- (1906 - 1950) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1906) Stage Play: The Man of the Hour. Melodrama. Written by George Broadhurst. Savoy Theatre: 4 Dec 1906- Jan 1908 (closing date unknown/479 performances). Cast: Mark J. Cody (as "Henry Williams"), Harry J. Cooley (as "Mills"), Harriet Otis Dellenbaugh (as "Mrs. Bennett'), Douglas Fairbanks' (as "Perry Carter Wainwright"), George Fawcett (as "James Phelan"), John Flood (as "Scott R. Gibbs"), Alfred Kappeler (as "Arthur Payne") [Broadway debut], Lillian Kemble-Cooper (as "Dallas Wainwright"), Robert A. Lothian (as "Office Boy"), Frank MacVicars (as "Richard Harrigan"), Diva Marolda (as "Cynthia Garrison"), Frederick Perry (as "Alwyn Bennett"), William Richards (as "William Ingram"), Bennett Southard (as "Richard Roberts"), Charles Stedman, Geoffrey C. Stein, James E. Wilson. Produced by William A. Brady and Joseph R. Grismer. Notes: (1) At this period on Broadway this was considered a smash hit. (2) Filmed by William A. Brady Picture Plays as Man of the Hour (1914) and distributed by World Film.
- (1917) Stage Play: The Lassoo.
- (1917) Stage Play: Good Morning, Rosamond.
- (1927) Stage: Appeared in "What Do We Know?" on Broadway.
- (1925) Stage: Appeared in "All Dressed Up" on Broadway.
- (1924) Stage Play: The New Poor. Comedy. Written by Cosmo Hamilton. Playhouse Theatre: 7 Jan 1924- Feb 1924 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Anita Booth, Lillian Kemble-Cooper, Beth Franklin, Myra Franklyn, Lyn Harding, Norma Mitchell, Irene Purcell, Ralph Sipperly, Morton Stevens [earliest Broadway role], George Thorpe, William Williams, Barry O'Moore. Produced by Alex Aarons and Vinton Freedley.
- (1923) Stage Play: The Mountebank. Written by William J. Locke and Ernest Denny [final Broadway credit]. Directed by David Burton. Lyceum Theatre: 7 May 1923- Jun 1923 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: F. Cecil Butler (as "Parker"), Marjorie Chard (as "Lady Verity-Stewart"), Lillian Kemble-Cooper (as "Lady Auriol Dayne"), Louis La Bey (as "Gustave"), Lennox Pawle (as "Horatio Bakkus"), T. Wigney Percyval (as "Anthony Hylton"), Gabrielle Ravine (as "Elodie"), Charles Romano (as "Harry Verity-Stewart"), Nora Swinburne (as "Evadne"), Norman Trevor (as "Andrew Lackaday, Petit Patou"). Produced by Charles Frohman Inc. Note: Filmed as The Side Show of Life (1924).
- (1922) Stage: Appeared in "The Fool" on Broadway. Melodrama.
- (1922) Stage Play: The National Anthem. Drama. Written by J. Hartley Manners. Henry Miller's Theatre: 23 Jan 1922- Apr 1922 (closing date unknown/114 performances). Cast: Laurette Taylor (as "Marian Hale"), William Armstrong, Lillian Kemble-Cooper, Robert Hudson, Greta Kemble-Cooper, Richie Ling (as "Reuben Hale"), J. Hartley Manners (as "Waiter"), Dodson Mitchell (as "John K. Carlton"), Ralph Morgan (as "Arthur Carlton"), Paul Porcasi (as "Dr. Virande"), Frank M. Thomas (as "Tom Carroll"), Jo Wallace, Ray Wilson. Produced by Abraham L. Erlanger and George C. Tyler. Produced under the personal direction of J. Hartley Manners. Note: Filmed by Corinne Griffith Productions [distributed by First National Pictures] as The Marriage Whirl (1925).
- (1921) Stage Play: The New Morality. Comedy. Written by Harold Chapin. Playhouse Theatre: 30 Jan 1921- Feb 1921 (closing date unknown/5 performances). Cast: Kathleen Andrus (as "Lesceline"), Lillian Kemble-Cooper (as "Alice Meynell"), Warburton Gamble (as "Colonel Ivor Jones"), Grace George (as "Betty Jones"), John Gray (as "Wooton"), Lawrence Grossmith (as "E. Wallace Wister"), Ernest Lawford (as "Geoffrey Belasis, K. C."). Produced by Grace George.
- (1920) Stage: Appeared in "The Night Boat" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Music by Jerome Kern. Material / lyrics by Anne Caldwell. Based on a farce by Alexandre Bisson. Musical Direction by Victor Baravelle. Music orchestrated by Frank Saddler. Additional lyrics by Frank Craven, C.M.S. McLellan, Bob Cole, William Jerome, Bert Hanlon, Benny Ryan, George M. Cohan and Paul Dresser. Additional music by George M. Cohan, Paul Dresser, Harry Tierney, James Monaco, J. Rosamond Johnson and Ivan Caryll. Musical Staging by Ned Wayburn. Staged by Fred G. Latham. Liberty Theatre: 2 Feb 1920-30 Oct 1920 (313 performances). Cast: Geraldine Alexander, Agnes Allen, Phoebe Appleton, Marie Benedict, Angel Cansino, Eduardo Cansino, Irving Carpenter, Marie Cavanaugh, Arline Chase, Cecil Conway, Evelyn Conway, Peggy Craven, Lola Curtis, Daisy Daniels, Isabel Falconer, Mrs. John Findlay, Gene Fleming, Babz Fowler, Helen Gates, Louise Groody, Betty Hope Hale, Jack E. Hazzard (as "Bob White"), Stella Hoban, Dorothy Hollis, Beatrice Hughes, Jack Hughes, Gordon Kyle, Lois Leigh, Mar LeRoy, Paul Lester, Adah Baker Lewis (as "Mrs. Maxim"), 'Jeanette MacDonald' (as "Ensemble"), Raymond Moore (as "Ensemble"), Ralph O'Brien, Evelyn Plumador, Marie Reagen, Frank Rowan, John Scannell, Lydia Scott, Mildred Sinclair, Hal Skelly, Daniel Sparks, Ernest Torrence, Kay Tudor, Bunny Wendell, Hansford Wilson, Irene Wilson. Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1918) Stage: Appeared in Perkins on Broadway. Written by Douglas Murray. Henry Miller's Theatre: 22 Oct 1918-Nov 1918 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Frances Goodrich Ames, Margery Card, Ruth Chatterton, Marjorie Hast, Frank Kemble-Cooper, Frederick Lloyd, Henry Miller, Tempe Pigott, Florence Wollerson.
- (1918) Stage: Appeared in "The Fountain of Youth" on Broadway.
- (1928) Stage Play: Our Betters. Comedy. Written by W. Somerset Maugham. Directed by Reginald Bach. Henry Miller's Theatre: 20 Feb 1928- Jun 1928 (closing date unknown/128 performances). Cast: Reginald Bach (as "Thornton Clay"), Ina Claire (as "Lady George Grayston"), Constance Collier (as "Duchesse De Surennes"), Lillian Kemble-Cooper (as "Principessa Della Cercola"), Edward Crandall, Louis D'Arclay, Madge Evans (as "Elizabeth Saunders"), Harry Joyner, Harry Lillford, Gordon McRae (as "First Footman"), Hugh Sinclair (as "Gibert Paxton"), Frederick Truesdell, Martin Walker. Produced by Messmore Kendall in association with Gilbert Miller. Note: Filmed by Radio Pictures [later known as RKO Radio Pictures] as Our Betters (1933).
- (1933) Stage Play: For Services Rendered. Written by W. Somerset Maugham. Directed by Robert B. Sinclair. Booth Theatre: 12 Apr 1933- Apr 1933 (closing date unknown/21 performances). Cast: Jean Adair (as "Charlotte Ardsley"), Fay Bainter (as "Eva Ardsley"), Leo G. Carroll (as "Sydney Ardsley"), Lillian Kemble-Cooper (as "Ethel Bartlett"), Henry Daniell, David Glassford, Mabel Gore, Walter Kingsford (as "Wilfred Cedar"), Richie Ling (as "Leonard Ardsley"), Elisabeth Risdon (as "Gwen Cedar"), Percy Waram (as "Howard Bartlett"), Jane Wyatt (as "Lois Ardsley"). Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1934) Stage Play: A Roman Servant. Drama. Written by Larry O'Connor. Directed by William B. Friedlander. Longacre Theatre: 1 Dec 1934- Dec 1934 (closing date unknown/9 performances). Cast: Lester Alden, Charles H. Croker-King, Leslie Denison, Ernest Glendinning, Lillian Kemble-Cooper (as "Lady Gylda"), Helene Millard. Produced by Arnaud and Connors Associates.
- (1949) Stage Play: I Know My Love. Comedy. Written by S.N. Behrman. Adapted from "Auprès de Ma Blonde" by Marcel Achard. Press Representative: Carlton Miles [final Broadway credit]. Directed by Alfred Lunt. Shubert Theatre: 2 Nov 1949- 3 Jun 1950 (247 performances). Cast: Lynn Fontanne (as "Emily Chanler"), Alfred Lunt (as "Thomas Chanler"), Katharine Bard, Henry Barnard, Charles Bowden, Sandy Campbell, Betty Caulfield, Mary Fickett, Hugh Franklin, Roy Johnson, Lillian Kemble-Cooper (as "Agnes") [credited as Lily Kemble-Cooper] (final Broadway role), Geoffrey Kerr, Doreen Lang, William LeMassena, Noel Leslie, Allen Martin, Esther Mitchell, Renee Orsell, Thomas Palmer, Anne Sargent, J.P. Wilson. Produced by The Theatre Guild and John C. Wilson.
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