- (1912) Stage: Wrote (w/Frederic Hatton; earliest Broadway credit) "Years of Discretion", produced on Broadweay. Comedy. Directed / produced by David Belasco. Belasco Theatre: 25 Dec 1912-Jun 1912 (closing date unknown/190 performances). Cast: Lyn Harding (as "Christopher Dallas"), Effie Shannon (as "Mrs. Farrell Howard"), Ninon Bunyea (as "Anna Merkel"; Broadway debut), Grace Edmondston (as "Bessie Newton"), E.M. Holland (as "Metz"), Herbert Kelcey (as "John Strong"), Bruce McRae (as "Michael Doyle"), Robert McWade (as "Amos Thomas"), Grant Mitchell (as "Farrell Howard Jr."), Ethel Pettit (as "Lily Newton"), Alice Putnam (as "Mrs. Margaret Brinton").
- (1915) Stage: Wrote (w/Frederic Hatton, Leo Ditrichstein) "The Great Lover", produced on Broadway. Romantic comedy. Longacre Theatre: 10 Nov 1915-Jun 1916 (closing date unknown/245 performances). Cast: Virginia Fox Brooks, Leo Ditrichstein, Malcolm Fassett, Alfred Kappeler, Julian Little, Frederick Macklyn, Anna McNaughton, Lee Millar, Alexis H. Polianov, William Ricciardi, George E. Romain, Antonio Salerno, M.D. Shatts, Beverly Sitgreaves, Cora Witherspoon. Produced by Cohan & Harris. NOTE: Filmed as The Great Lover (1931).
- (1916) Stage: Wrote (w/Frederic Hatton) "Upstairs and Down", produced on Broadway. Cort Theatre: 25 Sep 1916-Jul 1917 (closing date unknown/320 performances). Cast: Roberta Arnold, Orlando Daly, Juliette Day, Arthur Elliott, Courtenay Foote, Adoni Fovieri, Paul Harvey, Alfred Hesse, William MacDonald, Christine Norman, Mary Servoss, Ida St. Leon, Fred Tiden. Produced by Oliver Morosco. NOTE: Filmed as Upstairs and Down (1919).
- (1917) Stage: Wrote (w/Frederic Hatton) "Lombardi, Ltd.", produced on Broadway. Morosco Theatre: 24 Sep 1917-Jun 1918 (296 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott (as "Millie McNeal"), Warner Baxter (as "Riccardo Tosello"; only Broadway role), Hallam Bosworth (as "James Hodgkins"), Winifred Bryson (as "Muriel"), Leo Carrillo (as "Tito Lombardi"), Janet Dunbar (as "Norah Blake"), Maude Gilbert (as "Lida Moore"), Charles Hammond (as "Robert Tarrant"), Judy Harris (as "Yvette"), Sue MacManamy (as "Phyllis Manning"), Carrington North (as "Miss Curran"), Mary Robinson (as "An Errand Girl"), Ina Rorke (as "Mrs. Warrington Brown"), Harold Russell (as "Max Strohm"), Ruth Terry (as "Eloise"), Grace Valentine (as "Daisy"), Percival Vivian (as "An Expressman"). Produced by Oliver Morosco. NOTE: Filmed as Lombardi, Ltd. (1919).
- (1918) Stage: Wrote (w/Frederic Hatton) "The Indestructible Wife", produced on Broadway. Hudson Theatre: 30 Jan 1918-Feb 1918 (closing date unknown/22 performances). Cast: Lionel Atwill, Roland Byram, Clay Clement, John Cromwell, Fred Esmelton, Minna Gombell, Jane Houston, Esther Howard, Howard Kyle, Edward Le Duc, Mrs. Jacques Martin, Irene Timmons. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1918) Stage: Wrote (w/Frederic Hatton) "The Squab Farm", produced on Broadway. Bijou Theatre: 13 Mar 1918-Apr 1918 (closing date unknown/45 performances). Cast: Bert Angeles, Tallulah Bankhead, Raymond Bloomer, Julia Bruns, Harry Davenport, Alfred Dayton, Florence Doyle, William L. Gibson, Fred Kaufman, Dorothy Klewer, Vivian Rushmore, Charles M. Seay, Lowell Sherman, G. Oliver Smith, Ann Sustin, Suzanne Willa. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1918) Stage: Wrote (w/Frederic Hatton) "The Walk-offs", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Morosco Theatre: 17 Sep 1918-Nov 1918 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: Roberta Arnold, Elmer Ballard [Broadway debut], Edmund Lowe, Fania Marinoff, Carroll McComas, Percival T. Moore, William Roselle, Emmett Shackelford, Charles A. Stevenson, Fred Tiden [credited as Fred L. Tiden], Janet Travers, Frances Underwood. Produced by Oliver Morosco. Note: Filmed by Screen Classics Inc. [distributed by Metro Pictures Corp.] as The Walk-Offs (1920).
- (1920) Stage: Wrote "The Checkerboard", produced on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1921) Stage: Wrote (w/Frederic Hatton) "We Girls", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Directed by Priestly Morrison. 48th Street Theatre: 9 Nov 1921-Nov 1921 (closing date unknown/30 performances). Cast: Juliette Day (as "Harriet Durand"), Edward Fielding (as "Winthrop Hale"), Marguerite Forrest (as "Lucy Darragh"), A.J. Herbert (as "James Stedman"), Warren W. Krech (as "Dr. Tom Brown"), William Lennox (as "Pilgrim"), Cordelia MacDonald (as "Mrs. Embree"), John McFarlane (as "Richard I. A. Ryan"), Frances Neilson (as "Frances Waite"), Minna Phillips (as "Louisa"), Thomas A. Rolfe (as "Samuel Welsh"), Ray Wilson (as "Lawrence Ferris"), Mary Young (as "Mrs. Carter Durand"). Produced by Marc Klaw.
- (1926) Stage: Wrote (w/Frederic Hatton) "Treat 'em Rough", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Directed by Alan Dinehart. Klaw Theatre: 4 Oct 1926-Oct 1926 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Beppo (as "Beppo"), Walter Connolly (as "Marco"), Alan Dinehart (as "Tony Barudi"), Robert Dye (as "Gus"), Marguerite Forrest (as "Mimi La Verne"), Nedda Harrigan (as "Lisa Toselli"), May Hopkins, Helen Landis (as "Trixie Colette"), Thomas MacLarnie (as "Father Flynn"), James Manning (as "Sgt. Burns"), Myrtle Miller (as "Pansy La Motte"), M. Charles Palazzi (as "Joe"), William Ricciardi (as "Tomasso Salvatore"), Jack Rigo (as "Demetrius"), John Shanks (as "Buff"), Lois Shore (as "Susi"), Helen Sinnott [credited as Helene Sinnott; as "Lola Carson"), Genevieve Tobin, George Torrence (as "Dan Carson"). Produced by Richard Herndon.
- (1927) Stage: Wrote (w/Frederic Hatton) "Lombardi, Ltd.", produced on Broadway. Comedy (revival). Directed by Cecil Owen. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 6 Jun 1927-Jun 1927 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Leo Carrillo (as "Tito Lombardi"; final Broadway role), Evelyn Carter Carrington, Helen Dedens, Eunice Hunt, Adele Le Roy, Beresford Lovett, Marion Martin, Audrey Ridgewell [credited as Audrey Ridgwell], Arthur Ross, John Saunders, Edward Shaw, Philip Tonge (as "Riccardo Tosello"), Rita Grapel (as "Phyllis Manning"), Barbara Weeks (as "Eloise"). Produced by Murray Phillips' Repertory Theatre and Murray Phillips. NOTE: Filmed as Lombardi, Ltd. (1919).
- (1927) Stage: Wrote (w/Frederic Hatton) "Synthetic Sin", produced on Broadway. Directed by Franklyn Underwood. 49th Street Theatre: 10 Oct 1927-Oct 1927 (24 performances).
- (1930) Stage: Wrote (w/Frederic Hatton) "Love, Honor and Betray", produced on Broadway. Drama. Adapted from the French of Andre Antoine. Directed by Donn Mullally. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 12 Mar 1930-Apr 1930 (closing date unknown/45 performances). Cast: Alice Brady (as "The Woman"), George Brent (as "The Chauffeur"; only Broadway role), Glenda Farrell (as "The Young Girl"), Clark Gable (as "The Lover"; final Broadway role), Wilton Lackaye (as "The Doctor"), Mark Smith (as "The Husband"), Robert Williams (as "The Young Man"). Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1930) Stage: Adapted (w/Frederic Hatton) book for "Dancing Partner", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Alexander Engel [final Broadway credit] and Alfred Grünwald. Directed / produced by David Belasco. Belasco Theatre: 5 Aug 1930-Nov 1930 (closing date unknown/119 performances). Cast: Auguste Aramini (as "Armand Perichol"), Suzanne Caubaye (as "Rita-Vera"), Germaine De Renty (as "Fanchon"), Mauricette Ducret (as "Annette Lebrun"), Marie Durand (as "A Floor Maid"), Jules Epailly (as "Raquin"), Charlotte Granville (as "Lady Hartley"), Patrice Gridier (as "Gina"), Paul Heron (as "Louis"), Claudia Morgan (as "The Hon. Gwendolyn Davenham"), Lynne Overman (as "Lord Robert Brummel"), Irene Purcell (as "Roxy"), Thomas Reynolds (as "Nervous Flight Passenger"), Gustave Rolland (as "Pierre"), Ivan Servais (as "Henri Symeux"), Clare St. Clair (as "Vickie"), Henry Stephenson (as "Lord George Hampton"), Percy Woodley (as "A Pilot"). NOTE: Filmed as Just a Gigolo (1931).
- (1930) Stage: Wrote (w/Frederic Hatton) "His Majesty's Car", produced on Broadway. Comedy. From the Hungarian by Attila Orbók. Directed by Stanley Logan. Ethel Barrymore Theatre: 23 Oct 1930-Nov 1930 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Roman Arnoldoff (as "Alvarez"), Isabel Atwill (as "The Countess"), Arthur Barry (as "Von Werden"), Louise Bateman (as "The Baroness"), Peggy Conklin (as "Mitzi"), Edward Cradall (as "Robert Bardon"), Charles Croker-King (as "Ernest Dornik"), James Dunn (as "A Major-Domo"), Miriam Hopkins (as "Lily Dornik"), Anthony Kemble-Cooper (as "The King"), William Kershaw (as "Geo. Sappo"), Emile Littler (as "Reporter"), Gertrude Maitland (as "Mrs. Dornik"), Hugh Miller (as "Peter Hahn"), Wells Richardson (as "Cameraman"), Theodore St. John (as "Andre Dornik"), Herbert Standing (as "Strohn"), Marcella Swanson (as "Madelaine"), Lillian B. Tonge (as "Miss Marks"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1932) Stage: Adapted (w/Frederic Hatton) "The Stork is Dead", produced on Broadway. Comedy/farce. From the Viennese play by Hans Kottow. 48th Street Theatre: 23 Sep 1932-Oct 1932 (closing date unknown/27 performances). Cast: Ross Alexander (as "Comte Rene de Gaumont"), Nana Bryant (as "Madame Bridier"), Ninon Bunyea (as "Lola Faubert"), Eva Farrell (as "Madelaine"), Phyllis Holden (as "Hortense"), Ethel Norris (as "Suzanne Bridier"), Mark Smith (as "Lucien Bridier"), Fred Stewart (as "Paul de Gaumont"), 'Robert Vivian'' (as "Jerome"), Frank Woodruff (as "Max"). Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1932) Stage: Wrote (w/Frederic Hatton) "The Great Lover", produced on Broadway. Romantic comedy (revival). Waldorf Theatre: 11 Oct 1932-Oct 1932 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Gustav Bowhan, Alice Frost, Grant Gordon, Julia Johnson, Curtis Karpe (as "Carl Losseck"), Richard K. Keith (as "Faranald"), Leo Kennedy, Elsa Leon, Leo Leone, Ilse Marvenga, Maurice Morris, June Mullin, LeRoi Operti (as "Kartzag"), Alexis Polianov, William Ricciardi, Marguerita Sylva, Lou Tellegen (as "Jean Paurel"), Clyde Veaux. Produced by O.E. Wee and Jules J. Leventhal. NOTE: Filmed as The Great Lover (1920), The Great Lover (1931).
- Playwright (w/Frederic Hatton): "The Man Disturber". NOTE: Filmed as The Night Bird (1928).
- Story: "With the Tide". NOTE: Filmed as South Sea Love (1923).
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