- (1901) Stage: Wrote "Beaucaire", produced on Broadway. Comedy. NOTE: (1) Revived in 1904, and in 1912 as "Monsieur Beaucaire"; (2) filmed as Monsieur Beaucaire (1946), Monte Carlo (1930), Monsieur Beaucaire (1924), A Gentleman of France (1905), Monsieur Beaucaire (1952)).
- (1904) Stage: Wrote "Beaucaire", produced on Broadway (revival). Comedy.
- (1908) Stage: Wrote (w/Harry Leon Wilson) "The Man from Home", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Astor Theatre: 17 Aug 1908-Oct 1909 (496 performances). Produced by Liebler & Co. NOTE: Filmed as The Man from Home (1922), The Man from Home (1914).
- (1909) Stage: Wrote (w/Harry Leon Wilson) "Springtime", produced on Broadway. Based on a short story by George Bronson Howard. Music by Harry Rowe Shelley. Directed / produced by Frederic Thompson. Liberty Theatre: 19 Oct 1909-Dec 1909 (closing date unknown/79 performances). Cast: Joseph Brennan, Sallie Brent, Earle Browne, Charles Butler, Bijou Fernandez, Samuel Forrest, William Harrigan, Edwin Holland, Helen Lindroth, William B. Mack, Mabel Taliaferro, Alice Parke Warren. NOTE: Filmed as Springtime (1914).
- (1909) Stage: Wrote (w/Harry Leon Wilson) "Cameo Kirby", produced on Broadway. Hackett Theatre: 20 Dec 1909-Jan 1910 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Dustin Farnum (as "Eugene Kirby"), May Buckley (as "Adelle Randall"), Burr Caruth, Emmett Corrigan, Robert Cummings, John Harrington, Maud Hosford, Gordon Johnstone, Jane Kendrick, Ruth Lloyd, Nora Shelby, Alfred Tansy, Conway Tearle, George Thatcher, Gladys Williams. Produced by Liebler & Co. NOTE: Filmed as Cameo Kirby (1923), Cameo Kirby (1914).
- (1910) Stage: Wrote (w/Harry Leon Wilson): "Your Humble Servant", produced on Broadway.
- (1910) Stage: Wrote (w/Harry Leon Wilson) "Getting a Polish", produced on Broadway. Wallack's Theatre: 7 Nov 1910-17 Dec 1910 (48 performances). Cast: May Irwin (as "Mrs. Jim"), Frank Bixby, J.T. Chaillee, Rosalind Coghlan, George Fawcett, Charles A. Gay, Florence Glenn, Mary V. Hall, John Junior, Edward Leibert, John Daly Murphy, Albert Roccardi, Mary K. Taylor, Raymond Watson. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1912) Stage: Wrote (w/Evelyn Greenleaf Sutherland) "Monsieur Beaucaire", produced on Broadway (revival). Daly's Theatre: 11 May 1912-4 May 1912 (64 performances). Cast: Herbert Ayling, Lewis Broughton, Catherine Doucet [credited as Catherine Calhoun], Henry Carvill, Edith Charteris, Essex Dane, Reginald Dane, J. Malcolm Dunn, Elwin Eaton [credited as Elwyn Eaton], Rupert Julian, Dorothy Lane, Alice May, Henry Stanford, Vincent Sternroyd, Lewis Waller (also producer), Frank Wolfe.
- (1912) Stage: Wrote "Beauty and the Jacobin", produced on Broadway. Collier's Comedy Theatre: 29 Nov 1912 (1 performance). Cast: Maurice Elvey, Walter Kingsford, Eva Leonard Boyne, F.J. Randell, Elisabeth Risdon.
- (1916) Stage: Wrote "Mister Antonio", produced on Broadway. Lyceum Theatre: 18 Sep 1916-Oct 1916 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Joseph Brennan (as "Milton Jorny"), Jessie Crommette (as "Mrs. Walpole"), Winona Dennison (as "Mrs. Cooder"), Ernest A. Elton (as "Rev. Jesse Walpole"), Robert Harrison (as "Joe"), Frances Landy (as "Avalonio Jorny"), William Lorenz (as "Mr. Cooder"), Agnes Marc (as "Pearl"), John McCabe (as "Tug"), Patterson McNutt (as "Earl"; Broadway debut), Walter F. Scott (as "George Riddle"), Otis Skinner (as "Antonio Camaradonio"), Louise Sydmeth (as "Mrs. Jorny"), Sue Ann Wilson (as "Minnie Riddle"), Eleanor Woodruff (as "June Ramsey"). Produced by Charles Frohman Inc. NOTE: Filmed as Mister Antonio (1929).
- (1917) Stage: Wrote (w/Julian Street) "The Country Cousin", produced on Broadway. Gaiety Theatre: 3 Sep 1917-Dec 1917 (closing date unknown/128 performances). Cast: Alexandra Carlisle (as "Nancy Price"), Marion Coakley (as "Eleanor Howitt"), Grace Elliston (as "Maud Howitt"), Arthur Forrest (as "Stanley Howitt"), Donald Foster (as "Cyril Kinney"), Donald Gallaher (as "Sam Williams"), Eleanor Gordon (as "Mrs. Jane Kinney"), Charles MacKay (as "Archie Gore"), Nat Nazarro Jr., Eugene O'Brien (as "George Tewksberry Reynolds, 3rd"), Louise Prussing (as "Athalie Wainwright"; Broadway debut), Julia Stuart (as "Mrs. Howitt"), Albert Tavernier (as "Blake"), George Wright Jr. (as "Pruitt"). Produced by George C. Tyler and Klaw & Erlanger. NOTE: Filmed as The Country Cousin (1919).
- (1918) Stage: Wrote source material (novel) for "Seventeen", produced on Broadway. Written by Hugh Stanislaus Stange and Stannard Mears. Directed / produced by Stuart Walker. Booth Theatre: 22 Jan 1918-Aug 1918 (closing date unknown/225 performances) Cast: Morgan Farley, George Gaul, Ruth Gordon (as "Lola Pratt"), Gregory Kelly, Paul Kelly, Judith Lowry, Neil Martin, Beatrice Maude, Henrietta McDannel, Lew Medbury, Lillian Ross, Eugene Stockdale, Arthur Wells. NOTE: Filmed as Seventeen (1940), Seventeen (1916).
- (1918) Stage: Wrote source material (stories) for "Penrod", produced on Broadway. Written by Edward E. Rose. Directed by Dudley Digges and Edward E. Rose. Globe Theatre (moved to Punch and Judy Theatre on 7 Oct 1918 to close): 2 Sep 1918-Nov 1918 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast included Helen Chandler, Paul Kelly, Lillian Roth. Produced by George C. Tyler and Klaw & Erlanger. NOTE: Filmed as By the Light of the Silvery Moon (1953), Penrod (1922)).
- (1919) Stage: Wrote (w/Harry Leon Wilson) "Up from Nowhere", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Comedy Theatre: 8 Sep 1919-Oct 1919 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Ann Andrews, Clarence Bellair, George Casselberry (as "Linski"), Silver's Secretary"), Margalo Gillmore (as "Etta, Silver's Daughter"), Frederick Howard, Leotta Miller, Olive Murray, Grace Reals, Sato, Norman Trevor (as "George Washington Silver Silver's Son"), Cecil Yapp. Produced by John D. Williams.
- (1919) Stage: Wrote "Clarence", produced on Broaday. Comedy. Directed by Frederick Stanhope. Hudson Theatre: 20 Sep 1918-Jun 1920 (closing date unknown/300 performances). Cast: Willard Barton, Hubert Stem, Mary Boland (as "Mrs. Wheeler"), Barlowe Borland (as "Dinwiddie"), John Flood (as "Mr. Wheeler"), Helen Hayes (as "Cora Wheeler"), Glenn Hunter (as "Bobby Wheeler"), Alfred Lunt (as "Clarence"), Elsie MacKay (as "Violet Pinney"), Rea Martin (as "Della"), Susanne Westford (as "Mrs. Martyn"). Produced by George C. Tyler. NOTE: Filmed as Clarence (1937), Clarence (1922).
- (1919) Stage: Wrote "Monsieur Beaucaire", produced on Broadway. Musical / romance / opera (revival).
- (1920) Playwright: Wrote "Poldekin". Comedy.
- (1921) Stage: Wrote "The Wren", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Directed by 'Howard Lindsay'. Gaiety Theatre: 10 Oct 1921-Oct 1921 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott (as "Mrs. Freehart"), Pauline Armitage (as "Mrs. Frazee"), George Fawcett (as "Cap'n Olds"), John Flood (as "Frazee"), Helen Hayes (as "Seeby"), Leslie Howard (as "Roddy"), Sam Reed (as "Francis"). Produced by George C. Tyler and Abraham L. Erlanger.
- (1921) Stage: Wrote "The Intimate Strangers", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Directed by Ira Hards. Henry Miller's Theatre: 7 Nov 1921-Jan 1922 (closing date unknown/91 performances). Cast: Billie Burke (as "Isabel"), Charles S. Abbe (as "The Station Master"), Frances Howard (as "Florence"), Glenn Hunter (as "Johnnie White"), Frank J. Kirk (as "Henry"), Alfred Lunt (as "Ames"), Elizabeth Patterson (as "Aunt Ellen"), Clare Weldon (as "Mattie"). Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr., A.L. Erlanger and Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1922) Stage: Wrote "Rose Briar", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Empire Theatre: 25 Dec 1922-Mar 1923 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Billie Burke, Frank Conroy, Louis Darclee, Alan Dinehart, Paul Doucet, Mark Haight, Julia Hoyt, Richie Ling, Frank McCoy, Florence O'Denishawn, Ethel Remey. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1923) Stage: Wrote "The Trysting Place", produced on Broadway.
- (1923) Stage: Wrote "Tweedles", produced on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1923) Stage: Wrote "Magnolia", produced on Broadway. NOTE: Filmed as Mississippi (1935), The River of Romance (1929), The Fighting Coward (1924))
- (1924) Stage: Wrote "Beauty and the Jacobin", produced on Broadway (revival).
- (1926) Stage: Wrote source material (novel, "Seventeen") for "Hello, Lola", produced on Broadway. Musical comedy. Music by William Kernell. Book by Dorothy Donnelly. Scenic Design by Livingston Platt. Directed by Seymour Felix. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: (moved to Maxine Elliott's Theatre on 8 Feb 1926-close): 12 Jan 1926- 20 Feb 1926 (47 performances). Cast: Avis Adair (as "Ensemble"), Earl Atkinson (as "Ensemble"), Edythe Baker (as "Lola Pratt"), Sylvia Carol (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Casey (as "Ensemble"), Kittye Casey (as "Bridget"), Lillian Clerke (as "Ensemble"), Cullen Clewis (as "Ensemble"), Elisha Cook (as "Joe Bullitt"), George Crouch (as "Ensemble"), Don DeFrancis (as "Ensemble"), Nanette Flack (as "Mrs. Baxter"), Jay C. Flippen (as "Genesis"), Ben Franklin (as "Mr. Parcher"), Bert Gardner (as "George Cooper"), Ben Hendricks (as "Mr. Baxter"), Richard Keene (as "Willie Baxter"), Constance Lahleet (as "Ensemble"), Nancy Lea (as "Ensemble"), Frances Mildern (as "Ensemble"), Albert Miller (as "Ensemble"), Betty Noi (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Palmer (as "Ensemble"), Virginia Ray (as "Ensemble"), Diddie Read (as "Ensemble"), Beatrice Reiss (as "Ensemble"), Wyn Richmond (as "May Parcher"), Howard Shea (as "Ensemble"), Cora Stephens (as "Ensemble"), Wally Stewart (as "Ensemble"), George E. Stone (as "Johnnie Wilson"), Margaret Sullivan (credited as Margaret Brooke Sullivan; as "Miss Boke"l Broadway debut), Larry Vale (as "Ensemble"), Katherine Vercelle (as "Ensemble"), Louise Vercelle (as "Ensemble"), Marjorie White (as "Jane Baxter"), Harry Wood (as "Ensemble"), Emma Wyche (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1929) Stage: Wrote "How's Your Health", produced on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1930) Stage: Wrote "The Plutocrat", produced on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1931) Stage: Wrote "Colonel Satan", produced on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1952) Print ads: the 50th anniversary of New York Central's The 20th Century Limited train line from New York City to Chicago.
- Story: "Pied Piper Malone" (filmed as Pied Piper Malone (1924))
- (1915) Novel: "The Turmoil" (filmed as The Turmoil (1924)).
- Story: "The Man Who Found Himself" (filmed as The Man Who Found Himself (1925))
- Story: "Geraldine" (filmed as Geraldine (1929))
- Novel: "Old Fathers and Young Sons" (filmed as Father's Son (1931))
- (1913) Novel: "The Flirt" (filmed as Bad Sister (1931)).
- Novel: "Business and Pleasure" (filmed as Business and Pleasure (1932))
- (1921) Novel: "Alice Adams". NOTE (1) Tarkington won the Pulitzer Prize for this novel. (2). Filmed as Alice Adams (1935), Alice Adams (1923)).
- (1922) Novel: "Gentle Julia" (filmed as Gentle Julia (1936))
- (1916) Novel: "Penrod and Sam" (filmed as Penrod and Sam (1937), Detectuvs (1932), Penrod and Sam (1931), Penrod and Sam (1937), Penrod and Sam (1923))
- (1934) Novel: "Little Orvie" (filmed as Little Orvie (1940)).
- Story: "Father's Son" (filmed as Father's Son (1941))
- (1918) Novel: "The Magnificent Ambersons". NOTE: (1) Tarkington won the Pulitzer Prize for this novel. (2) Filmed as The Magnificent Ambersons (1942), Pampered Youth (1925), The Magnificent Ambersons (1950).
- (1933) Novel: Wrote "Presenting Lily Mars" (filmed as Presenting Lily Mars (1943)).
- Novel: "Beau Brummel (filmed as Beau Brummel (1913), Beau Brummell (1954)).
- Novel: "Misunderstood" (filmed as Boy of Mine (1923)).
- (1903) Story: "Cherry" (filmed as Cherry (1914)).
- (1923) Story: "The Fascinating Stranger" (filmed as The Fascinating Stranger (1952)).
- Novelette: "The Uncertain Mrs. Collicutt" (filmed as The Uncertain Molly Collicutt (1950)).
- Novel: "A Gentleman of France" (filmed as A Gentleman of France (1905)).
- (1928) Book: "Claire Ambler" (filmed as Claire Ambler (1952)).
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