- (1/16/1906-6/1/1906) Stage: Directed "The Vanderbilt Cup" on Broadway. Broadway Theatre (143 performances).
- (1907) Stage: Directed "The Vanderbilt Cup" on Broadway. Musical comedy (return engagement). Music by / Musical Director: Robert Hood Bowers. Book by 'Sydney Rosenfeld' (qv. Lyrics by Raymond Peck. Directed by Hugh Ford
- (1907) Stage Play: Salomy Jane. Melodrama/romance. Written by Paul Armstrong. Based on "Salomy Jane's Kiss" by Bret Harte. Directed by Hugh Ford. Liberty Theatre: 19 Jan 1907- 4 May 1907 (122 performances). Cast: Ruth Abbott Wells, Holbrook Blinn, Earl Browne, Ralph Delmore, Ada Dwyer, Reuben Fax, Frances Golden Fuller, Master Donald Gallaher, Henry Harmon, Eleanor Robson Belmont[credited as Eleanor Robson] (as "Salomy Jane"), James Seeley, Horace Vinton, H.B. Warner, Stephen Wright. Produced by Liebler & Co. Note: Filmed by California Motion Picture Corporation [distributed by Alco Film Corporation] as Salomy Jane (1914), by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as Salomy Jane (1923), and by Fox Film Corporation as Wild Girl (1932).
- (1907) Stage Play: Genesee of the Hills.
- (1909) Stage Play: The Dawn of a Tomorrow. Written by Frances Hodgson Burnett. Directed by Hugh Ford. Lyceum Theatre: 25 Jan 1909- Jun 1909 (closing date unknown/152 performances). Cast: Arthur Barry, Aubrey Boucicault, Claude Brooke, Frank Daniels, Walter Dickinson, Wallace Erskine, Roy Fairchild, George Farren, Henry Forrest, Ernest Joy [credited as Ernest C. Joy], Fuller Mellish (as "Sir Oliver Holt"), Alan Pollock, Eleanor Robson, Fred W. Sidney, Henry Stanford (as "Dandy"), Ernest H. Wallace. Produced by Liebler & Co. Note: Filmed by Famous Players Film Company [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as The Dawn of a Tomorrow (1915), and by Paramount Pictures as The Dawn of a Tomorrow (1924).
- (1911) Stage Play: The Deep Purple.
- (1911) Stage Play: The Garden of Allah. Written by Robert Hitchens and Mary Anderson. Directed by Hugh Ford. Century Theatre: 21 Oct 11- May 1912 (unknown closing date/241 performances). Cast: Zabell Amar (as "Ouardi"), Asmasa (as "Tamouda"), Keill Ayobb (as "Sheik"), Salum Ayobb (as "Mueddin"), Paul Braconnier (as "Ensemble"), Edwin Brandt (as "Captain DeTrevignac"), Henri Dufresne (as "Ensemble"), Frank Durand (as "Ensemble"), Alphonse Fabre (as "Garcon"), Faddma (as "Irena"), Forcin (as "Selima"), William Grossen (as "Ensemble"), Charles Hayne (as "The Sand Diviner"), Clarence Heritage (as "Dr. Peter Androvsky"), Franklyn Hurleigh (as "A Trappist Monk"), Edouard Laroche (as "Ensemble"), Alfred Lecomte (as "Ensemble"), Mary Mannering (as "Domini Enfilden"), Herschel Mayall (as "Father Roubier"), Roy Merrill (as "Hadj"), Eugene Moulin (as "Ensemble"), Charles Nollet (as "Ensemble"), Eben Plympton (as "Count Anteoni"), José Ruben (as "Batouch") [Broadway debut], Mrs. Alexander Salvini (as "Suzanne"), Dikran Seropyan (as "Larbi"), Lewis Waller (as "Boris Androvsky/Father Antoine"). Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1921) Stage Play: Alias Jimmy Valentine. Melodrama (revival). Written by Paul Armstrong. Directed by Hugh Ford. Gaiety Theatre: 8 Dec 1921- Jan 1922 (closing date unknown/46 performances). Cast: Mary Boland (as "Mrs. Webster"), Earle Brown (as "Red Joclyn"), Emmett Corrigan (as "Doyle"), Archie Curtis (as "Smith"), Edmund Elton (as "Bill Avery"), George Farren (as "William Lane"), Margalo Gillmore, Harold Hartsell (as "Handler"), Grace Henderson (as "Mrs. Moore"), Emil Hoch (as "Blickendolfenbach"), J.J. Hyland (as "Dick the Rat"), William Ingersoll (as "Robert Fay, Lieut. Gov. of New York"), John Kennedy (as "A Bank Clerk"), Otto Kruger (as "Lee Randall"), Andrew Lawlor (as "Bobby Lane"), Lorna Volare (as "Kitty Lane"), Edward Wonn (as "Blinky Davis"). Produced by George C. Tyler. Note: Filmed by Peerless Productions [distributed by World Film] as Alias Jimmy Valentine (1915), and by Metro Pictures Corporation as Alias Jimmy Valentine (1920), and by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) as Alias Jimmy Valentine (1928).
- (1922) Stage Play: Merton of the Movies. Comedy. Note: Filmed by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as Merton of the Movies (1924), and by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) as Merton of the Movies (1947).
- (1922) Stage Play: The Romantic Age. Comedy.
- (11/28/22-1/20/23) Stage: Wrote (w/Anne Caldwell book for "The Bunch and Judy". Directed by Fred G. Latham. Globe Theatre (63 performances).
- (1923) Stage Play: Aren't We All? Romantic comedy. Written by Frederick Lonsdale. Directed by Hugh Ford. Gaiety Theatre: 21 May 1923- Jun 1923 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Harry Ashford (as "Reverend Ernest Lynton"), Roberta Beatty (as "Kitty Lake"), F. Gatenby Bell (as "Roberts"), Gurney, Denis (as "Arthur Wells"), Leslie Howard (as "Hon. William Tatham"), Cyril Maude (as "Lord Grenham"), Geoffrey Millar (as "John Willocks"), Marguerite St. John (as "Hon. Mrs. Ernest Lynton"), George Tawde (as "Morton"), Alma Tell (as "Margot Tatham"), Mabel Terry-Lewis (as "Lady Frinton"), Jack Whiting (as "Martin Steele"). Produced by Charles B. Dillingham. Note: Filmed by Paramount British Studios as Aren't We All? (1932) [UK production].
- (1923) Stage Play: Home Fires. Romantic comedy.
- (11/5/23-11/23) Stage: Directed "The Deep Tangled Wildwood" on Broadway. Frazee Theatre (closing date unknown;16 performances).
- (1907) Stage Play: Salomy Jane. Melodrama/romance [return engagement]. Written by Paul Armstrong. Based on "Salomy Jane's Kiss" by Bret Harte. Directed by Hugh Ford. Liberty Theatre: 2 Sep 1907- 30 Sep 1907 (33 performances). Cast: Unknown. Produced by Liebler & Co. Note: Filmed by California Motion Picture Corporation [distributed by Alco Film Corporation] as Salomy Jane (1914), by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as Salomy Jane (1923), and by Fox Film Corporation as Wild Girl (1932).
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