- (1901 - 1921) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1901) Stage Play: The Liberty Belles. Musical comedy. Additional music by John W. Bratton, Clifton Crawford, Aimee Lachaume, Harry von Tilzer [earliest Broadway credit], A. Baldwin Sloane, Louis F. Gottschalk, William J. Accooe and Mae Anwerda Sloane. Book by Harry B. Smith. Lyrics by Harry B. Smith. Musical Director: Aimee Lachaume. Additional lyrics by George V. Hobart, Walter Ford, Irving Claxton and Clifton Crawford. Hoyt's Theatre (moved to the Grand Opera House on 19 Jan 1902 to close): 30 Sep 1901- Jan 1902 (closing date unknown/112 performances). Cast: Edith Barr, Bobby Burns, Atta Butler, Nat C. Cafferty, Crissie Carlisle, Harry Davenport, Lotta Faust, Elsie Ferguson (as "Maria Morris") [Broadway debut], Harry Gilfoil, Augusta Glose, Edna Hunter, Violet Jewell, Grace Kimball (as "Edith May"), Dorothy Lester, Helene Lucas, D. Mack Lumsden, Esther Lyons, J.C. Marlowe, Louise Middleton, Sandol Milliken, Marie Murphy, Edward Pooley, Katherine Roberts, John Slavin, Margaret Walker. Produced by Klaw & Erlanger.
- The Wild Rose (1902). Musical comedy. Music by Ludwig Englander. Book by Harry B. Smith and George V. Hobart. Lyrics by Harry B. Smith and George V. Hobart. Musical Director: Frederic Solomon. Featuring songs with lyrics by William H. Penn, Ren Shields and Clifton Crawford. Additional lyrics by William Jerome, Junie McCree, Cecil Mack, John Gilroy and Vincent Bryan. Additional music by Harry Linton, Will Marion Cook, Harry von Tilzer, Ben Jerome, Melville Ellis and Jean Schwartz. Scenic Design by D. Frank Dodge. Costume Design by Caroline Seidle. Dances arranged by Adolph Neuberger. Directed by George W. Lederer. Knickerbocker Theatre: 5 May 1902- 30 Aug 1902 (136 performances). Cast: Madge Adae (as "Diane D'Ivry"), Marion Alexander (as "La Boulotte"), George Ali (as "Baby"), Neva Aymer (as "Michelline"), Theresa Barron (as "Lena"), David Bennett (as "Lieutenant Marcel de Talleyrand-Perigord"), Irene Bentley (as "Rose Romany "), Irene Bishop (as "Fanchonette"), William Wallace Black (as "Count von Lahn/Scipio"), Minna Blackman (as "Lisa"), Madge Brooks (as "La Radieuse"), Marie Cahill (as "Vera von Lahn"), Viola Carlstedt (as "Lieutenant Goetz"), Marguerite Clark (as "Lieutenant Gaston Gardennes"), Ma Belle Davis (as "Cigale"), Louise De Rigney (as "Lieutenant Bourbon"), Belva Don Kersley (as "Germinie"), Teddie DuCoe (as "Gretchen"), Elsie Ferguson (as "Philomele"), Evelyn Florence (as "Vashti"), Mazie Follette (as "Petite Singe"), Edwin Foy (as "Paracelsus Noodles"), Ida Gabrielle (as "Rafael"), Archie Guerin (as "Fritz"), Averell Harris (as "Lieutenant Walther"), Albert Hart (as "Mahomet"), Charles Hooker (as "Lieutenant Pierre de Rastignac"), Helga Howard (as "Beppo"), Ethel Jewett (as "La Joyeuse"), Louis Kelso (as "Lieutenant Henri St. Bris"), Elba Kenny (as "Lieutenant Charlevoix"), Richard Lambert (as "Major Hauptmann"), V.H. Lee (as "Lieutenant Conrad"), David Lythgoe (as "Rudolph von Walden"), Hazel Manchester (as "Barbara"), Madge Marston (as "Eve Bonheur"), Junie McCree (as "Victor Hugo de Brie"), Rube Miller (as "Lieutenant Franz von Richter"), Charles Morton (as "Lieutenant Leopold"), E.H. O'Connor (as "Aristotle"), Carrie E. Perkins (as "Mirabel"), Nina Randall (as "La Rouleuse"), Mollie Sherwood (as "Rosalie"), Maida Van Buren (as "Rigolette"), Mai Walker (as "Lieutenant Drachenfels"). Produced by George W. Lederer.
- (1902) Stage Play: Sally in Our Alley. Musical comedy. Music by Ludwig Englander. Book by George V. Hobart. Lyrics by George V. Hobart. Featuring "Under The Bamboo Tree" by J. Rosamond Johnson and Bob Cole. Featuring songs by Harry von Tilzer, William H. Penn, William Frederick Peters, Bert Williams, George Walker and Henry Carey. Featuring songs with lyrics by Bert Williams, Henry Blossom, Ernest Hanegan, George Totten Smith, George Walker and Henry Carey. Musical Director: Max Hirschfeld. Scenic Design by D. Frank Dodge and Edward G. Unitt. Costume Design by Caroline F. Siedle. Directed by George W. Lederer. Broadway Theatre (moved to The Harlem Opera House from 10 Nov 1902- Nov 1902, then moved to The New York Theatre from 24 Nov 1902 to close): 20 Aug 1902- 13 Dec 1902 (100 performances). Cast: Frank Bernard, Gertrude Blanke, Harry Brown, Marie Cahill, Georgia Caine, Viola Carlstedt, Richard F. Carroll, J.T. Chaillee, Dora Cheever, Reine Davies (as "Miss Violet"), Roger De Coverly (as "The Governor of North Carolina"), Mildred De Vere, Rita Dean, Anna Delaney, Wheeler Earl, Minnie Edwards, Edward Ellkors, Harry Fairleigh, James A. Furey, Ray Gilmore, Joseph W. Herbert, Ethel Kelly, Georgia Kelly, Georgie Lawrence (as "Little Norah Ryan"), Catherine Lewis, Margaret Marston, Madeleine Martin, Dan McAvoy, May Miller, Dan Smith, Julius Steger, Ruddy J. Struck, Fred Titus, Agnes Wayburn, Louis Wesley. Produced by George W. Lederer.
- Mr. Bluebeard (1903). Musical. Music by Frederick Solomon. Additional music by C. Herbert Kerr. Book by Arthur Collins and J. Hickory Wood. Lyrics by J. Cheever Goodwin. Musical Director: Frederick Solomon. Adapted for America by John J. McNally. Additional numbers by William Jerome, Jean Schwartz, Al Bryan, Vincent Bryan, Gus Edwards, J. Rosamond Johnson, Theodore M. Morse, Bob Cole, Matt Woodward, Ben M. Jerome, Will D. Cobb, Harry von Tilzer and Dan McAvoy. Choreographed by Ernest D'Auban. Directed by Herbert Gresham and Ned Wayburn. Knickerbocker Theatre: 21 Jan 1903- 16 May 1903 (135 performances). Cast: Myrtle Artlington (as "Beca"), George A. Cameron (as "Dunfor"), Herbert Cawthorne (as "Irish Patsha"), Dane and Seymour (as "Specialty"), William Danforth (as "Mustapha"), Bessie De Voie (as "Korafai"), Rose Earle (as "Nadie"), Eddie Foy (as "Sister Anne"), Elizabeth Hauman (as "Pony Ballet"), Lonie Hauman (as "Pony Ballet"), Clara Havel (as "Mirza"), Chauncey Holland (as "Passai"), Helga Howard (as "Zara"), Elsa Huerting (as "Specialty"), Georgia Kelly (as "Stella"), Norma Kopp (as "Abdallah"), Beatrice Liddell (as "Pony Ballet"), Bonnie Maginn (as "Imer Dasher"), Eva Marlow (as "Pony Ballet"), Dorothy Marlowe (as "Pony Ballet"), Dan McAvoy (as "Mr. Blue Beard"), Seppie McNeil (as "Pony Ballet"), Harry Murdoc (as "Laidoff"), Thomas O'Brien (as "Hatrac"), Edith Palmer (as "Amina"), Flora Parker (as "Fatima"), Carolyn Poltz (as "Pony Ballet"), Premiere (as "Specialty"), Adele Rafter (as "Selim"), Sam Reed (as "Abaddin"), Ada Robertson (as "Pony Ballet"), Nellie Simmons (as "Zoli"), Abner Symmons (as "Badun"), May Taylor (as "Zaidee"), The Grigolatis Troupe of Aerialists (as "Specialty"), Fred Walsh (as "Knouse"), W.H. White (as "Hacnum"), Frank C. Young (as "Abumun"). Produced by Klaw & Erlanger.
- Spotless Town (1903). Musical comedy.
- (1903) Stage Play: The Fisher Maiden. Musical comedy/opera. Music by Harry von Tilzer. Libretto by Arthur Lamb. Musical Director: Fred Perkins. Choreographed by Joseph C. Smith. Directed by Harry von Tilzer. Victoria Theatre: 5 Oct 1903- 31 Oct 1903 (32 performances). Cast: Edna Bronson (as "Marjorie"), Frances Cameron (as "Tippee"), Tom Collins (as "Bob Bobstay"), Sydney A. Harris (as "Minister"), Dorothy Jardon (as "Mabel"), Rose La Harte (as "Georgianna"), Robert Lett (as "Sir George Gilding"), George MacFarlane (as "Robert Luckstone") [Broadway debut], Elaine Selover (as "Ethel"), Al Shean (as "Dullovitch"), Harry Short (as "Benedict Sevan"), Frank Smiley (as "Dr. Grip"), J. Francis Sullivan (as "Jack Tuggs"), Bessie Tannehill (as "Maydee"), George Tennery (as "Harry Goodwill"), James Wallace (as "Photographer"), Charles Warren (as "Grimsky"), Al H. Weston (as "Simon Sax"). Produced by Harry von Tilzer.
- Paris By Night (1904). Musical revue. Book by Harry B. Marshall. Musical Director: Robert W. Edwards. Lyrics by Harry B. Marshall. Music by Alfred Solman. Additional music by Robert W. Edwards, Harry B. Marshall, Linda Bloodgood, Egbert Van Alstyne, Joseph Nathan, Harry von Tilzer, Harry Armstrong and Julius Adler. Featuring songs with lyrics by Jack E. Hazzard, Estella Acres, Harry Williams, Joan Haden, Andrew B. Sterling and James Morrison. Scenic Design by P. Dodd Ackerman. Costume Design by Bertha Dowling. Directed by Sol Fields. Madison Square Roof Garden (moved yo The Murray Hill Theatre from 28 Aug 1905 to close): 2 Jul 1904- 13 Aug 1904 (closing date unknown/59 performances). Cast: Naomi Arnold, Sylvia Beecher (as "Marguerita Hottomoleo"), Adrian Bellvue, Grace Bond, Mabelle Bonner, Hugh Cameron, Julia Cook, Julia Curtis, Alberta Davis, Fleurette De Mar, Bertha Dowling, Helene Drew, Louise Egener, Minnie Egener, Frank C. Evans, George Fields, Linnet Fiske, Edyth Forrest, Cassius Freeborn, May Guyer, Toma Hanlon, Madge Lawrence, Frank McCullough, Margaret Messinger, George H. Nagel, W.R. Paschel, Purnell Pratt (as "Harold Vere de Vere Cushman"), Charles Robinson, Ceretta Ross, Mae Sheridan, Edgar Temple, Henry Vogel, Edith Warren, Ben Welch, Maude Wynne. Produced by Joseph M. Weber and Rush.
- A Jolly Baron (1905). Musical/fantasy.
- The Dairymaids (1907). Musical farce. Music by Paul Rubens and Frank Tours. Lyrics by Arthur Wimperis. Book by Alexander M. Thompson and Robert Courtneidge. Featuring songs by Jerome Kern. Featuring songs with lyrics by M.E. Rourke. Featuring "It's Naughty to Be Kissed" by William T. Francis and J.B. Loughrey. Music and lyrics for "Quarrel Duet" with J.J. Montague. Featuring "Down the Strand" by E.G. McLellan and Bernard Rolt. Featuring "Barcelona" by Eustace Baynes, James W. Tate and Vernon Roy. Featuring "Oh, Mr. Brown" by 'Harry Von Tilzer' and Andrew B. Sterling. Featuring "Dat Friend of Mine" by Egbert Van Alstyne and Harry Williams. Featuring "In the Twi-Twi-Twilight" by Herman E. Darewski, Jr. and Charles Wilmot. Musical Director: William T. Francis. Dances arranged by Adolph Neuberger. Directed by A.E. Dodson. Criterion Theatre: 26 Aug 1907- 16 Nov 1907 (86 performances). Cast: George Gregory, Donald Hall, Thelma Raye, Julia Sanderson, Huntley Wright, Bessie De Voie, Edna Dodsworth, Emily Francis, May Gerson, Dorothy Gibson, Enid Gibson, Flossie Hope, Lanford Kirby, John Laughlin, Lillian LeRoy, Maude LeRoy, Rose Leslie, Grace Lindsay, Hatty Lorraine, Minna Martrit, Beatrice McKay, Isabelle Meyers, Hazel Neason, Eugene O'Rourke, Ruby Ray, Frieda Weigold, Florence Wilson, Wilma Wood, May Yerby. Produced by Charles Frohman. Trivia: Sheet music for this show appears on the wall of the writer's office of 'The Dick Van Dyke Show.'
- Ziegfeld Follies of 1910 (1910). Musical revue. Based on material by Harry B. Smith and Gus Edwards. Music and lyrics by Irving Berlin. Featuring songs by Will D. Cobb, Gus Edwards, Ballard MacDonald, Harry Carroll, Harry B. Smith, Will Marion Cook, Ford Dabney [earliest Broadway credit], James Henry Burriss, Chris Smith, Bert Williams, Alex Rogers, William Tracy, Lewis F. Muir, Vincent Bryan, Addison Burkhardt, Harry von Tilzer and Victor Holländer. Jardin de Paris: 20 Jun 1910- 3 Sep 1910 (88 performances). Cast: George Bickel, Arline Boley, Fanny Brice, Rosie Green, Elsie Hamilton, Maurice Hegeman, Vonnie Hoyt, Jacques Kruger, Lillian Lorraine, Bobby North, John Quigg, William Reeves, Hazel Robinson, Grace Tyson, Jerome Van Norden, Harry Watson, Bert Williams. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- (1910) Stage Play: Madame Sherry. Musical. Music by Karl Hoschna. Book and lyrics by Otto A. Harbach. Based on the German musical by Benno Jacobson, Maurice Ordonneau, Paul Burani and Hugo Felix. Book adapted by Charles E. Hands and Adrian Ross. Featuring songs by Hugo Felix [Broadway credit], Harry von Tilzer and Phil Schwartz. Featuring songs with lyrics by Harold Atteridge, Junie McCree and Edward Madden. Musical Director: Hans S. Linne. Directed by George W. Lederer. New Amsterdam Theatre: 30 Aug 1910- 11 Mar 1911 (231 performances). Cast: Lina Abarbanell (as "Yvonne Sherry"), Naomi Dale (as "Dorothy Pelham"), Frances Demarest (as "Lulu"), Almanore Francis (as "Florence Brevoort"), Jack Gardner (as "Edward Sherry"), May Hanna (as "Helen Van Ness"), Ralph C. Herz (as "Uncle Theophilus Sherry"), Dorothy Jardon (as "Pepita"), Frank Johnson (as "Hectar"), Marcelle Lamb (as "Bertha Von Hutton"), Roselle Lyons (as "Betty Palmer"), Ignacio Martinetti (as "Phillippe"), Elizabeth Murray (as "Catherine"), Elizabeth Nelson (as "Eleanor de Peyster"), Alice Palmer (as "Irene Vandervelt"), Irene Palmer (as "Loy De Puyster"), John Reinhard (as "Leonard Gomez"), Joseph C. Smith (as "Bobby"), Leslie Stose (as "Marion Pallerson"), May Thompson (as "Myrtle Stuyvesant"), Lillian Tucker (as "Florence Astoria"), Evelyn Westbrook (as "Ruth Amsterdam"). Produced by Mr. Woods, H.H. Frazee and George W. Lederer.
- A Night with the Pierrots/Sesostra/The Whirl of Society (1912).
- Silks and Satins (1920). Musical revue. Music by Leon Rosebrook. Book by Thomas Duggan. Lyrics by Louis Weslyn. Musical Director: Leon Rosebrook. Music orchestrated by Leon Rosebrook and Alfred Delby. Featuring songs by Oliver G. Wallace, Albert von Tilzer, Harry von Tilzer, Jesse Greer, Ed Smalle and Arthur Swanstrom. Featuring songs with lyrics by William Rock, Andrew Sterling, Lew Brown, Lloyd Garrett, Arthur Freed, Jesse Greer, Ed Smalle and Arthur Swanstrom. Choreographed by Earl Lindsay. Directed by William Rock. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 15 Jul 1920- 4 Sep 1920 (60 performances). Cast: West Avey, Marcelle Barnes, Betty Brown, Babette Busey, Blanche Clark, Estelle Collette, Johnny Dale, Louise Dale, Norma Dale, Robert Dale, Ursula Dale, Delphi Daugan, William Demarest, Thomas Duggan, Helyn Elby, Zenia Fedova, Marjorie Flynn, Bernice Hart, Irene Hart, Elsie Held, Harry Hines, Phoebe King, Virginia Lee, Connie Madison, Irene Mayberry, Carolyn Maywood, Ernestine Meyers, Dennis O'Neil, Constantine Permane, Babette Raymond, Jay Regan, William Rock, George Shelly, Orilla Smith, Aileen Stanley, Betty Stewart, Jue Quon Tai, Jean Thomas, Daisy Watson, Hazel Webb, Elsie Westcott, Rudy Wiedoft. Produced by William Rock.
- The Passing Show of 1913 (1913). Musical revue (revival).
- [Posthumous] Tintypes (1980). Musical revue.
- [Posthumous] Doctor Jazz (1975). Musical.
- (1921) Stage Play: Ziegfeld Follies of 1921. Musical revue. Dialogue by Channing Pollock, Willard Mack and Ralph Spence. Lyrics by Gene Buck and Buddy G. DeSylva. Music by Victor Herbert, Rudolf Friml and Dave Stamper. Musical Direction by Frank Tours. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh and Stephen Jones. Featuring songs with lyrics by Henry Creamer, J. Turner Layton, Grant Clarke, James F. Hanley, Channing Pollock, Blanche Merrill, Leo Edwards, Ballard MacDonald, Harry Carroll, Albert Willemetz, Jacques Charles, Buddy G. DeSylva, Gus Mueller, Buster Johnson, Andrew Sterling, Harry von Tilzer and Edward P Moran. Featuring songs by Elsie White and Henry Busse. Directed by Edward Royce. Globe Theatre: 21 Jun 1921- 1 Oct 1921 (119 performances). Cast: Marie Astrova, Miss Barnett, Emma Beresbach, Ethel Blaire, Eva Brady, Fanny Brice (as "Principal"), Evelyn Campbell, Betty Carsdale, Margery Chapin, Hazel Chappel, Miss Chase, John Clarke, Darling Twins, Peggy Davis, Ray Dooley, Phil Dwyer, Charles Eaton, Mary Eaton (as "Principal"), Marguerite Falconer, W.C. Fields (as "Principal," and "M. Le Duc de Chateau Briand"), Consuelo Flowerton, Edna French, Pearl Germonde, Diana Gordon, Raymond Hitchcock, Herbert Hoey, Miss Hughes, Helen Hunt, Albert Innis, Frank Innis, Keene Twins, Miss Leigh, Mary Lewis, Doris Lloyd, Gladys Loftus, Madelyn Lombard, Miss Lomp, Mandal Brothers, Irene Marcellus, Albertine Marlowe, Vera Michelena, Mary Milburn, Beatrice Milner, Geneva Mitchell, Mlle. Mitti, Madilyn Morrissey, Florence O'Denishawn, Charles O'Donnell, Jessie Reed, Anastasia Reilly, Frances Reveaux, Miss Rolph, Gertrude Seldon, Peggy Stohl, Janet Stone, Avonne Taylor, M. Tillio, Van and Schenck, Edna Wheaton, Helen Lee Worthing. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- A Night with the Pierrots/Sesostra/The Whirl of Society (1912). [Joint production; Mr. von Tilzer was involved with A Night with the Pierrots]. A Night with the Pierrots: musical/vaudeville. Musical Director: Samuel Lehman. Featuring songs by Irving Berlin, Louis A. Hirsch and Harry von Tilzer. Featuring songs with lyrics by Irving Berlin, Louis A. Hirsch, Al Jolson and William Jerome. Scenic Design by H. Robert Law. Winter Garden Theatre: 5 Mar 1912- 29 Jun 1912 (136 performances for all 3 productions). Cast: Barney Bernard (as "Tambo"), Martin Brown Florence Cable, Doris Cameron, Kathleen Clifford, Jose Collins, The Courtenay Sisters, Edward Cutler, Mildred Elaine, Laura Hamilton, Ernest Hare, Clarence Harvey, Al Jolson (as "The Humpback/Bones"), Stella Mayhew (as "Sumurun"), Cecil Ryan, Blossom Seeley, Billee Taylor (as "Interlocutor"), Melissa Ten Eyck, Barney Thornton, Harry Wardell, George White. Produced by The Winter Garden Company.
- (1910) Stage Play: Up and Down Broadway. Musical revue. Music by Jean Schwartz. Book by Edgar Smith. Lyrics by William Jerome. Additional music by Albert von Tilzer, Ted Snyder, Melville Ellis, Melville Gideon and Louis A. Hirsch. Additional lyrics by Edward Madden, Junie McCree and Irving Berlin. Musical Director: Oscar Radin. Directed by William J. Wilson. Casino Theatre: 18 Jul 1910- 17 Sep 1910 (72 performances). Cast: Adelaide & Hughes (as "Special Dancing Feature"), Ricca Allen (as "Mrs. Shark"), George Anderson (as "Apollo"), Leota Armitage (as "Chorus"), Lillian Barnett (as "Chorus"), Edna Bates (as "Chorus"), Anna Berg (as "Chorus"), Irving Berlin (as "Entertainer at the Cafe d'Lobster"), Ammie Berry (as "Chorus"), Betty Best (as "Chorus"), Martin Brown (as "Erato"), Sara Carr (as "Chorus"), James B. Carson (as "Isadore Schlameil"), Emma Carus (as "Melpomene"), Bertha Caruthers (as "Chorus"), Sylvia Clarke (as "Lucius/Chorus"), Edward Cutler (as "Chorus"), Lillian Darlington (as "Chorus"), Mae Dealy (as "Mrs. Shopleigh/Euterpe"), Ray Dodge (as "Chorus/George Lushington"), Edna Dodsworth (as "Chorus"), May Donahue (as "Mrs. Bumpkin"), Florence Douglas (as "Chorus"), Helen Edwards (as "Chorus"), Marie Flood (as "Mrs. Shirkflat/Chorus"), Gene Foxcroft (as "Chu Gum"), Eddie Foy (as "Momus"), Lillian Gay (as "Chorus"), Phyllis Gordon (as "Thalia"), Jack Hagner (as "Chorus"), Frances Halliday (as "Chorus"), Patsy Hamilton (as "Chorus"), Ernest Hare (as "Vicius/Officer Casey"), Martha Hines (as "Chorus"), Henry Holt (as "Sing Hi"), Thea Howard (as "Chorus"), Ada Howell (as "Chorus"), Morien Huben (as "Chorus"), Maude Inglesby (as "Chorus"), Susie Kerwin (as "Chorus"), Ida Kramer (as "Chorus"), Irma La Pierre (as "Chorus"), Margaret Langhorne (as "Chorus"), Betty Lavalliere (as "Chorus"), George Lyman (as "Chorus"), Harry MacDonough (as "Nabba/Henry White/Jean Garcon"), Adele Marie (as "Chorus"), Blanche Marr (as "Chorus"), Blanche Mell (as "Chorus"), Peggy Merritt (as "Genus/Chorus"), Marguerite Meyers (as "Chorus"), Robert Milliken (as "Dutch McGee/Willie Run/An Umpire"), Nat Nazarro Jr., Gloria Pierce (as "Mazie Malborough"), Harry Potter (as "Chorus"), Frederick Powell (as "George Bumpkin"), Frankie Rice (as "Chorus"), Agnes Richter (as "Chorus"), Harold A. Robe (as "Gilligan/Chorus"), Hans Robert (as "Harry Soakem/Bunco Bill"), Mathilde Rodriguez (as "Chorus"), Beatrice Rose (as "Chorus"), Milbury Ryder (as "Chorus"), Oscar Schwartz (as "Chorus"), Ted Snyder (as "Entertainer at the Cafe d'Lobster"), Marguerite St. Clair (as "Pythagoras/Chorus"), Melissa Ten Eyck (as "Fan Tan"), Jane Warrington (as "Chorus"), Anna Wheaton (as "Miss Frite"), Vida Whitmore (as "Terpischore"), Eva Williams (as "Lazia"), Jesse Willingham (as "Chorus"), Jessica Worth (as "Caliope/Vivian Bumpkin"), Dorothy Wright (as "Chorus"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert and Lew M. Fields.
- (1906) Stage Play: The Man from Now. Musical. Music by Manuel Klein. Book by Vincent Bryan and John Kendrick Bangs. Lyrics by John Kendrick Bangs and Vincent Bryan. Featuring songs by Bernard Rolt, Harry von Tilzer, Harry Bulger and Gertrude Hoffman. Featuring songs with lyrics by Manuel Klein and Isabel DeWitte Kaplan. Directed by George F. Marion. New Amsterdam Theatre: 3 Sep 1906- 29 Sep 1906 (28 performances). Cast: Hattie Arnold (as "Matricula"), Anna Berg(as "Chorus"), Charles Books (as "Chorus"), Herman Brand (as "Chorus"), Phil Branson (as "John P. Pennypacker"), Harry Bulger (as "Steve Waffles"), Gardner Bullard, Eva Burnett (as "Chorus"), Helen Burnett (as "Chorus"), Miss Cramer (as "Chorus"), Mr. Cramer (as "Chorus"), Ethel Daggett (as "Chorus"), Margaret Dalrymple (as "Chorus"), Jeanette Despres (as "Chorus"), Helene Drew (as "Chorus"), Miss Dunn (as "Chorus"), Miss DuPont (as "Chorus"), Paula Edwardes (as "Chorus"), Jean Erickson (as "Chorus"), Sallie Fisher (as "Dora"), Miss Flower (as "Chorus"), Gilbert Gregory (as "Eli Beasley"), Miss Hackett (as "Chorus"), Helen Hale (as "Samsonia/Gasolina"), Charles Hessong (as "Chorus"), Miss Holton (as "Chorus"), Mr. Hudson (as "Chorus"), Miss Johnston (as "Chorus"), Marie Keller (as "Electra"), Amy LaDew (as "Chorus"), Walter Lawrence (as "Jack Raleigh"), Bertha Mack (as "Chorus"), Miss MacPhie (as "Chorus"), Miss Marshall (as "Chorus"), Edward B. Martindell (as "Forecasta"), Minnie Mason (as "Chorus"), Peggy Merritt (as "Chorus"), Bert Montclair (as "Chorus"), Mabel Moyles (as "Chorus"), William Murphy (as "Comahn/Chorus"), Miss. Randall (as "Chorus"), Virginia Richmond (as "Chorus"), Miss Riedel (as "Chorus"), Miss Schiebly (as "Chorus"), Winnifred Spaulding (as "Chorus"), Mabel Spencer (as "Chorus"), Maude Ream Stover (as "Chorus"), Clara Tichenor (as "Chorus"), Lucy Tonge (as "Zeroine"), Mr. Winstrom (as "Chorus"). Produced by Henry W. Savage.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content