- (1889 - 1918) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1889) Stage Play: Shenandoah. Written by Bronson Howard. Star Theatre (moved to Proctor's Theatre from 21 Oct 1889 to close): 9 Sep 1889- 19 Apr 1890 (250 performances). Cast: Viola Allen (as "Gertrude Ellingham"), G.W. Bailey, William Barnes, J.O. Barrows, C.C. Brandt, Nanette Comstock, W.J. Cummings, W.L. Dennison, Dorothy Dorr, Esther Drew, Alice B. Haines, Harry Harwood, Mrs. C.A. Haslam, Lucius Henderson (as "Robert Ellingham"), John E. Kellerd (as "Capt. Thornton"), Wilton Lackaye (as "Gen. Haverhill"), G. Maxwell, Rube Miller (as "Kerchival West"), Morton Selten (as "Capt. Heartsease") [Broadway debut], Effie Shannon (as "Jenny Buckthorn"), W.H. Thorn. Replacement actors: Joseph Adelman (as "Capt. Thornton") [Broadway debut], Mary Breyer (as "Old Margery"), Frann Dayton (as "Robert Ellingham"), Louis Hendricks (as "Capt. Lockwood"), Joseph Holland (as "Gen. Haverhill") [Broadway debut]. Produced by Charles Frohman [earliest Broadway credit].
- (1904) Stage: Appeared (credited as "Morton Selton") in "Yvette" on Broadway. Written by Pierre Berton. Book adapted by Cosmo Gordon Lennox. Knickerbocker Theatre: 13 May 1904 (1 performance). Cast: Rosalind Coghlan, Harry Davenport, Paul Decker, Ralph Delmore, Dorothy Dorr, Arthur Elliott, Maud Granger, Margaret Illington, Claire Kulp, Ernest Lambart, Jeffreys Lewis, Bruce McRae, Robert McWade, Kate Pattison Selton, Tyrone Power Sr.. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1896) Stage Play: An Enemy to the King. Drama.
- (1899) Stage Play: The King's Musketeer. Romance. Written by Henry Hamilton. Adapted from the famous romance, "The Three Musketeers" by Alexandre Dumas. Incidental music by Frank Howson. Directed by William Seymour. Knickerbocker Theatre: 3 Mar 1899- unknown (40 performances). Cast: E.H. Sothern (as "Raoul D'Artagnan, a youth from Gascony, age 18"), F. Beamish (as "Servant to M. de Treville"), Edward Belmar (as "D'Estrees, Musketeer of the King's Guard"), Geo. E. Bryant (as "Aramis, Musketeer of the King's Guard"), Rowland Buckstone (as "M. de Trevelle, Captain of King's Musketeers"), R.S. Carrington (as "Jussac of the Cardinal's Guards"), John J. Collins (as "Le Masle, usher to Richelieu"), Norman Conniers (as "Porthos, Musketeer of the King's Guard"), Edith Crane (as "Clarice, Countess de Winter, known as Miladi"), Roydon Erlynne (as "Athos. Comte de la Fére, Musketeer of the King's Guard"), Owen Fawcett (as "Mousqueton, servant to Porthos"), C.P. Flockton (as "Comte de Rochefort"), Katherine Florence (as "Gabrielle de Chalus, maid-of-honor to the Queen"), Frank Greppo (as "Bernajoux, of the Cardinal's Guards"), Henry Hyde (as "Le Cahusac, of the Cardinal's Guards"), Daniel Jarrett (as "De Chemerault, Musketeer of the King's Guard"), Bessie Johnson (as "Galliere, page to the Queen"), May Johnson (as "de la Fauconiere, page to the Queen"), Arthur R. Lawrence (as "Cardinal Richelieu, Prime Minister"), Olga McArthur (as "A Nun"), Henry Miller (as "Vernet, of Richelieu"), R. Neill (as "De Vieuville, of the Cardinal's Guards"), Norman Parr (as "John Felton, officer in the Duke of Buckingham's household"), Kate Pattison-Selten (as "Mother-Superior, of the convent at Bethune"), Edna Phillips (as "Toinette, maid to the Countess de Winter"), Frank Raymond (as "Bicarat, of the Cardinal's Guards"), Morton Selten (as "Louis XIII, King of France"), Edgar Selwyn (as "Dujart, spy of Richelieu"), Marshall Stedman (as "George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham"), Ernest Tarleton (as "Planchet, servant to D'Artagnan, Rebecca Warren (as "Anne of Austria, Consort of Louis XIII, Queen of France"). Produced by Daniel Frohman.
- (1899) Stage Play: The Song of the Sword. Romance.
- (1900) Stage Play: Her Majesty, the Girl Queen of Nordenmark. Melodrama. Written by J.I.C. Clarke, from a novel by Elizabeth Tompkins. Directed by Frank Hatch (also in cast). Manhattan Theatre: 15 Oct 1900- Dec 1900 (closing date unknown/58 performances). Cast included: May Arthur, Isabelle Bowman, George Conklin, Frazer Coulter, Fernanda Eliscu, Alfred Garland, Grace George, Emil Hoch, P. James, Louise Lloyd, Agnes Marks, Agnes McCarthy, Thomas Meighan, Samuel Michaelson, Annie Mifflin, William Murchison, George Osbourne, Bert W. Parmeter, George Pauncefort [Broadway debut], Louis Payne, Morton Selten [credited as Morton Selton], T. Troy, Marion Walsh, Frank Worthing. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (September 18, 1924 - November 1924) Stage: Appeared in Channing Pollock's "The Fool," at the Apollo Theatre in London, England, with Henry Ainley, Mary Merrall, F. Bellamy, May Whitty, Clare Harris, Julian Royce, Sara Sothern and Olga Lindo in the cast.
- (1880's- ?). Active on stage elsewhere:
- (1902) Stage Play: Heidelberg. Drama. Written by Aubrey Boucicault. Based on "Alt Heidelberg" by Wilhelm Meyer-Foerster. Princess Theatre: 15 Dec 1902- Jan 1903 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Karl Bergner, Aubrey Boucicault, Heinrich Branton, Myra C. Brooke, John Burrell, Charles Clear, Norman Conniers, Augustus Cook, Edward Dresser, Minnie Dupree, Wilhelm Engelhoff, August Franko, Max Freeman, Henry Glass, Emil Himmelreich, Erne Houmann, F. Hurleigh, Robert Loraine, Bernhard Niemeyer, Charles Parr, Theodore Roberts, Ludwig Schultz, Morton Selten, Mollie Sherwood, William Sissons, John Stearns, Franz Steindorff, W.N. Stephens, Walter Travers. Produced by Sam Shubert and Lee Shubert.
- (1908) Stage Play: The World and His Wife. Written by Charles Frederic Nirdlinger [credited as Charles Frederick Nirdlinger]. Based on the "El Gran Galeoto" of José Echegaray y Eizaguirre [credited as Jose Echegaray] (final Broadway credit). Music by William Furst. Directed by William Faversham. Daly's Theatre: 2 Nov 1908- 14 Jan 1909 (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 [credited as Morton Selton] (as "Captain Beaulieu"). Produced by William Faversham. Note: Filmed by Fox Films as The Celebrated Scandal (1915), Cosmopolitan Productions as The World and His Wife (1920), by MGM as Lovers? (1927), Festín de buitres (1949), El gran Galeoto (1951).
- (1907) Stage Play: My Wife. Written by Michael Morton, from the French of Paul Gavault and Robert Charvay. Empire Theatre: 31 Aug 1907- Dec 1907 (closing date unknown/129 performances). Cast: Alex Brunn, Herbert Budd, Billie Burke, John Drew, Frank Goldsmith, Ferdinand Gottschalk, L.C. Howard, Hope Latham, Mario Majeroni, Rex McDougall, Soldine Powel [credited as E. Soldene Powell], Albert Roccardi, Morton Selten, Ida Greeley Smith, Walter Soderling, Dorothy Tennant. Produced by Charles Frohman.
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