow, Arthur Barry, A.M. Botsford, Albert Easdale, Louise Fredericks, Wallie Howe, Edith Wynne Matthison, Wilfred North, Frank Reicher, Louis Seymour. Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1912) Stage Play: June Madness. Written by Henry Kitchell Webster. Fulton Theatre: 25 Sep 1912- Oct 1912 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: Hedwiga Reicher [credited as Hedwig Reicher] (as "Mrs. Thornborough"), Hylton Allen [credited as A. Hylton Allen], Edward Emery, Renee Kelly (as "June"), Adelaide Nowak, P.W. Perry, Helen Tracy, Charles Waldron. Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Affairs of Anatol. Written by Arthur Schnitzler. Directed by George Foster Platt. Little Theatre: 14 Oct 1912- Dec 1912 (closing date unknown/72 performances). Cast: John Barrymore (as "Anatol"), Marguerite Clark (as "Hilda"), Alfred De Ball (as "Waiter"), Albert Easdale (as "Franz"), Katherine Emmett (as "Gabrielle"), Gail Kane (as "Bianca"), Doris Keane (as "Mimi"), Isabel Lee (as "Lona"), Oswald Yorke (as "Max"). Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1912) Stage Play: Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Written by Jessie Graham White. Based on the stories of the The Brothers Grimm. Little Theatre (moved to Maxine Elliott's Theatre from 27 Jan 1913- Close): 7 Nov 1912- unknown (72 performances). Cast: Marguerite Clark (as "Snow White"), Elaine Inescort (as "Wicked Queen"), Madeline Chieffo. William H. Davis, Jeanette Dix, Charles Everett, Madeline Fairbanks, Marion Fairbanks, Dorothy Farrier, Thomas Fife, Harriet Ingalls, Frank McCormack, Dorothy Preyer, Edward See, Marie Stanley. Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1912) Stage Play: Rutherford & Son. Written by K.G. Sowerby. Directed by Norman McKinnel. Little Theatre: 24 Dec 1912- Feb 1913 (closing date unknown/63 performances). Cast: Marie Ault, J. Cook Beresford, J.V. Bryant, Leo G. Carroll [Broadway debut], Norman McKinnel, Thyrza Norman, Edyth Olive, Agnes Thomas. Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1913) Stage Play: Her Own Money. Comedy. Written by Mark Swan. Comedy Theatre (moved to The Lyric Theatre from 6 Oct 1913 to close): 1 Sep 1913- unknown (55 performances). Cast: Sydney Booth, Julia Dean, Maude Durand, Ernest Glendinning, Louise Grassler, George Hassell, Beverly Sitgreaves. Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1913) Stage Play: The Great Adventure. Written by Arnold Bennett. Booth Theatre: 16 Oct 1913- Nov 1913 (closing date unknown/52 performances). Cast: Roxane Barton, Janet Beecher, Cyril Biddulph, Erskholme Clive, Edward Connelly, Walter Creighton, Frank Goldsmith, Lyn Harding, Edgar Kent, Rupert Lumley, Edward Martyn, Walter Maxwell, Guthrie McClintic [Broadway debut], Thomas Wigney Percyval, Ina Rorke, Roland Rushton. Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1913) Stage Play: Prunella [or Love in a Garden]. Drama. Written by Laurence Housman and Harley Granville-Barker. Music by Joseph Moorat. Little Theatre (moved to The Booth Theatre from 8 Dec 1913- close): 27 Oct 1913- unknown (104 performances). Cast: Marguerite Clark (as "Prunella") [final Broadway role], Ernest Glendinning (as "Pierrot"), Kathleen Comegys [Broadway debut], Edwin Cushman, Kate De Becker, William Evill, Nennelle Foster, Winifred Fraser, Paul Gordon, Marie Hudspeth, Master Albert James, Raymond Lockwood, Luke Martin, Cecilia Radclyffe, Ada St. Clair. Produced by Winthrop Ames. Note: Filmed as Prunella (1918).
- (1913) Stage Play: The Philanderer. Written by George Bernard Shaw. Directed by George Bernard Shaw. Little Theatre: 30 Dec 1913- Mar 1914 (closing date unknown/103 performances). Cast: E.J. Ballantine, Reginald Besant, Reginald Dance, Ernita Lascelles, Mary Lawton, Charles Maude, Muriel Reddall, W.R. Stavely. Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1914) Stage Play: The Truth. Drama (revival). Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1914) Stage Play: A Pair of Silk Stockings.
- (1915) Stage Play: Children of Earth.
- (1916) Stage Play: Pierrot the Prodigal.
- (1916) Stage Play: Hush!
- (1917) Stage Play: The Morris Dance. Written by Harley Granville-Barker, from the novel "The Wrong Box" by Robert Louis Stevenson. Based on Lloyd Osbourne. Little Theatre: 13 Feb 1917- Mar 1917 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Richard Bennett, Sidney Blackmer, William Foster, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Ethelbert Hales, Dora Heritage, Isadore Marcil, James W. Morrison, Gerald Oliver-Smith, Robert Rendel, Elisabeth Risdon, John L. Shine, Carl M. Tyng, Peter Woolman, Barry O'Moore. Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1917) Stage Play: Saturday to Monday. Written by William Hurlbut. Bijou Theatre: 1 Oct 1917- Oct 1917 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Constance Binney, Elizabeth Brown, Theresa Maxwell Conover, Marie Haynes, Eleanor Hutchison, Saxon Kling, Ruth Maycliffe, Charles McCarthy, Norman Trevor, Cecil Yapp. Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1918) Stage Play: The Betrothal. Written by Maurice Maeterlinck. Translated by Alexander Teixeira De Mattos. Directed by Winthrop Ames. Shubert Theatre, (moved to The Century Theatre from 1 Feb 1919- circa Mar 1919): 28 Nov 1918- Mar 1919 (closing date unknown/120 performances). Cast: H.J. Carvill (as "The Great Peasant"), Claude Cooper (as "Drunken Ancestor"), Georges Du Bois (as "Murderer Ancestor"), Augustin Duncan (as "The Great Ancestor"), Elwyn Eaton (as "The Great Mendicant"), Sylvia Field (as "Joy"), Gladys George (as "Jalline") [Broadway debut], Winifred Lenihan (as "Belline") [Broadway debut], Barry Macollum (as "The Sick Ancestor"), Mrs. Jacques Martin (as "The Fairy Berylune"), Lillian Roth (as "Tyltyl's Grandchild"), Reggie Sheffield (as "Tyltyl"), Allen Thomas (as "The Rich Ancestor"), Henry Travers (as "Daddy Tyl"), June Walker (as "Roselle") [Broadway debut], George Wolcott (as "Tyltyl's Last Born"), "Boots" Wooster (as "Milette"). Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Truth About Blayds. Comedy/tragedy. Written by A.A. Milne. Directed by Winthrop Ames. Booth Theatre: 14 Mar 1922- Jun 1922 (closing date unknown/108 performances). Cast: Alexandra Carlisle (as "Isobel"), Gilbert Emery (as "A.L. Royce"), Vane Featherston (as Marion Blayds-Conway"), Mary Gayley (as "Parsons"), Ferdinand Gottschalk (as "William Blayds-Conway"), O.P. Heggie (as "Oliver Blayds"), Leslie Howard (as "Oliver Blayds-Conway"), Frieda Inescort (as "Septima Blayds-Conway") [Broadway debut]. Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1923) Stage Play: Will Shakespeare.
- (1923) Stage Play: In the Next Room. Melodrama.
- (1924) Stage Play: Beggar on Horseback. Written by George S. Kaufman and Marc Connelly. Broadhurst Theatre: 12 Feb 1924- 23 Aug 1924 (223 performances). Cast: Edwin Argus (as "Jerry/A Policeman"), Marion Ballou (as "Mrs. Cady"), Richard Barbee (as "Dr. Albert Rice"), George Barbier, Spring Byington, Anne Carpenger (as "Gladys Cady"), Chappell Cory Jr. (as "A Song-Writer"), Pascal Cowan (as "A Butler"), Drake De Kay (as "First Lord of the Bed Chamber"), Bertrand O. Dolson (as "A Novelist"), Walker M. Ellis (as "A Guide"), Joseph Hamilton (as "Caesar"), Charles A. House (as "A Waiter"), Herbert James (as "Pompey"), Kay Johnson (as "Cynthia Mason"), Hamilton MacFadden (as "A Poet"), Henry Meglup (as "An Artist"), George Mitchell (as "H.R.H. The Crown Prince of Xanadu"), Osgood Perkins (as "Homer Cady") [Broadway debut], Tom Raynor (as "A Lamplighter"), Grethe Rutz-Nissen (as "H.R.H. The Crown Princess of Xanadu"), Maxwell Selzer (as "A Business Man"), James Sumner (as "A Reporter"), Norman Sweetser (as "A Sightseer"), Fay Walker (as "Miss You"), Paul Wilson (as "A Juror"), Roland Young. Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1924) Stage Play: Minick.
- (1924) Stage Play: Old English. Written by John Galsworthy. Directed by Edward L. Swete. Ritz Theatre: 23 Dec 1924- Jun 1925 (closing date unknown/183 performances). Cast: George Arliss (as "Sylvanus Heythorp, Chairman of "The Island Navigation Company"), Norman Cannon (as "Mr. Brownbee, a Credito of old Heythorp"), Horace Cooper (as "Mr. Westgate, Shareholder of the Company"), Stafford Dickens (as "Charles Ventnor, a Solicitor"), Cecile Dixon (as "Phyllis, Larne's Child"), Thomas Donnelly (as "Mr. Appleby, Shareholder of the Company"), Frederick Earle (as "Gilbert Farney, Secretary of the same"), Edmund George (as "Clerk, of "The Island Navigation Company"), Henrietta Goodwin (as "Letty, the Larne's Maid-of-all-work"), Ethel Griffies (as "Adela Heythorp, Daughter of old Heythorp"), Langford Hayes (as "A Director"), James Hughes (as "Mr. Batterson, Shareholder of the Company"), Mollie Johnson (as "Molly, his Daughter's House-maid"), Irby Marshall (as "Rosamund Larne. a connection of Old Heythorp"), Henry Morrell (as "Meller, old Heythorp's Body-servant"), Ivan F. Simpson (as "Joseph Pillin, Senior Partner of Pillin & Son"), Murray Stephens (as "Mr. Winkley, Shareholder of the Company"), Arthur Villars (as "Mr. Budgeon, Shareholder of the Company"), Deering Wells (as "Bob Pillin, of Pillan & Son, shipowners"), Victor Weston (as "Clerk, of "The Island Navigation Company"), George Wolcott (as "Jock, Larne's Child"), Eustace Wyatt (as "Clergyman, another Creditor"). Produced by Winthrop Ames and Edward L. Swete.
- (1926) Stage Play: Iolanthe. Musical/operetta (revival). Written by W.S. Gilbert. Music by Sir Arthur Sullivan. Directed by Winthrop Ames. Plymouth Theatre: 19 Apr 1926- Nov 1926 (closing date unknown/255 performances). Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1926) Stage Play: White Wings. Comedy. Written by Philip Barry. Directed by Winthrop Ames. Booth Theatre: 15 Oct 1926- Nov 1928 (closing date unknown/27 performances). Cast: George Ali (as "Joseph. A Horse"), Arthur Allen (as "Charlie Todd"), Jessie Graham (as "Mrs. Fanny K. Inch"), J.M. Kerrigan (as "Herbert"), Ben Lackland (as "A Taxi-driver"), Winifred Lenihan (as "Mary Todd"), Donald MacDonald (as "Clyde Sims"), Earl McDonald (as "Ralph Otis/ Dr. Derby"), Donald McKee (as "Paul Pillsbury/Dr. Bowles"), William Norris (as "Mr. Ernest Inch"), Tom Powers (as "Archie Inch"), Phil M. Sheridan (as "A City Employee"), Albert Tavernier (as "Major Philip E. Inch"). Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Pirates of Penzance. Musical comedy/operetta (revival).
- (1927) Stage Play: The Mikado. Musical/operetta (revival). Written by W.S. Gilbert. Music by Sir Arthur Sullivan. Choreographed by Michio Ito. Directed by Winthrop Ames. Royale Theatre: 17 Nov 1927- 7 Jan 1928 (110 performances). Cast: Joseph Ames (as "Chorus"), Florence Barbiers (as "Chorus"), John Barclay (as "The Mikado of Japan"), Lois Bennett (as "Yum-Yum, one of Three Sisters, ward of Ko-Ko"), Adolph L. Benson (as "Chorus"), Barbara Bronson (as "Chorus"), Robert Caille (as "Chorus"), Dorothy Coulter (as "Chorus"), Nina Dean (as "Chorus"), Hartwell DeMille (as "Chorus"), J. Humbird Duffey (as "Pish-Tush, a Noble Lord"), Virginia Fox (as "Chorus"), William C. Gordon (as "Pooh-Bah, Lord High Everything Else"), Bettina Hall (as "Peep-Bo, one of Three Sisters, ward of Ko-Ko"), Mildred Harrington (as "Chorus"), Melvin Hemphill (as "Chorus"), Ann Honeycutt (as "Chorus"), Sybil Kama (as "Chorus"), Edna D. Lambert (as "Chorus"), Paula Langlen (as "The Mikado's Sword-Bearer"), Harry Lauder (as "Chorus"), Palmer Laughlin (as "Chorus"), Benn K. Leavenworth (as "Chorus"), George C. Lehrian (as "The Mikado's Umbrella-Bearer"), Milja Levander (as "Chorus"), Lawrence L. Lewis (as "Chorus"), May MacFarlane (as "Chorus"), Ray Melton (as "Chorus"), Walter Owens (as "Chorus"), John Pendergrast (as "Chorus"), Hilga Rorlund (as "Chorus"), Vera Ross (as "Katisha, an Elderly Lady, in love with Nanki-Poo"), Allyn C. Saurer (as "Chorus"), J. Gordon Selwood (as "Chorus"), John Sindall (as "Chorus"), Louise Smith (as "Chorus"), Miller Sparks (as "Chorus"), Suissabell Sterling (as "Pitti-Sing, one of Three Sisters, ward of Ko-Ko"), Mollie Stockard (as "Chorus"), George Wharton (as "Chorus"), William Williams (as "Nanki-Poo, son of the Mikado, disguised as a wandering minister"), Victor S. Wrenn (as "Chorus"), Fred Wright (as "Ko-Ko, Lord High Executioner of Titipu"). Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1927) Stage Play: Escape. Written by John Galsworthy. Directed by Winthrop Ames. Booth Theatre: 26 Oct 1927- Mar 1928 (closing date unknown/173 performances).
- (1927) Stage Play: Iolanthe. Musical/operetta (revival). Written by W.S. Gilbert. Music by Sir Arthur Sullivan. Directed by Winthrop Ames. Royale Theatre: 14 Nov 1927- Nov 1927 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: John Barclay (as "Earl of Mountararat"), Lois Bennett (as "Phyllis"), J. Humbird Duffey (as "Lord Tolloler"), Virginia Fox (as "Celia"), William C. Gordon (as "Private Willis"), Bettina Hall (as "Iolanthe"), Paula Langlen (as "Fleta"), George C. Lehrian (as "The Train Bearer"), Vera Ross (as "Queen of the Fairies"), Suissabell Sterling (as "Leila"), William Williams (as "Strephon"), Fred Wright (as "The Lord Chancellor"). Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1927) Stage Play: The Pirates of Penzance. Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1928) Stage Play: The Merchant of Venice. Comedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Winthrop Ames. Broadhurst Theatre: 16 Jan 1928- Mar 1928 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Hardie Albright (as "Solanio, friend of Antonio"), George Arliss (as "Shylock, a Jew of Venice") [final Broadway role], Sydney Booth (as "Salarino, friend of Antonio"), Romney Brent (as "Launcelot Gobbo, servant to Shylock"), Spring Byington (as "Nerissa, Portia's waiting gentle-woman"), Hope Cary, George Graham, Murray Kinnell (as "Bassanio, friend of Antonio"), David Leonard, Hugh Miller, Henry Morrell, Guido Nadzo, Lewis Sealy [credited as Lewis A. Sealy] (as "Balthasar"), Alan Willey (as "Antonio, a merchant of Venice," and "Stephano servant to Portia"), Peggy Wood (as "Portia"). Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1930) Stage Play: Mrs. Moonlight. Drama. Written by Benn W. Levy. Directed by Charles Hopkins. Charles Hopkins Theatre: 29 Sep 1930- Jul 1931 (closing date unknown/321 performances). Cast: Edith Barrett, Guy Standing (as "Tom Moonlight"), Haidee Wright (as "Minnie"), Leo G. Carroll (as "Percy Middling"), Kathryn Collier, Vernon Kelso (as "Willie Ragg"), John Ross, Katherine Standing. Produced by Charles Hopkins. Theatre Owned by Winthrop Ames (who had no other involvement in production).
- (1930) Stage Play: Mr. Samuel. Produced by Winthrop Ames.
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