- (1892) Stage: Wrote "The Professor's Love Story", produced on Broadway (earliest Broadway credit). Star Theatre: 19 Dec 1892-unknown (unknown performances). Cast [as known]: E.S. Willard.
- (1897) Stage: Wrote "The Little Minister", produced on Broadway. Drama. Empire Theatre (moved to The Garrick Theatre from Nov 1897-circa Jun 1897, then returned to The Empire Theatre from Jun 1898-close): 27 1897-Jun 1898 (closing date unknown/300 performances). Cast: Maude Adams (as "Lady Babbie"), R. Peyton Carter, Robert Edeson (as "Gavin Dishart"), Margaret Gordon (as "Felice"; Broadway debut), Wallace Jackson, Eugene Jepson, Thomas C. Valentine. Produced by Charles Frohman. NOTE: Filmed as The Little Minister (1934), The Little Minister (1913), The Little Minister (1915), The Little Minister (1921), The Little Minister (1922), The Little Gypsy (1915).
- (1900) Stage: Wrote "The Professor's Love Story", produced on Broadway (revival).
- (1901) Stage: Wrote "Quality Street", produced on Broadway. Drama. Scenic Design by Edward G. Unitt. Directed by Joseph Humphries. Knickerbocker Theatre: 11 Nov 1901-Jan 1902 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Maude Adams, Sydney Brough, R. Payton Carter, Sarah Converse, Joseph Francoeur, George S. Irving, William Lewers, Helen Lowell, Charles Martin, Sara Perry, Fred Santley, Frederick Spencer, Ida Waterman. Produced by Charles Frohman. NOTE: Filmed as Quality Street (1927), Quality Street (1937).
- (1902) Stage: Wrote "The Professor's Love Story", produced on Broadway (revival/ played in repertory with "The Cardinal", "David Garrick", "The Middleman", "All For Her"). Garden Theatre: 2 Dec 1902-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown. Produced by Edward Smith Willard Repertory.
- (1903) Stage: Wrote "The Admirable Crichton", produced on Broadway. Fantasy. Lyceum Theatre: 17 Nov 1903-Mar 1904 (closing date unknown/144 performances). Cast: William Gillette, Pattie Browne, Ethel Bruce, Florence Busby, Sybil Campbell, Sybil Carlisle (as "Lady Mary Lasenby"), Rosalind Coghlan (as "Lady Agatha Lasenby"), Frances Comstock, Fred Courteney, Ernest Crawford, Marie Doro (as "Lady Catherine Lasenby"), Archie Fahnestock (as "Servant"), Maude Giroux (as "Servant"), Evelyn Harris (as "Servant"), Harold Heaton (as "Rev. John Treherne"), Florence Honey (as "Servant"), Beatrice Irwin, Henry Kemble (as "The Bard of Loam"), Charles S. Marshall (as "Servant"), Kate Meeks (as "Countess of Brocklehurst"), Joseph F. Moreland (as "Servant"), H.A. Morey (as "Naval Officer"), Frederick Morris (as "Tompsett"), Carter Pickford (as "Hon. Ernest Wooley"), Soldine Powel (credited as Soldene Powell; as "Lord Brocklehurst"), Arthur Willmore (as "Servant"). Produced by Charles Frohman. NOTE: Filmed as Paradise Lagoon (1957).
- (1904) Stage: Wrote "Little Mary", produced on Broadway. Empire Theatre: 5 Jan 1904-Jan 1904 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Jessie Busley, Henry E. Dixey, Marie Doro, Walter Eddinger, Arthur Elliott, Alfred Fischer, Arthur Herman, Kathryn Hutchinson, M.A. Kennedy, Fred Tyler, Ida Waterman, Fritz Williams. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1904) Stage: Wrote "The Little Minister", produced on Broadway (revival). Empire Theatre: 26 Dec 1904-Feb 1905 (closing date unknown/73 performances). Cast: Maude Adams (as "Lady Babbie"), Arthur Byron (as "Gavin Dishart"), Lloyd B. Carleton, Joseph Francoeur, May Galyer, Margaret Gordon, William Henderson, George S. Irving, Wallace Jackson (as "Silva Tosh"), Eugene Jepson, Mrs. W.G. Jones, Richard Pitman, Charles Pitt, Violet Rand, T.C. Valentine, Charles Walcot. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1905) Stage: Wrote "The Professor's Love Story", produced on Broadway (Revival/played in repertory with "Lucky Durham", "The Brighter Side", "The Middleman"). Knickerbocker Theatre: 23 Jan 1905-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown. Produced by Edward Smith Willard Repertory.
- (1905) Stage: Wrote "Peter Pan", produced on Broadway. Fantasy (original production). Empire Theatre: 6 Nov 1905-20 May 1906 (223 performances). Cast included: Maude Adams (as "Peter Pan"), Margaret Gordon (as "Tiger Lilly"), Ernest Lawford (as "Captain Hook"), Thomas McGrath, Frederick Raymond, Jane Wren (as "Tinker Bell"). Produced by Charles Frohman. NOTE: Filmed as Pan (2015), Peter Pan (2003), Peter Pan (1953), Peter Pan Live! (2014), Peter Pan (1960), Peter Pan (1924), Peter Pan (2000), Peter Pan (1988), Peter Pan (1976), Peter Pan (1955), Jacqueline Emerson: Peter Pan (2011), Peter Pan (2013), Peter Pan (1962), Peter Pan and the Pirates (1990), Peter Pan (1956), Peter Pan, Peter Pan (1955), Peter and Wendy (2015), Black Peter Pan (2006), Happy Birthday, Peter Pan (2005), Peter Pan XXX: An Axel Braun Parody (2015), The New Adventures of Peter Pan (2012).
- (1905) Stage: Wrote "The Professor's Love Story", produced on Broadway (revival/played in repertory with "The Man Who Was", "A Pair of Spectacles", "Tom Pinch", "The Middleman", "David Garrick", "The Fool's Revenge"). New Amsterdam Theatre: 11 Dec 1905-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Unknown. Produced by Edward Smith Willard Repertory.
- (1905) Stage: Wrote "Pantaloon" / "Alice Sit-by-the-Fire" [joint production]. Criterion Theatre: 25 Dec 1905-Mar 1906 (closing date unknown/81 performances). "Alice Sit-by-the-Fire": Cast: Beatrice Agnew (as "Amy Grey"), Ethel Barrymore (as "Mrs. Grey"), John Barrymore (as "Stephen Rollo"), Florence Busby (as "Fanny"), Bruce McRae (as "Col. Grey"), Mary Nash (as "Leonora Dunbar"; Broadway debut), Lillian Reed (as "Richardson"), May Davenport (as "Seymour Nurse"), Cyril Smith (as "Cosmo Grey"). "Pantaloon": Cast: Beatrice Agnew (as "Columbine"), John Barrymore (as "Clown"), Lionel Barrymore (as "Pantaloon"), John P. Kennedy (as "Harlequin"), Leona Powers (as "The Child"; Broadway debut). Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1906) Stage: Wrote "Peter Pan", produced on Broadway. Fantasy [return engagement]. Empire Theatre: 24 Dec 1906-Jan 1907 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast [as known]: Maude Adams (as "Peter Pan"). Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1908) Stage: Wrote "Quality Street", produced on Broadway. Drama (revival). Empire Theatre: 6 Jan 1908-Jan 1908 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Producer not credited (probably Charles Frohman).
- (1908) Stage: Wrote (w/John Stix) "What Every Woman Knows", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Empire Theatre: 23 Dec 1908-Jun 1909 (closing date unknown/198 performances). Cast: Maud Adams (as "Maggie Wylie, his daughter"), Beatrice Agnew (as "Lady Sybil Tenterden"), Richard Bennett (as "John Shand"), James L. Carhart (as "First Elector"), R. Payton Carter (as "Alick Wylie"), W.H. Gilmore (as "Third Elector"), Lumsden Hare (as "Charles Venables"), Wallace Jackson (as "Second Elector"), Folliott Paget (as "Comtesse de la Briere"), Lillian Spencer (as "A Maid"), David Torrence (as "David Wylie, his son"), Fred Tyler (as "James Wylie, his son"). Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1911) Stage: Wrote "Alice Sit-by-the-Fire" [A Page From A Daughter's Diary] (revival). Empire Theatre: 13 Feb 1911-Mar 1911 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast included: Ethel Barrymore. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1911) Stage: Wrote "The Twelve Pound Look", produced on Broadway. Empire Theatre: 13 Feb 1911-Mar 1911 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Ethel Barrymore, Charles Dalton, James Kearney, Mrs. Sam Sothern. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1912) Stage: Wrote "A Slice of Life", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Empire Theatre (moved to the Criterion on 26 Feb 1912-close): 29 Jan 1912- Mar 1912 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Ethel Barrymore, John Barrymore, Hattie Williams. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1912) Stage: Wrote "Peter Pan" (revival). Empire Theatre: 23 Dec 1912-Jan 1913 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast included: Maude Adams (as "Peter Pan"), Marion Abbott, Robert Peyton Carter, Dorothy Chesman, Lola Clifton, Dorothy Dunn, Margaret Gordon, Raymond Hackett, Anna Reader, Audrey Ridgewell [Broadway debut], William Sheafe, Byron Silvers, Dorothy Tureak, Fred Tyler, Edwin Wilson, Jane Wren. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1913) Stage: "The Younger Generation" / "Half an Hour" [joint production]. Lyceum Theatre: 25 Sep 1913-Nov 1913 (closing date unknown/60 performances). "The Younger Generation": Written by Stanley Houghton [final Broadway credit; he would die on 10 Dec 1913 in Lancashire, England at age 32 from meningitis]. Directed by Stanley Drewitt. Cast: Nigel Barry, Rose Beaudet, Katherine Browne, Alfred R. Dight, Stanley Drewitt, Robert Entwistle, Katherine MacPherson, Rex McDougall, Clinton Preston, Ida Waterman. "Half an Hour": Written by J.M. Barrie. Cast: Nigel Barry, Daisy Belmore, Ruth Boyce, Alfred R. Dight, Stanley Drewitt, S. Dudley, Grace George, H.E. Herbert. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1913) Stage: Wrote "The Will", produced on Broadway. Empire Theatre: 29 Sep 1913-Oct 1913 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Mary Boland, John Drew, Fred Eric, Sidney Herbert, Frank Kemble-Cooper, Murray Ross, Walter Soderling. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1913) Stage: Wrote "The Censor and the Dramatists", produced on Broadway. Globe Theatre: 14 Oct 1913-Nov 1913 (closing date unknown/33 performances). Cast: Richard Carle, Roger Davis, Victor Le Roy, Charles McNaughton, Ralph Nairn, Will West, Hattie Williams. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1914) Stage: Wrote "The Legend of Leonora", produced on Broadway. Empire Theatre: 5 Jan 1914-May 1914 (closing date unknown/136 performances). Cast: Maude Adams, Willard Barton, James L. Carhart (as "Juryman"), Robert Peyton Carter (as "Mr. Lebetter"), Elise Clarens (as "Lady Peripety"), Arthur Fitzgerald (as "Foreman of Jury"), George B. Hubbard (as "Policeman"), Arthur Lewis, Morton Selten (credited as Morton Selton; as "Sir Roderick Peripety"), Byron Silvers (as "Railway Guard"), C. Aubrey Smith (as "Capt. Rottray, RN"), Edwin Wilson (as "Messenger"). Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1915) Stage: Wrote "The Duke of Killicrankie" / "Rosalind" [joint production], produced on Broadway.
- (1915) Stage: Wrote "Peter Pan" (revival). Empire Theatre: 21 Dec 1915-Jan 1916 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Maude Adams, Dorothea Camden, R.P. Carter, Elsie Clarens, Margaret Field, Gladys Gillan, Ruth Gordon [Broadway debut], Wallace Jackson, Katherine Keppell, Donald McClelland, Angela Ogden, Adele Prince, William Sheafe, Byron Silvers, Fred Tyler, Jane Wren. Produced by Charles Frohman Inc.
- (1916) Stage: Wrote "The Little Minister", produced on Broadway. Empire Theatre: 11 Jan 1916-Mar 1916 (closing date unknown/79 performances). Cast: Maude Adams, Dallas Anderson, Willard Barton, Ada Boshell, J.L. Carhart, Robert Peyton Carter, Elsie Clarens, Charles Gay, Gladys Gillen, Wallace Jackson, J.M. McFarlane, Angela Ogden, Martin Sands, Morton Selten (credited as Morton Selton), David Torrence. Produced by Charles Frohman Inc.
- (11/4/02) Stage: Wrote "The Admirable Crichton," performed at the Duke of York's Theatre in London, England, with H.B. Irving, Irene Vanbrugh, Henry Kemble, Sybil Carlisle, Muriel Beaumont, Carter Pickford, Compton Coutts, Margaret Fraser, Clarence Blakiston, 'Gerald Du Maurier', Pattie Browne, J.C. Buckstone and Fanny Coleman in the cast.
- (1964) Stage: Wrote (w/David Lee, Herbert Kretzmer) the musical, "Our Man Crichton," performed at the Shaftesbury Theatre in London, England, with Kenneth More, Millicent Martin, George Benson, David Kernan, Dilys Watling, Anna Barry, Glyn Worsnip and Patricia Lambert in the cast. Clifford Williams was director.
- (1973) Stage: Wrote "Dear Brutus," performed at the Oxford Playhouse in Oxford, Oxfordshire, England, with Helen Cotterill, Gwen Nelson, Barbara Jefford, Sheila Ballantine, George Selway, Richard Goolden, Donald Layne-Smith, Philip Voss and John Turner in the cast. Edgar Wreford was director.
- (1917) Stage: Wrote "The Old Lady Shows Her Medals", produced on Broadway. Empire Theatre: 14 May 1917-Jun 1917 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Clara T. Bracy (as "Chorus"), Lillian Brennard (as "Chorus"), Alice Esden (as "Chorus"), John J. McFarlane (as "Pvt. K. Dowey"), Beryl Mercer (as "Mrs. Dowey"), Theodore von Eltz (as "Mr. Wilkinson, a clergyman"). Produced by Charles Frohman, Inc. NOTE: Filmed as Seven Days Leave (1930), The Old Lady Shows Her Medals (1948)).
- (2010-11) Stage: Wrote source material (novel) for "Peter Pan," adapted by Amanda Dehnert at the Lookingglass Theatre Company in Chicago, IL. Matt Hawkins was fight and movement director.
- (1986) Stage: Wrote source material (novel) for "Peter Pan," performed at the Sir Michael Redgrave Theatre in Farnham, Surrey, England, with David Parfitt, Granville Saxton, Sean Murray and Paul Benzing in the cast.
- (1901) Stage: Wrote "Quality Street", produced on Broadway. Scenic Design by Edward G. Unitt. Directed by Joseph Humphries. Knickerbocker Theatre: 11 Nov 1901-Jan 1902 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Maude Adams, Sydney Brough, R. Payton Carter, Sarah Converse, Joseph Francoeur, George S. Irving, William Lewers, Helen Lowell, Charles Martin, Sara Perry, Fred Santley, Frederick Spencer, Ida Waterman. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1888) Novel: "Better Dead".
- (1926) Stage: Wrote (w/John Stix) "What Every Woman Knows", produced on Broadway. Comedy (revival). Directed by Lumsden Hare. Bijou Theatre: 13 Apr 1926-Dec 1926 (closing date unknown/268 performances). Cast: Dennis Cleugh (as "Alick Wylie"), Lumsden Hare (as "Charles Venables"), Harry Hatch (as "Third Elector"), Helen Hayes (as "Maggie Wylie, his daughter"), Rose Hobart (as "Lady Sybil Lazenby"), Austin O. Huhn (as "First Elector"), Kenneth MacKenna (as "John Shand"), Dora Micawber (as "A Maid"), Alfred Pinner (as "A Butler"), Adelaide Prince (as "Comtesse de la Briere"), Jack Terry (as "James Wylie, his son"), Eugene Weber (as "David Wylie, his son"), Vincent York (as "Second Elector"). Produced by William A. Brady. Produced in association with Lee Shubert and Charles Frohman Inc.
- (1931) Stage: Wrote "The Admirable Crichton", produced on Broadway. Comedy/satire (revival). Directed by William Postance. New Amsterdam Theatre: 9 Mar 1931-Apr 1931 (closing date unknown/56 performances). Cast: Fay Bainter (as "Lady Mary Lasenby"), Sybil Campbell (as "Ensemble"), Charley Chase (as "Ensemble"), Clay Cody (as "Ensemble"), Phyllis Connard (as "Lady Agatha Lasenby"), Guy Cunningham (as "Ensemble"), William Dale (as "Tompsett"), Hubert Druce (as "The Bard of Loam"), J.C. Dunn (as "Rev. John Treherne"), Alice Earhardt (as "Ensemble"), Judith Elder (as "Ensemble"), Ernest Glendinning (as "Hon. Ernest Wooley"), Gerald Hamer (as "Lord Brocklehurst"), Walter Hampden (as "Mr. Crichton"), Mary Hone (as "Lady Catherine Lasenby"), Harry Joyner (as "Naval Officer"), Maurice Lord (as "Ensemble"), Norma Lytell (as "Ensemble"), Vivian McGill (as "Ensemble"), Madge North (as "Ensemble"), Oriel Ross (as "Fisher"), Effie Shannon (as "Countess of Brocklehurst"), George Smithfield (as "Ensemble"), Estelle Winwood (as "Tweeny"). Produced by George C. Tyler. Produced in association with The Erlanger Interests. NOTE: Filmed as Shipwrecked (1913), The Admirable Crichton (1918), Male and Female (1919), We're Not Dressing (1934).
- (1918) Stage: Wrote "The New Word", produced on Broadway (revival). Empire Theatre: 6 May 1918-Jun 1918 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Mary Balfour, Winifred Fraser, E. Lyall Swete, Philip Tonge. Produced by Charles Frohman Inc.
- (6/2/2010-6/27/2010) Stage: Wrote "Peter Pan", performed at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, NJ. Moose Charlap was the musical director. Carolyn Leigh was the lyricist. Mark S. Hoebee was the artistic director. Patti Colombo was the choreographer.
- (1902) Novel: "Peter Pan". NOTE: Filmed as Peter Pan (2003), Peter Pan (1953), Peter Pan (1960), Peter Pan (2000), Peter Pan (1924), Peter Pan (1988), Peter Pan (1955), Peter Pan (1962), Peter Pan (1955)
- (1927) Stage: Wrote "The Legend of Leonora", produced on Broadway. Comedy (revival). Directed by Edward Elsner. Ritz Theatre: 29 Mar 1927-Apr 1927 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Edward Cooper (as "Mr. Lebetter"), Grace George (as "Leonora"), Harry Holliday (as "Usher"), Moffat Johnston (as "Mr. Justice Grim Dyke"), Kenneth Lawton (as "Clerk"), Nelly Malcolm (as "Mrs. Tovey"), Jane Maurice (as "Maid"), Bruce McRae (as "Capt. Rottray, RN"; final Broadway role), William Newman (as "Juryman"), Richard Rawson (as "Policeman"), J.F. Robertson (as "Foreman of Jury"), Adele Ronson (as "Lady Peripety"), Richard Simpson (as "Railway Guard"), George Thorpe (as "Mr. Tovey"), Leonard Willey (as "Sir Roderick Peripety"), George H. Wiseman (as "Juryman"). Produced by Charles Frohman Inc.
- (1917) Stage: Wrote "The Professor's Love Story", produced on Broadway (revival). Knickerbocker Theatre: 26 Feb 1917-Apr 1917 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: George Arliss (as "Prof. Goodwillie"), Florence Arliss (credited as Mrs. George Arliss; as "Miss Agnes Goodwillie"), Ethel Dane (as "The Dowager Lady Gilding"), Reginald Denny (as "Henders"), Jeanne Eagels (as "Lucy White"), Arthur Eldred (as "Dr. Yellowlees"), Violet Kemble Cooper (as "Lady Gilding"), Edgar Kent (as "Sir George Gilding"), Malcolm Morley (as "Pete"), Molly Pearson (as "Effie Prostor"),Grant Stewart (as "Dr. Cosens"). Produced by George C. Tyler and Klaw & Erlanger.
- (1997) Stage" Wrote "Peter Pan," performed in a Royal National Theatre production at the Laurence Olivier Theatre in London, England, with Ian McKellen, Alec McCowen, Daniel Evans, Jenny Agutter, Claudia Blakely Adrian Ross-Magenty, and Clive Rowe in the cast. John Caird and Fiona Laird were directors.
- (1950) Stage: Wrote "Dear Brutus," performed at the Cape Playhouse in Dennis, MA, with Brian Aherne in the cast.
- (1930) Stage: Wrote "Mary Rose," performed at the Cape Playhouse in Dennis, MA, with Henry Hull and Edith Barrett in the cast.
- (1933) Stage: Wrote "What Every Woman Knows," performed at the Cape Playhouse in Dennis, MA, with Edith Barrett, 'Sheppard Strudwick' (qvb), and 'Van Heflin' (credited as E. Van Heflin) in the cast.
- (1934) Stage: Wrote "The Legend of Leonora," performed at the Cape Playhouse in Dennis, MA, with Grace George in the cast.
- (1941) Stage: Wrote "A Kiss for Cinderella," performed at the Cape Playhouse in Dennis, MA, with Luise Rainer and Ralph Forbes in the cast.
- (1946) Stage: Wrote "Alice Sit-By-The-Fire," performed at the Cape Playhouse in Dennis, MA, with Gladys Cooper and Taylor Holmes in the cast.
- (1981-82) Stage: Wrote "The Admirable Crichton," performed in an American Conservatory Theatre production in San Francisco, CA. Michael Winters was director.
- (2/20/27) Stage: Wrote "What Every Woman Knows," performed at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, OH, with Helen Hayes in the cast.
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