- (1888) Stage: Appeared in "Partners" on Broadway. Comedy/drama. Written by Robert Buchanan. Musical Director: Frank Howson. Madison Square Theatre: 9 Apr 1888-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Herbert Ayling (as "Mrs. Harkaway's Husband"), Marie Burroughs, William Davidge, John Findlay, C.P. Flockton, E.M. Holland, Gertie Homan, Mathilde Madison, Kate Molony, E.J. Phillips, W.H. Pope, Walden Ramsay, May Robson (as "Alice Bellair, Her Sister"), Alexander Salvini, George S. Stevens, J.H. Stoddard. Produced by A.M. Palmer.
- (1893) Stage: Appeared in "The Younger Son" on Broadway. Written by David Belasco. Empire Theatre: 24 Oct 1893-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Viola Allen, William Faversham, Henry Miller, May Robson, William H. Thompson [credited as W.H. Thompson], Edna Wallace Hopper [credited as Edna Wallace].
- (1894) Stage: Appeared in "The Fatal Card" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by C. Haddon Chambers and B.C. Stephenson. Palmer's Theatre: 31 Dec 1894-Mar 1895 (closing date unknown/unknown performances). Cast: Amy Busby (as "Margaret Marrable"), E.J. Ratcliffe (as "Gerald Austen"), R.A. Roberts (as "Harry Burgess"). NOTE: Filmed as The Fatal Card (1915).
- (1895) Stage: Appeared in "The Importance of Being Earnest" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Oscar Wilde. Empire Theatre: 22 Apr 1895-1 May 1895 (12 performances). Cast: Viola Allen (as "Honorable Gwendolyn Fairfax, Lady Bracknell's daughter"), W.H. Crompton (as "Rev. Canon Chasuble, D.D., Rector of Woolton"), William Faversham (as "Algernon Moncrieff"), Henry Miller (as "John Worthing, J.P., Of the Manor House, Woolton, Hertfordshire"), May Robson (as "Miss Priam"), Ida Vernon (as "Lady Bracknell"). NOTE: Generally considered as Oscar Wilde's trademark work, it is perhaps remarkable that it was a major flop in this original production.
- (1895) Stage: Appeared in "The Luck of Roaring Camp" / "Gudgeons" [joint production]. Empire Theatre: 14 May 1895-28 May 1895 (unknown performances). THE LUCK OF ROARING CAMP: Written by Bret Harte. Cast [as known]: May Robson. GUDGEONS: Written by Thornton Clark and Louis N. Parker. Cast: Kitty Cheatham (as "Persis"), W.H. Crompton (as "Howard R. Harrison"), William Faversham (as "Reginald"), Henry Miller (as "James Ffolliott Treherne").
- (1897) Stage: Appeared in "Never Again" on Broadway. Farce. Based on the French of Anthony Mars [earliest Broadway credit] and 'Maurice Desvallieres', as translated by T.R. Birmingham. Garrick Theatre: 8 Mar 1897-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Elsie de Wolfe, Ferdinand Gottschalk, E.M. Holland, Agnes Miller, May Robson, Fritz Williams. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1899) Stage: Appeared in "Lord and Lady Algy" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by R.C. Carton. Empire Theatre: 14 Feb 1899-May 1899 (closing date unknown/111 performances). Cast: John Armstrong, E.Y. Backus, J.H. Benrimo, Frank Brownlee, Blanche Burton, W.H. Compton, William Faversham, Marian Gardiner, George W. Howard, Louise Maltman, Jesse Millward, George Osborne Jr., George C. Pearce, May Robson, Guy Standing, John R. Sumner, Lillian Thurgate, Joseph Wheelock Jr., W.H. Workman. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1899 Stage: Appeared in "Lord and Lady Algy" on Broadway. Comedy (revival). Written by R.C. Carton. Knickerbocker Theatre: 16 Oct 1899-Oct 1899 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: John Armstrong, E.Y. Backus, J.H. Benrimo, Frank Brownlee, Blanche Burton, W.H. Crompton, William Faversham, Marian Gardiner, George W. Howard, Louise Maltman, Jesse Millward, George Osborne Jr., George C. Pearce, May Robson, Guy Standing, John R. Sumner, Lillian Thurgate, Joseph Wheelock Jr., W.H. Workman. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1899) Stage: Appeared in "Way for the Ladies" on Broadway. Farce.
- (1900) Stage: Appeared in "Self and Lady" on Broadway. Comedy/farce.
- (1900) Stage: Appeared in "Lady Huntworth's Experiment" on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1901) Stage: Appeared in "Are You a Mason?" on Broadway. Farce.
- (1901) Stage: Appeared in "The Messenger Boy" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Music by Ivan Caryll and Lionel Monckton. Book by James T. Tanner and Alfred Murray. Lyrics by Adrian Ross and Percy Greenbank. Musical Director: Louis F. Gottschalk. Additional music by T.W. Conner, Paul Rubens and Bert Brantford. Additional lyrics by T.W. Conner, Paul Rubens, James T. Powers, Leslie Mayne and Harry Boden. Scenic Design by Joseph Harker and T.E. Ryan. Directed by Herbert Gresham. Daly's Theatre: 16 Sep 1901-4 Jan 1902 (128 performances). Cast: Agnes Blake (as "Wadleigh Chorus"), Rachel Booth (as "Rosa"), Georgia Caine (as "Nora"), Helen Chichester (as "Dorothy Majoribanks"), Armand Cortes (as "Dedong"; Broadway debut), Harold C. Crane (as "Lord Punchestown"), Leonora Crum (as "Chorus"), Herbert Darley (as "Mr. Trotter" / "Purser"), George De Long (as "Comte de Fleury"), Miss Fanchonette (as "Pepita"), Tom Hadaway (as "Prof. Phunckwitz"), George Heath (as "Mr. Tudor Pyke"), George Honey (as "Hooker Pasha"), Jobyna Howland (as "Lord Punchestown), Bertha Hunter (as "Chorus"), Harry Kelly (as "Capt. Pott"), John P. Kennedy (as "Capt. Naylor"), Caroline Locke (as "Chorus"), Sally McNeil (as "Chorus"), Louise Murry (as "Chorus"), Paul Nicholson (as "Cosmos Bey"), John B. Park (as "Clive Radnor"), James T. Powers (as "Tommy Bang"), George Pullman (as "Chorus"), Florence Redmond (as "Chorus"), May Robson (as "Mrs. Bang"), Abner Seymour (as "Chorus"), J.W. Styles (as "Chorus"), Hattie Waters (as "Lady Winifred"), Agnes Wayburn (as "Cecilia Gower"), Dene Woodruff (as "Chorus"), Flora Zabelle (as "Isabel Blyth"). Produced by Sam Nixon and J. Fred Zimmerman.
- (1902) Stage: Appeared in "The Billionaire" on Broadway. Musical/farce. Music by Gustav Kerker. Book by Harry B. Smith. Lyrics by Harry B. Smith. Musical Direction by Antonio DeNovellis. Choreographed by Ned Wayburn. Directed by Herbert Gresham. Daly's Theatre (moved to The Grand Opera House from 6 Apr 1903-close): 29 Dec 1902-Apr 1903 (closing date unknown/112 performances). Cast: R.A. Beale (as "First Theatre-goer"), Patricia Rooney (as "A Page"; credited as Marion Bent), Vera Cameron (as "Miss Capitol"), George Dolan (as "Second Theatre-goer"), Marie Doro (as "Rosalba"), Edward Everett (as "Southern Gent"), Sallie Fisher (as "Flora"), L.C. Fitzroy (as "First Ticket Speculator"), Louis Foley (as "Hot Stuff Jake"), Nellie Follis (as "Pansy Good"), Abraham Friedland (as "Ping Pong"), James Grant (as "Mr. Gummel"), William Havens (as "Mr. Fidget"), Lillian Hudson (as "Miss Gotham"), Walter James (as "Second Ticket Speculator"), Harry Kelly (as "Tim Lafferty"), John P. Kennedy (as "Monsieur Achille Petipas"), Thomas C. Leary (as "Mr. Peppercorn"), George Lyman (as "Third Theatre-goer"), Harry MacDonough (as "Baptiste"), Sallie McNeel (as "Miss Tremont"), Sadie Peters (as "Miss Tulane"), Hans F. Robert (as "Wally Peppercorn"), May Robson (as "Mrs. Peppercorn"), A. Rosenthal (as "Little Leopold"), Gertrude Saye (as "Miss Lakeside" / "Mirandy Hopkins"), Fred Scott (as "M. Cardenes"), Charles Sinclair (as "Messenger Boy"), Elphye Snowden (as "Miss Memphis"), Julius Steger (as "Lt. Ladislas"), John Steppling (as "Mr. Herman Rheinheister"), Albert S. Sykes (as "Hiram Hopkins"), Jerome Sykes (as "John Doe"), Frank Todd (as "A Stage Carpenter"), Hattie Waters (as "Miss Flossie Frivol"). Produced by Klaw & Erlanger.
- (1903) Stage: Appeared in "Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall" on Broadway. Melodrama. Written by Paul Kester. Based on the novel by Charles Major. Directed by R.A. Roberts. New York Theatre (moved to The Lyric Theatre from 14 Jan 1904-close): 14 Dec 1903-Jan 1904 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Carl Anthony, Mary Bacon, S.K. Blair, Sheridan Block, Mrs. Irvin Chapman, Estelle Coffin, Lillian Coffin, Jane Cowl [Broadway debut], Edith Crane, Sara Delaro, Gertrude Dorrence, Stanley Drewitt, Bertha Galland (as "Dorothy Vernon"), Alexis Law Gisiko, Bernice Golden, Edna Griffin, Helen Hale, Mignon Hardt, Howard Hull, Sybil Klein, Ferrers Knyvett, George LeSoir, Emmet Lennon, William Lewers (as "John Manners"), Frank Losee, Charles Martin, Emma Millard, Harold Mitchell, Louise Moodie, Allen Murnane, Charlotte Nicoll Weston, Genevieve Reynolds, Isabel Richards, May Robson, Edith Rowand, Harold Watts, William Whitney, Kate Denin Wilson, Lydia Winters, Douglas J. Wood.
- (1904) Stage: Appeared in "It Happened in Nordland" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Music by Victor Herbert. Book / lyrics by Glen MacDonough. Musical Director: Max Hirschfeld. Directed by Julian Mitchell. Lew M. Fields Theatre (from 5 Dec 1904-29 Apr 1905, then went on hiatus until resuming there from 31 Aug 1905-close): 5 Dec 1904-25 Nov 1905 (254 performances). Cast: Indiola Arnold (as "Ethylle"), Maida Athens (as "Vyvienne"), Georgia Baron (as "Colonel of the Army of Nordland" / "Chorus"), Edna Birch, Alfred Borneman (as "King Leopold of Belgium"), William Burress (as "Dr. Popoff" / "Capt. Gatling"), Marie Cahill (as "Katherine Peepfogle"), Josephine Carlin (as "Gladys"), Adah Carlyle, Joseph Carroll (as "Capt. Slivowitz"), Mattie Chapin, May Chapin, Bessie Clayton (as "Parthenia Schmitt"), Jeanne Crane, Jessie Crane, Jean d'Albert (as "Boris"), Harry Davenport (as "Prince George of Nebula"), Franklin Deland (as "Cook's Tourist Conductor"), Paula Desmond, George V. Dill (as "Corporal"), Fanny Dupre, Frederick Fair (as "King Edward of England"), Barbara Farres, Grace Field (as "Chorus"), Ruthita Field, Lew Fields (as "Hubert"), Harry Fisher (as "Baron Sparta"), Harriet Forsythe (as "Sylvia"), Carolyn Fostelle, Pauline Frederick (as "Miss Hicks" / "Countess Pokota"), Emily Fulton, Ethel Gilmore, Mabel Gilmore, Ray Gilmore, Rosemary Glosz, Charles Gotthold (as "Hugo von Armin"), Gertrude Grant, Jack Hall (as "Fauncey Betrue"), Joseph Herbert (as "The Duke of Toxen"), May Hickey, Katherine Howland (as "General of the Army of Nordland" / "Chorus"), Amalie Karle, Elba Kenny, Frankie Lee, May Leslie, Walter Lindberg, Hattie Lorraine, Loretta MacDonald, Diva Marolda, Maud Mills, Edmund Mortimer, May Naudain, Herman Noble, Billie Norton, Frank O'Neill, Charlotte Palmer, Susanne Parker, Clara Pitt, Harriet Raymond, Jessie Richmond, May Robson (as "Princess Aline"), R.W. Rosemire, Julius Steger, Marie Troy, W.C. Van Brunt, Dorothy Watson, Parvin White, Minnie Whitmore, Ocie Williams, Elizabeth Young. Produced by Hamlin, Mitchell and Fields.
- (1905) Stage: Appeared in "Cousin Billy" on Broadwawy. Comedy/Farce. Written / directed by Clyde Fitch. Based on "Le Voyage de Monsieur Perrichon" by Eugène Labiche and Edouard Martin. Scenic Design by Ernest M. Gros, Homer Emens and Edward G. Unitt. Criterion Theatre: 2 Jan 1905-Mar 1905 (closing date unknown/76 performances). Cast: Edward Abeles, Beatrice Agnew, Edith Barker, Freeman Barnes, Marion Brooks, Alexander Brunn, Rosa Cook, Charles J. Greene, Jean Hubbell, Angela Keir, Ora Lee, William Lewers, Grant Mitchell, Sydney Rice, May Robson, Arthur Row, Zelda Sears, Francis Wilson. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1906) Stage: Appeared in "The Mountain Climber" on Broadway. Farce. Adapted from the German farce by C. Kraatz. Written by M. Neal. Directed by Ben Teal. Criterion Theatre: 5 Mar 1906-Apr 1906 (closing date unknown/55 performances). Cast: Joseph Allen, Harrison Armstrong, Edith Barker, Joseph Brennan, Walter Dickenson, Augustin Duncan, Elsa Garrett, Charles J. Greene, Angela Keir, William Lewers, Herbert Marion, Grant Mitchell, Ellen Mortimer, Sidney Rice, May Robson, George Soule Spencer, Francis Wilson. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1906) Stage: Appeared in "The Little Father of the Wilderness" / "The Mountain Climber" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Austin Strong and Lloyd Osbourne. Criterion Theatre: 23 Apr 1906-May 1906 (closing date unknown/24 performances). THE LITTLE FATHER OF THE WILDERNESS: Written by Austin Strong and Lloyd Osbourne. Cast: Harrison Armstrong (as "Capt. Chevillon"), Edith Barker (as "Mademoiselle Henriette"), Joseph Brennan (as "Chevalier De Frontenac"), Augustin Duncan (as "Duc de St. Albret"), William Lewers (as "Louis XV"), Sidney Rice, George Soule Spencer (as "Frere Gregoire"), Francis Wilson (as "Pere Marlotte"). THE MOUNTAIN CLIMBER: Written by C. Kraatz and M. Neal. Directed by Ben Teal. Cast: Edith Barker, Joseph Brennan, Augustin Duncan, William Lewers, Sidney Rice, May Robson, George Soule Spencer [final Broadway role], Francis Wilson. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1907) Stage: Appeared in "The Rejuvenation of Aunt Mary" on Broadway. Written by Anne Warner. Garden Theatre (moved to Hoyt's Theatre from 16 Dec 1907-close): 12 Nov 1907-Dec 1907 (closing date unknown/56 performances). Cast: Eva Bingham, Harry Cowley, Margaret Drew, Grace Parks Fiske, George F. Hall, Frances Herblin, Harry Jones, William Levis, Nora O'Brien, David Proctor, May Robson, Nina Saville, George A. Stevenson, Jack Storey. Produced by L.S. Sire.
- (1911 Stage: Appeared in "The Three Lights" on Broadway. Written by Charles T. Dazey and May Robson. Bijou Theatre: 31 Oct 1911-Nov 1911 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Lotta Blake, Edith Conrad, Faye Cusick, Paul Decker, Eleanor Flowers, C.C. Gwynne, W. Haentges, George Hall, Eddie Leaman, Eugene Ordway, Lemore Phelps, May Robson, John C. Rowe, Jack Storey. Produced by L.S. Sire.
- (1926) Stage: Appeared in "The Two Orphans" on Broadway. Drama (revival). Written by Adolphe d'Ennery and 'Eugene Cormon'. Translated by N. Hart Jackson. Directed by William A. Brady. Cosmopolitan Theatre: 5 Apr 1936-May 1926 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Fay Bainter (as "Louise"), Charles D. Brown, Hugh Buckler (as "Marquis De Presles"), Henrietta Crosman (as "Countess De Linieres"), Henry Cunningham, Ann Delafield, Henry E. Dixey (as "Picard"; final Broadway role), Marie DuChette, Carolyn Ferriday, Mrs. J.R. Hurley, Wilton Lackaye (as "Count De Linieres"), Wilton Lackaye Jr. (as "Footman"), Robert Loraine, James Morrison, Florence Nash (as "Marianne"), Mary Nash, Clement O'Loghlen, Joseph Perkins, Franklin Rich, May Robson (as "La Frochard"; final Broadway role), José Ruben (as "Pierre Frochard"), William Seymour, Richard Stuart, Bess Tuttle, Robert Warwick (as "Jacques Frochard"), Mrs. Thomas Whiffen (as "Sister Genevieve"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert. Produced in association with William A. Brady and Dwight Wiman.
- (1/2/39) Radio: Appeared (as "Mrs. Leona Wicks") in a "Lux Radio Theater" broadcast of "The Perfect Specimen".
- (1930) Stage play: "Helena's Boys" presented by the Henry Duff Players at the Hollywood Playhouse. The cast included Tove Linden, Myra Hubert, Dolores Brown, Lillian Harmer, James Bush, William C. Kirby, Geoffrey Wardwell and Willis Marks.
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