- (1893 - 1937) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1893) Stage Play: The Girl I Left Behind Me. Written by David Belasco and Franklin Fyles. Empire Theatre: 25 Jan 1893- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Orrin Johnson, Cyril Scott [Broadway debut], William H. Thompson (credited as W.H. Thompson) [Broadway debut] , Wallace Eddinger, Katherine Florence, Edna Wallace Hopper (credited as Edna Wallace) [Broadway debut].
- (1898) Stage Play: A Runaway Girl. Musical comedy.
- (1899) Stage Play: A Stranger in a Strange Land. Comedy.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Fatted Calf. Comedy. Written by Arthur Hopkins, Daly's Theatre: 19 Feb 1912- Feb 1912 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Robert Drouet, Margaret Greene, Frank Hatch, May Milloy, Walter Pennington, Cyril Scott, Ruth Shepley, Ann Warrington. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1916) Stage Play: Arms and the Girl. Written by Grant Stewart and Robert M. Baker. Directed by Paul Dickey. Fulton Theatre: 27 Sep 1916- Dec 1916 (closing date unknown/77 performances). Cast: Fay Bainter, Francis Byrne, Paul Cazeneuve, H.F. DeMont, Karl Dietz, J. Malcolm Dunn, Marie Hassell, Ethel Intropidi, Suzanne Jackson, Cyril Scott, Henry Vogel. Produced by William H. Harris Jr. Note: Filmed by Famous Players Film Company (Jesse Lasky later known as Paramount Pictures), as Arms and the Girl (1917) starring Billie Burke.
- (1903) Stage Play: A Princess of Kensington. Musical/opera. Music by Edward German. Libretto by Basil Hood. Musical Director: J. Sebastian Hiller. Featuring songs by Ernest Shand. Featuring songs with lyrics by C.H. Bovill. Additional lyrics by James T. Powers. Directed by Cyril Scott. Broadway Theatre: 31 Aug 1903- 3 Oct 1903 (41 performances). Cast: Wyatt E. Barnes, Lily Bircham (as "Butterfly"), Walter Craven (as "Yapp"), Pauline de la Paz (as "Mustardseed"), Dora DeFilippe (as "Kenna"), Nellie Emerald (as "Dragonfly"), Cecil Engleheart (as "Joy"), Amelia Fields (as "Nell Reddish"), Stanley Forde [credited as Stanley H. Forde] (as "Mr. Reddish"), Pauline Frederick (as "Titania"), Elsie Gibbons (as "Cobweb"), C.H. Hillman (as "James Doubleday"), Loyd Hoey (as "Zephyrus"), Fred Huntley (as "Bill Blake"), George B. Jackson (as "Sir James Jellicoe"), Richie Ling (as "Lieutenant Brook Green"), Edward Martindel (as "Azuriel"), Angela May (as "Lady Jellicoe"), George Mudie (as "Old Ben"), James T. Powers (as "William Jelf"), Thomas Shannon (as "Recruiting Sergeant"), William Stephens (as "Puck"), Jack Taylor (as "Oberon"), Bernard Tieman (as "Will Weatherley"), Estelle Ward (as "Peaseblossom"), Leila Williams (as "Moth"), P.J. Worthington (as "Jem Johnson"). Produced by John C. Fisher.
- (1912) Stage Play: Patience [or Bunthorne's Bride]. Musical/operetta (revival). Written by W.S. Gilbert. Music by Arthur Sullivan. Scenic Design by H. Robert Law. Costume Design by Melville Ellis. Orchestrations conducted by Clarence Rogerson. Lyric Theatre: 6 May 1912- 1 Jun 1912 (32 performances). Cast: Arthur Aldridge (as "Lieut. The Duke of Dunstable"), Eugene Cowles (as "Major Murgatroyd"), Eva Davenport (as "Lady Jane"), Marie Doro (as "Patience, a dairy maid"), Viola Gillette (as "Lady Angela"), DeWolf Hopper Sr. (as "Reginald Bunthorne"), George J. MacFarlane (as "Colonel Calverley"), Christine Nielson (as "Lady Ella"), William Baumann (as "Dragoon Guard"), Ruth Bonner (as "Maiden"), Alice Brady (as "Lady Saphir"), Sidonia Brann (as "Maiden"), Tom Bryan (as "Dragoon Guard"), Edith Buell (as "Maiden"), Dorothy Cassel (as "Maiden"), Alice Chase (as "Maiden"), Marie Corty (as "Maiden"), Constance Crane (as "Maiden"), John C. Cryan (as "Dragoon Guard"), Harriett DeNorma (as "Maiden"), Josephine DeNoville (as "Maiden"), Louis Derman (as "Dragoon Guard"), Loretta Doyle (as "Maiden"), Caro DuBurgho (as "Maiden"), Jack Evans (as "Dragoon Guard"), J. Leonard Feiner (as "Dragoon Guard"), Joseph Galton (as "Dragoon Guard"), Marion George (as "Maiden"), Lew Graham (as "Dragoon Guard"), Katherine Gray (as "Maiden"), Leonora Guest (as "Maiden"), Norma Haggins (as "Maiden"), Herbert Hall (as "Dragoon Guard"), Florence Harris (as "Maiden"), David Heilbron (as "Dragoon Guard"), Annette Herbert (as "Maiden"), Fern Hollis (as "Maiden"), Henry Holt (as "Dragoon Guard"), Alex Keene (as "Dragoon Guard"), Irving Lavitz (as "Dragoon Guard"), Edna Lee (as "Maiden"), Parker Leonard (as "Dragoon Guard"), Lew Litchfield (as "Dragoon Guard"), Flora Lyons (as "Maiden"), Nora McClory (as "Maiden"), Sara Meredith (as "Maiden"), Frank Mirose (as "Dragoon Guard"), Margaret Morrison (as "Maiden"), Jose Pepe (as "Dragoon Guard"), John E. Reese (as "Dragoon Guard"), George Romain (as "Attorney"), Nathalie Saymore (as "Maiden"), Cyril Scott (as "Archibald Grosvenor"), Florence Sommerville (as "Maiden"), Helen Starr (as "Maiden"), Pauline Sterling (as "Maiden"), Alice Stratton (as "Maiden"), May von Summerfield (as "Maiden"), Fred Walker (as "Dragoon Guard"), Rose Wertz (as "Maiden"), Billie Williams (as "Maiden"), George Williams (as "Dragoon Guard"), L. Williams (as "Dragoon Guard"), Charles Yorkshire (as "Dragoon Guard"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert and William A. Brady.
- (1904) Stage Play: Glittering Gloria. Musical comedy. Music by Bernard Rolt. Book by C.M.S. McLellan [credited as Hugh Morton]. Lyrics by C.M.S. McLellan [credited as Hugh Morton] and Bernard Rolt. Featuring songs by Jean Schwartz and A. Baldwin Sloane. Featuring songs with lyrics by William Jerome and Edward Abeles. Daly's Theatre (moved to The Grand Opera House from 4 Apr 1904- close): 15 Feb 1904- Apr 1904 (closing date unknown/30 performances). Cast: Marie Allen (as "Brenda"), Percy Ames (as "Archie Toddleby, Jack's friend"), Sybil Anderson (as "Rosamund/Chorus"), Katherine Black (as "Chorus"), Viola Clayton (as "Chorus"), Belva Don Kersley (as "Kathleen"), Gertrude Douglas (as "Irene"), Lotta Ettinger (as "Chorus"), Edna Farrell (as "Ethel"), Amy Forsland (as "Chorus"), E. Lovat Fraser (as "Robert Shreve, Slapton's partner"), Edward Gore (as "Samuel Slapton, a Bond Street jeweler"), Ferdinand Gottschalk (as "Zebedee Poskett, a rural solicitor"), Olive Haskell (as "Chorus"), John Hendy (as "First Porter"), Flora Hengler (as "Herbert "Buttons," at Coddlesmere mansions"), May Hengler (as "Sarah, maid to Gloria"), May Hopkins (as "Chorus"), Ethel Intropodi (as "Chorus"), Eugene O'Rourke (as "Mr. Griddletop, Third Assistant superintendent of luggage"), Carol Oty (as "Chorus"), Adelaide Prince (as "Mrs. Jack James"), Jessie Radcliffe (as "Chorus"), Phyllis Rankin (as "Dorothy Kenworthy, Archie's fiancée"), Adele Ritchie (as "Gloria Grant, known as "Glittering Gloria"), Forrest Robinson (as "Colonel Pasquale Gallegher, from El Paso, Texas"), Frieda Salber (as "Chorus"), George A. Schiller (as "Algernon Entwistle, the Colonel's Secretary"), Cyril Scott (as "Jack James, Jack's Wife"), Lottie Vernon (as "Chorus"), Marie L. Wilson (as "Ariadne"). Produced by John C. Fisher and Thomas W. Ryley.
- (1909) Stage Play: The Intruder. Written by Thompson Buchanan. Bijou Theatre: 22 Sep 1909- Oct 1909 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: Janet Beecher, A.S. 'Pop' Byron, Scott Cooper, Grace Goodall, Lizzie Goode, Maude Turner Gordon, Mrs. Rupert Hughes [credited as Adelaide Manola] (final Broadway role), Cyril Scott. Produced by William A. Brady and Joseph R. Grismer.
- (1909) Stage Play: The Lottery Man. Written by Rida Johnson Young. Bijou Theatre: 6 Dec 1909- May 1910 (closing date unknown/200 performances). Cast: Janet Beecher (as "Helen Heyer"), Louise Galloway, Harry S. Hadfield, Helen Lowell, Robert MacKay, Mary Leslie Mayo, Cyril Scott (as "Jack Wright"), Wallace Sharpe, Ethel Winthrop. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert. Note: Filmed by F. Ray Comstock Photoplay Company [distributed by Unity Sales Corp.] as The Lottery Man (1916), and by Paramount Pictures as The Lottery Man (1919) [considered lost as of Jul 2014].
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content