- (1905- 1936?). Stage and radio actor. Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1905) Stage Play: Lucky Durham. Drama. Written by Wilson Barrett. New Amsterdam Theatre: 22 Jan 1905- unknown (unknown performances/production played in repertory with The Brighter Side, The Middleman, The Professor's Love Story). Cast: Nelly Angell, H. Barfoot, Alice Belmore, Harry Cane, H. Cooper Cliffe [Broadway debut], J.R. Crauford, Arthur Curtis, Mabel Dubois, Walter Edmunds, Gladys Granger, John W. Lawrence, Marie Linden, Alice Lonnon, H.G. Lonsdale, Tom Lovell, Miss E. Page, Leila Repton, Faith Reynolds, Walter Sauter, Ivan F. Simpson, Ernest Stallard, Violet Vorley, E.S. Willard. Produced by Edward Smith Willard Repertory.
- (1905) Stage Play: The Brighter Side. Melodrama.
- (1905) Stage Play: The Man Who Was. Written by Rudyard Kipling. Dramatized by F. Kinsey Peile. Dramatized by F. Kinsey Peile. New Amsterdam Theatre: 11 Dec 1905- unknown (unknown performances/played in repertory with "A Pair of Spectacles," "Tom Pinch," "The Middleman," "David Garrick," "The Fool's Revenge," "The Professor's Love Story"). Cast: Nelly Angell, Harry Barfoot, Alice Belmore, Mabel Bubois, Harry Cane, H. Cooper Cliffe, J.R. Crauford, Arthur Curtis, Walter Edmunds, Gladys Granger, John W. Lawrence, Marie Linden, Leila Repton, Walter Sauter, Ivan F. Simpson, Violet Vorley, E.S. Willard. Produced by Edward Smith Willard Repertory.
- (1908) Stage Play: The World and His Wife. Written by Charles Frederic Nirdlinger. From the Spanish of Jose Echegaray. Music by William Furst. Directed by William Faversham. Daly's Theatre: 2 Nov 1908- Jan 1909 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Lionel Belmore (as "Genaro"), H. Cooper Cliffe (as "Don Julian"), William Faversham (as "Don Ernesto"), Charles Harbury (as "Don Severo"), Olive Oliver (as "Dona Mercedes"), Julie Opp (as "Dona Teodora"), Harry Redding (as "Don Pepito"), Morton Selten (as "Captain Beaulieu"). Produced by William Faversham.
- (1909) Stage Play: The Barber of New Orleans. Written by Edward Childs Carpenter. Daly's Theatre: 15 Jan 1909- 5 Feb 1909 (27 performances). Produced by William Faversham.
- (1909) Stage Play: Herod. Written by Stephen Phillips. Lyric Theatre: 26 Oct 1909- Nov 1909 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: William Faversham (as "Herod"), Hylton Allen [credited as A. Hylton Allen] (as "Aristobulus"), Alice Belmore (as "Hagar"), Lionel Belmore (as "Physician"), Leon Brown (as "Sentinel"), Berton Churchill [credited as Burton Churchill] (as "Sohemus"), H. Cooper Cliffe (as "Gadias"), Warren Conlan (as "Priest"), Helen Dedens, Mary Marshall (as "Ruth"), Claire McDowell (as "Bathsheba"), Olive Oliver (as "Salome"), Julie Opp (as "Mariamne"), Harry Redding (as "Councillor"), Sidney Seaward (as "Messenger"), Morton Selten (as "Pheroras"), Earl Q. Snider (as "Syllaeus"), Tracy and Hay (as "Cypros").
- (1911) Stage Play: Everywoman [Her Pilgrimage in Quest of Love]. Music by George Whitefield Chadwick. A Morality Tale written by Walter Browne. Musical Director: Hugo Frey. Directed by George F. Marion. Herald Square Theatre (moved to The Lyric Theatre from 29 May 1911- 1 Jul 1911, then moved to The Herald Square Theatre from 19 Feb 1912 to close): 27 Feb 1911- 23 Mar 1912 (189 performances). Cast: Jean Barrett, Wilda Bennett, Vivian Blackburn, Rue Brown, Grace Calve, William Calvin, Charlotte Carter, H. Cooper Cliffe, Patricia Collinge (as "Youth"), Juliet Day, Frederic De Belleville, David Estoclet, Marjorie Fitch, Eleanor Flowers, Richard Fuller, Suzette Gordon, Laura Nelson Hall, Stella Hammerstein, Charles Hayne, Sydney Jarvis, Kathleen Kerrigan, Alice Kline, Frank Lacy, Sarah Cowell Le Moyne (as "Truth"), Richard Lee, Edward MacKay, Barry Maxwell, Betty Murdoch, Hubert Osborne (as "Witless"), Aurora Piatt, Detmar Poppen, Edna Porter, John L. Shine, Henry Wenman, McIntyre Wickstead. Produced by Henry W. Savage. Note: Filmed by Paramount Pictures as Everywoman (1919), starring Bebe Daniels in one of her first featured roles after leaving Harold Lloyd's shorts.
- (1915) Stage Play: Inside the Lines. Written by Earl Derr Biggers. Longacre Theatre: 9 Feb 1915- May 1915 (closing date unknown/103 performances). Cast: James Bradbury, H. Cooper Cliffe, Camilla Crume, Robert Fisher, Isabel Goodwin, Macy Harlam, William Keighley, Mayne Lynton, Carroll McComas, Robert McWade, Mildred Morris, Horace Pollock, Edward See, Ivan F. Simpson, Lewis Stone, Anne Sutherland. Produced by J. Fred Zimmerman Jr. and William H. Harris Jr. Note: Filmed by Delcah Photoplays Inc./Pyramid Film Corporation [distributed by World Film] as Inside the Lines (1918), and by Radio Pictures [later known as RKO] as Inside the Lines (1930).
- (1916) Stage Play: The Intruder.
- (1917) Stage Play: Stranger Than Fiction.
- (1918) Stage Play: Seven Days' Leave.
- (1918) Stage Play: The Invisible Foe. Written by Walter C. Hackett. Directed by Thomas Dixon Jr. [credited as Thomas Dixon]. Harris Theatre: 30 Dec 1918- Apr 1919 (closing date unknown/112 performances). Cast: Frank Andrews, Mabel Archdall, Robert Barrat, H. Cooper Cliffe, J.H. Gilmour, Flora Macdonald [Broadway debut], Percy Marmont [final Broadway role], Marion Rogers, Daisy Vivian. Produced by Thomas F. Dixon Jr.
- (1919) Stage Play: One Night in Rome. Drama.
- (1920) Stage Play: Genius and the Crowd. Comedy.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Squaw Man. Drama (revival). Written by Edwin Milton Royle. Directed by William Faversham. Astor Theatre: 26 Dec 1921- Feb 1922 (closing date unknown/50 performances). Cast: Herbert Ashton (as "Grouchy, Cowboy on Carston's Ranch"), Elizabeth Bellairs (as "Lady Mabel Wynnegate, Sister of Henry Wynnegate"), Chauncey Causland (as "McSorley, Engineer of the Overland Limited"), H. Cooper Cliffe (as "Malcolm Petrie, Solicitor of Henry Wynnegate"), Murray Darcy (as "Parker, Conductor of the Overland Limited"), J. Malcolm Dunn (as "Henry Wynnegate, Earl of Kerhill"), Bernard Durkin (as "Little Hal, Nat-U-Ritch's Son"), Herbert Farjeon (as "Baco White"), William Faversham (as "Capt. James Wynnegate, Cousin of Henry Wynnegate, Afterwards Known as Jim Carson"), William Frederic (as "Bud Hardy, County Sheriff"), Harry Hanlon (as "Pete, A Cowboy"), Winifred Harris (as "Lady Elizabeth Wynnegate, Mother of Henry Wynnegate"), Riley Hatch (as "Tab-Y-Wana, Peach Chief of the Utes"), William T. Hays (as "Mr. Hiram Doolittle"), Frank Hollins (as "Sir John Applegate, Diana's Cousin"), Julia Hoyt (as "Diana Wynnegate, Countess of Kerhill"), Curley Judge (as "Punk, A Chinaman"), Emily Lorraine (as "Mrs. Hiram Doolittle"), Frank Lyon (as "Parson"), Bertram A. Marburgh (as "Andy, Cowboy on Carston's Ranch"), Burr McIntosh (as "Big Bill, Foreman of Carston's Ranch"), Willard Robertson (as "Cash Hawkins"), Gerald Rogers (as "Rev. Belachazar Chiswick"), Josephine Royle (as "Nat-U-Ritch, Daughter of Tab-Y-Wana"), George Schaeffer (as "Bates, Butler of Henry Wynnegate"), Emmett Shackelford (as "Shorty, Cowboy on Carston's Ranch"), Edmund Soraghan (as "Nick, Barkeeper of "The Long Horn Saloon"), Ralph Sumpter (as "Lieut. Crosby"), Raymond Van Rensselaer (as "Lieut. Markwell"). Produced by Lee Shubert.
- (1922) Stage Play: La Tendresse. Drama. Written by Henri Bataille Directed by Henry Miller. Empire Theatre: 25 Sep 1922- Nov 1922 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: A.G. Andrews (as "Guerin"), Elmer Brown, Ruth Chatterton (as "Marthe Dellieres"), Ronald Colman (as "Alain Sergyll") [final Broadway role], H. Cooper Cliffe (as "Fernal"), Jean De La Cruz (as "Count de Jalligny"), Florence Fair, Elfin Finn, Mary Fowler, William Hanley (as "Julian d'Ablincourt"), Norma Havey, Louis Le Bay, Edward MacKay, Henry Miller (as "Paul Barnac"), William Pearce, Sidney Riggs, Marguerite St. John.
- (1923) Stage Play: The Comedian. Comedy. Written by Sacha Guitry. Book adapted by David Belasco. Directed by David Belasco. Lyceum Theatre: 13 Mar 1923- May 1923 (closing date unknown/87 performances). Cast: Lionel Atwill (as "The Comedian"), H. Cooper Cliffe (as "Mounet-Pombla"), Jacques DeWolfe (as "Henri"), Marguarite Denys (as "Yvette"), Paul Doucet [credited as H. Paul Doucet] (as "Leclerc"), Marquita Dwight (as "Marie"), Myra Florian (as "Marcelle"), Evelyn Gosnell (as "Marguerite Simonest"), Albert Gran (as "Bloch"), Will Hindson (as "A Stage Manager"), A.P. Kaye (as "G. Maillart"), William Lorenz (as "Robert"), Elsie MacKay (as "Jacqueline"), Edmonia Nolley (as "Alise") [Broadway debut], Harold Seton (as "Lucien"), Rose Winter (as "Antoinette Viver"). Produced by David Belasco.
- (1923) Stage Play: Scaramouche. Romance. Written by Rafael Sabatini. Morosco Theatre: 24 Oct 1923- Dec 1923 (closing date unknown/61 performances). Cast: E.J. Ballantine (as "Phillippe de Vilmorin"), Herbert Belmore (as "Pasquariel"), Sidney Blackmer, Mary Cecil, H. Cooper Cliffe, William Crimans (as "Lesarches/Duroc"), Arthur De Langis (as "Leander"), Margalo Gillmore (as "aline De Kercadiou"), Percy Haswell (as "Comtesse De Plougastel"), Knox Herold, Stanley Howlett, Allyn Joslyn (as "Harlequin"), J.M. Kerrigan(as "Polichinelle"), Louis Le Seuer (as "Chevalier De Chabrillane"), Vivienne Osborne (as "Climene"), Orlo Sheldon (as "Jacques"), John L. Shine (as "Quentin De Kercadiou"), Sheldon Stanwood (as "Scaramouche"), Dorothy Tierney (as "Columbine"), Walter Timmis (as "Rhodomont"), John Turner (as "Fencing Master"), Tim Walters (as "Sergeant of Gendarmerie"), Frederick Worlock. Produced by Charles L. Wagner.
- (1924) Stage Play: Silence. Melodrama.
- (1931) Stage Play: Miss Gulliver Travels.
- (1934) Stage Play: The O'Flynn. Musical/operetta. Material by Brian Hooker and Russell Janney. Based on the novel and play by Justin Huntly McCarthy. Music by Franklin Hauser. Lyrics by Brian Hooker and Russell Janney. Musical Director: Giuseppe Bamboschek. Staged by Robert Milton. Choreographed by Louis Chalif. Directed by Max Figman and Olga Treskoff [final Broadway credit]. Broadway Theatre: 27 Dec 1934- 4 Jan 1935 (11 performances). Cast: Ruth Adams, Wilson Angel, Hugo Baldi, William Balfour (as "Hendrigg"), David Bell, Charlotte Beverly, Barbara Blair, Emmy Bock, Lis Braemer, Virginia Brown, Colin Campbell, John Cardini, N. Cardosia, Pauline Chandler, H. Cooper Cliffe (as "His Majesty King James II"), Richard Cody, Virginia Collins, Lucille Constant, Burr Crandall, Florence DeBarde, Vance Elliott, Jules Epailly (as "The Cook"), Frank Fenton, Magnheld Fjeldheim, Walter Franklyn, John Fulco, Charles E. Galagher, Mitzi Garner, Lucille Gottlieb, Helen Grenelle, Marcia Grey, Joel Hamilton, Helen Hampton, Anna Heindl, Herman Holt, Charles Homer, Beverly Hosier, George Houston, Elwin Howland, Amelie Ideal, Rose Kearney, Eleanor Keenan, Elizabeth Kerr, Amanda King, Eugene King,Vera Kingsley, Nancy Knott, Leone Krauss, Maria Lama, Sylvia LaMarde, Lelia Laney, Ona Leonovitz, Paula Lind, Vera Lix, Madeline MacDonald, Edith Maison, Edward Martyn, Earl Mason, H.H. McCollum, John Mealey, Sallee Merrill, Lucy Monroe, George Monteer, Adrienne Munkeberg, Walter Munroe, Jean Newcombe, Raymond O'Brien, Raymond O'Toole, Madge Parker, Will H. Philbrick, Basil Prock, Orville Race, Basil Rallis, Lee Randall, Doris Rich, James Ross, Marion Ross, Marie Russel, Joseph Scandur, Rosalind Shaw, George Shields, Albert Soback, Sophie Stern, Merle Stevens, Miriam Stockton, Lillian Sullivan, Genevieve Svesson, Charles Tress, Anna Trockowna, Don Valentine, Henry Vincent, Buck Williams, Roy Williams, Thomas Williams, John Zak. Produced by Russell Janney.
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