- (1902) Stage Play: Her Lord and Master. Drama. Written by Martha Morton. Scenic Design by Homer Emens. Manhattan Theatre: 24 Feb 1902-Apr 1902 (closing date unknown/69 performances). Cast: Percy Brooke, E.L. Caton, Archie Curtis, Ida Darling, Douglas Fairbanks [Broadway debut], Herbert Kelcey (as "Viscount Canning"), Robert Rogers, Hattie Russell, Morton Selten, Effie Shannon (as "Indiana Stillwater"), Winona Shannon, Isabel Waldron. Produced by Henry C. Pierce. Note: Filmed as Her Lord and Master (1921).
- (1902) Stage: Appeared in "A Rose o' Plymouth-town" on Broadway.
- (1904) Stage: Appeared in "The Pit" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Channing Pollock [earliest Broadway credit]. From the novel by Frank Norris. Lyric Theatre: 10 Feb 1904-Apr 1904 (closing date unknown/77 performances). Cast: Howard Boulden, Edgar Bowman, Clay Boyd, Wilson Burke, Bert Burrell, Harold Byrne, Marian A. Chapman, Harry Converse, Kenneth Davenport, Adeline Dunlap, James Emerson, Agnes Evans, Edmund Evans, Agnes Findlay, Mabel Findlay, John J. Fogarty, Robert Peyton Gibbs, Doris Goodwin, Mrs. Powhattan Gordon, George Grey, Henry Gunson, Hale Hamilton, Margaret Kenmare, Charles Kenyon [Broadway debut], Wilton Lackaye (as "Curtis Jadwin"), Amber Lawlord, Richard Manuel, J. Cleneay Mathews, Thomas McCabe, Tilden Mercer, Charles Merritt, Walter Moran, Owen Murphey, Jane Oaker, Bowman Ralston, Ed Ralston, Franklyn Roberts, Rudy Saxe, Willard Saxon, Avon Stern, William Stern, A.H. Stuart, Eddie Stuart, Frank Tillman, William Titus, Richard Webster, White Whittlesey, Joseph A. Wilkes, Maude Wilson, Cecil Worth, Robert Wright, Vera Zalene. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1904) Stage Play: Two Little Sailor Boys. Written by Walter Howard. Academy of Music: 2 May 1904- May 1904 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: William Brand, Ethel Brandon, John T. Burke, James Carew, Dan Collyer, Lizzie Evans, Douglas Fairbanks, John Harson, Burt Jordon, M.J. Jordon, C.E. Lark, W.D. Norton, Jack Oatley, J.J. Owen, Phil Sheridan, George Soule Spencer, Harry St. Maur, Georgia Welles.
- (1905) Stage: Appeared (as "Fred Everett") in "Fantana" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Music by Raymond Hubbell. Book by Robert B. Smith (also lyrics) and Sam S. Shubert (who later admitted that Smith actually did the writing). Musical Director: Albert Krausse. Additional music by Gus Edwards. Additional lyrics by Vincent Bryan. Scenic Design by John H. Young, D. Frank Dodge, Frank E. Gates and E.A. Morange. Costume Design by Caroline F. Siedle. Directed by R.H. Burnside. Lyric Theatre: 14 Jan 1905-30 Sep 1905 (298 performances). Cast: Sybil Anderson (as "Chorus"), Katie Barry (as "Jessie"), Louise Barthel (as "Chorus"), George Beban (as "Henri Pasdoit"), Marian Bontelle (as "Chorus"), Robert Broderick (as "The Marquis Kioto"), Eleanor Browning (as "Mlle. Anita"), Jean Caluducci (as "Florence"), Francis Cameron (as "Chorus"), Jack Carlyle (as "Chorus"), Helen Cheston (as "Lillian"), Nina Clemens (as "Chorus"), Catherine Cooper (as "Jeanette"), Mabel Courtney (as "Chorus"), Amy Dale (as "Chorus"), Lynn D'Arcy (as "Leola San"), (as "Chorus"), Henry Davis (as "Chorus"), Jefferson De Angelis (as "Hawkins"), Carlotta Doty (as "Chorus"), Henry Dyer (as "Chorus"), Lotta Ettinger (as "Chorus"), Frank Greene (as "Chorus"), Edward Hallaran (as "Chorus"), Katherine Hyland (as "Chorus"), Harvey A. Kelly (as "Chorus"), R.T. Kirkwood (as "Chorus"), Dorothy Knight (as "Chorus"), Philip Leigh (as "Hon. Kogora Hirataka"), Gertrude Mandell (as "Chorus"), Carol Oty (as "Chorus"), Aurora Piatt (as "Chorus"), George Picard (as "Chorus"), Olive Quimby (as "Chorus"), Adele Ritchie (as "Fanny Everett"), Frank Rushworth (as "Lt. Sinclair Warren"), Roma Ryder, Julia Sanderson (as "Elsie Sturtevant"), Adelaide Sharp (as "The Kid"), Victoria Stuart (as "Hela Kora"), Neva West (as "Chorus"), Hubert Wilke (as "Commodore Everett"), Grace E. Wilson (as "Chorus"), Charles Wright (as "Chorus"). Produced by Lee Shubert and Sam Shubert. NOTE: Production reportedly cost a then-record $60,000.
- (1905) Stage: Appeared in "A Case of Frenzied Finance" on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1905) Stage: Appeared (as "Lute Ludlam") in "As Ye Sow" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by Rev. John M. Snyder. Musical Director by Charles F. Higgins. Scenic Design by H. Robert Law. Garden Theatre: 25 Dec 1905-Jan 1906 (closing date unknown/34 performances). Cast: Mac Barnes (as "Capt. Hanks"), Noah Beery (as "Tobe Hallett"), Edward Bender, Kate Beneteau, Oliver Blake, John Burton, Marion Chapman, George Coleman, Charles E. Craig, Edwin Forsberg, Frederic D. Freeman, Katherine Gemmill, Frank Gilmore, Samuel Gray, Frank Logan, Ernest Mack, May McCabe, Steven Meade, Harry Meredith, Franklyn Roberts, James K. Rogers, Pearl Sanford, Marie Taylor, Charlotte Walker, George R Warren, Edith Wright, Olive Wright. Produced by William A. Brady and Joseph R. Grismer.
- (1906) Stage: Appeared in "Clothes" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Avery Hopwood and Channing Pollock. Scenic Design by Robert T. McKee and H. Robert Law. Costume Design by Van Horn and Lord & Taylor. Mannhattan Theatre: 11 Sep 1906-Dec 1906 (closing date unknown/113 performances). Cast: Grace George (as "Olivia Sherwood"), Louise Closser Hale, Justine Cutting, Robert T. Haines, Diana Huneker, Angela Ogden, Dorothy Revelle, Charles Stanley, A.H. Stuart, Anne Sutherland, Richard Wilson, Frank Worthing. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1906) Stage Play: The Man of the Hour. Melodrama. Written by George Broadhurst. Savoy Theatre: 4 Dec 1906- Jan 1908 (closing date unknown/479 performances). Cast: Mark J. Cody (as "Henry Williams"), Harry J. Cooley (as "Mills"), 'Harriet Otis Dellenbaugh' (as "Mrs. Bennett'), Douglas Fairbanks' (as "Perry Carter Wainwright"), George Fawcett (as "James Phelan"), John Flood (as "Scott R. Gibbs"), Alfred Kappeler (as "Arthur Payne") [Broadway debut], Lillian Kemble-Cooper (as "Dallas Wainwright"), Robert A. Lothian (as "Office Boy"), Frank MacVicars (as "Richard Harrigan"), Diva Marolda (as "Cynthia Garrison"), Frederick Perry (as "Alwyn Bennett"), William Richards (as "William Ingram"), Bennett Southard (as "Richard Roberts"), Charles Stedman, Geoffrey C. Stein, James E. Wilson. Produced by William A. Brady and Joseph R. Grismer. Notes: (1) At this period on Broadway this was considered a smash hit. (2). Filmed by William A. Brady Picture Plays as Man of the Hour (1914) and distributed by World Film. Johnny Hines was recast in the film role originated by Mr. Fairbanks.
- (1908) Stage: Appeared (as "Harold Jepson") in "All for a Girl" on Broadway. Written by Rupert Hughes. Bijou Theatre: 22 Aug 1908-Sep 1908 (closing date unknown/33 performances). Cast: John E. Brennan, Carlos Constantine, W.J. Constantine, Jane Corcoran, Harriet Otis Dellenbaugh, Emil DeVarney, Robert A. Fischer, Samuel M. Forrest, Ernest Mack, Adelaide Manola, Percy Plunkett, Florence Robertson, Ruth Shepley. Produced by William A. Brady and Joseph R. Grismer.
- (1908) Stage: Appeared (as "Bud Haines") in "A Gentleman from Mississippi" on Broadway. Written by Harrison Rhodes and Thomas A. Wise (who also appeared)). Bijou Theatre: 29 Sep 1908-Sep 1909 (closing date unknown/407 performances). Cast: Ernest Baxter, E.H. Bender, Frederick Bock, W.J. Brady, Charles Chappelle, Hal De Forest, Henry Gibson, Charles Johnson, Donald MacKintire, M.W. Rale, Charles Sedgwick, Harry Stubbs, Sue Van Duzer, Stanhope Wheatcroft. Produced by William A. Brady and Joseph R. Grismer.
- (1910) Stage Play: The Cub. Comedy. Written by Thompson Buchanan. Collier's Comedy Theatre: 1 Nov 1910- Nov 1910 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Douglas Fairbanks (as "Steve Oldham"), Ernest Baxter, Elmer Booth, Harrison Coates, Millicent Evans, Joseph Greene, Lillian Hathaway, John Henderson, Harry Latimer, Jack Le Roy, Cynthia Lewis, Charles MacDonald, James A. Marcus, Louise Rial, Olaf Skavlan, Charles Stanley, Robert Wessels. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1911) Stage Play: The Lights o' London. (Revival). Written by George R. Sims. Lyric Theatre: 1 May 1911- May 1911 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: William Betts, Holbrook Blinn, James Bobst, Clarice Burke, William Courtenay, Harry Davies, Clara Davis, Lawrence D'Orsay, Edward Emery, Douglas Fairbanks, John Fenton, George Flagg, C.E. Harris, Josie Hayward, Doris Keane, Harry Lane, Edward Le Hay, Amy Meers, Sidney Ray Melven, Edward Morris, Frank Purvis, Charles Richman, Thomas Q. Seabrooke, Thomas A. Wise. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1911) Stage Play: A Gentleman of Leisure. Comedy. Written by John Stapleton and P.G. Wodehouse. Playhouse Theatre (moved to The Globe Theatre from 13 Sep 1911- unknown, then moved to The Herald Square Theatre from 16 Oct 1911- close): 24 Aug 1911- unknown (76 performances). Cast: Elmer Booth, Francis Carlyle, Ruth Chester, Bert Daube, Laurence Dwight, Douglas Fairbanks, George Fawcett (as "Big Phil Creedon"), Edmund Forde, Lindsay J. Hall, Harry K. Jones, Frank Kendrick, Leon Kendrick, Arthur Laceby, Mona Morgan, Roland Rushton, Ruth Shepley (as "Mollie Creedon"), Ida Van Tine. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1912) Stage Play: Hawthorne of the U.S.A. Written by James B. Fagan. Astor Theatre: 4 Nov 1912- Jan 1913 (closing date unknown/72 performances). Cast: Martin L. Alsop (as "Prince Vladimir"), Douglas Fairbanks (as "Anthony Hamilton Hawthorne"), Irene Fenwick (as "Princess Irma Augusta Elizabeth Overitch"), Ruth Allen, Eric Blind, Sam Hardy, Rapley Holmes, Wallie Howe [credited as Walter Howe], Walter Leonard Howe, Annie Hughes, Louis Le Bey, W. Mayne Lynton, Allan Pollock, Frederick Powell, Legai Robinson, Ivan F. Simpson, Henry Stephenson. Produced by Cohan & Harris.
- (1913) Stage Play: The New Henrietta. Comedy. Written by Bronson Howard. Revised by Victor Mapes and Winchell Smith. Directed by Joseph Brooks. Knickerbocker Theatre: 22 Dec 1913- Feb 1914 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: William H. Crane (as "Nicholas Van Alstyne/Old Nick"), Amelia G. Bingham, Malcolm Bradley, Halbert W. Brown, Lyster Chambers (as "Mark Turner, Nick's son-in-law"), Patricia Collinge (as "Agnes Gates, Nick's Ward"), Eileen Errol, Douglas Fairbanks (as "Bertie Van Alstyne, Nick's Son"), Arthur Stuart Hull (as "Dr. George Wainwright"), J.H. Huntley, Edward Poland, Zeffie Tilbury (as "Hattie, A strange young woman"), Bud Woodthorpe. Produced by Charles Frohman and Klaw & Erlanger.
- (1914) Stage Play: He Comes Up Smiling.
- (1914) Stage: Appeared in "The Show Shop" on Broadway. Written by James Forbes. Hudson Theatre: 31 Dec 1914-May 1915 (closing date unknown/156 performances). Cast: Edna Aug, Harry G. Bates, William Bedford, George Coit, Samuel Coit, Patricia Collinge, Charles Emerson, Al Gilmore, Felix Krembs, Olive May, William Sampson, Zelda Sears, George Sidney, Ned Sparks, Lillian Tucker, Walter Young. Produced by Selwyn & Co.
- (1900) Stage: Appeared (as "Florio"; stage debut) in "The Duke's Jester", Academy of Music, Richmond, VA.
- (1912) Stage: Appeared in touring company of "Officer 666". Produced by Sam Harris and George M. Cohan.
- (1922) Book: Wrote the foreword to "Young Lawyer U.N. Truth's First Case" by 'Emory Washburn Ulman'.
- (3/29/28) Radio: Appeared on an NBC radio special: "The Dodge Hour", with D.W. Griffith, Charles Chaplin and John Barrymore. Sponsored by Dodge Brothers to introduce its newest automobile, it was broadcast from New York, Detroit and Hollywood. No recording is known to exist.
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