- (1907) Stage: Wrote (earliest Broadway credit) "The Silver Box", performed on Broadway. Empire Theatre: 18 Mar 1907-Apr 1907 (closing date unknown/20 performances). Cast: Ethel Barrymore, Fanny L. Burt, Louis Eagan, William Evans, Eugene Jepson, James Kearney, Bruce McRae, Helen Mooney, Mary Nash, M.B. Pollock, Soldine Powel [credited as Soldene Powell], Harry Redding, Forrest Robinson, Anita Rothe, Hattie Russell, William T. Sampson, Dorothy Scherer. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1909) Stage: Wrote "Strife", produced on Broadway. New Theatre: 17 Nov 1909-unknown (unknown performances). Cast: A.E. Anson, Lee Baker, Reginald Barlow, Albert Bruning, Rowland Buckstone, Louis Calvert, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Robert Homans, Ben Johnson, William McVay, Harry Melick, Nat Nazarro Jr., Wilfrid North, Henry Stanford, John Tansey, Jacob Wendell, Cecil Yapp. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1912) Stage: Wrote "The Pigeon", produced on Broadway. Little Theatre: 12 Mar 1912-May 1912 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Reginald Barlow (as "First Humble Man"), Arthur Barry (as "Sir Thomas Hoxton"), A.M. Botsford (as "Rory Megan"), Albert Easdale (as "Second Humble Man"), Pamela Gaythorne (as "Guinevere Megan"), Wallie Howe (as "Edward Bertley"), Thomas Louden (as "Alfred Calway"), Wilfrid North (as "A Police Constable"), Frank Reicher, Louise Seymour (as "Ann Wellwyn"), Sidney Valentine (as "Timson"), Russ Whytal. Produced by Winthrop Ames.
- (1916) Stage: Wrote "Justice", produced on Broadway. Candler Theatre: 3 Apr 1916-Jul 1916 (closing date unknown/104 performances). Cast: John Barrymore (as "William Falder"), F. Cecil Butler, Wallis Clark, Cecil Clovelly (as "Sweedle"), Charles Dodsworth, Charles Francis, Walter Geer, Rupert Harvey, O.P. Heggie (as "Robert Cokeson"), Warren F. Hill, Lester Lonergan, Thomas Louden, John S. O'Brien, Henry Stephenson (as "James How"), Ashton Tonge, Watson White (as "Cowley") [Broadway debut]. Produced by Corey-Williams-Riter Inc.
- (1917) Stage: Wrote "The Little Man", produced on Broadway.
- (1916) Stage: Wrote "The Fugitive", produced on Broadway.
- (1920) Stage: Wrote "The Skin Game", produced on Broadway. Comedy/tragedy. Directed by Basil Dean. Bijou Theatre: 20 Oct 1920-Mar 1921 (closing date unknown/176 performances). Cast: Marsh Allen (as "Mr. Hillcrist"), Tracy Barrow (as "Mr. Jackman"), Arthur Bowyer (as "Dawker"), Robertson Braine (as "Rolf"), Lillian Brennard (as "Mrs. Jackman"), Cynthia Brooke (as "Mrs. Hillcrist"), Ernest Cossart (as "An Auctioneer"), Shirley Gale (as "Anna"), Douglas Garden (as "The First Stranger"), N. St. Clair Hales (as "Charles"), Herbert Lomas (as "Mr. Hornblower"), Joan MacLean (as "Jill"), Horace Pollock (as "Fellows"), H. Ashton Tonge (as "A Country Solicitor" / "The Second Stranger'), Josephine Victor' (as "Chloe"). Produced by William A. Brady. NOTE: Filmed as The Skin Game (1931).
- (1922) Stage: Wrote "The Pigeon", produced on Broadway. Fantasy (revival).
- (1922) Stage: Wrote "Loyalties". Drama. Written by John Galsworthy. Directed by Basil Dean. Gaiety Theatre: 27 Sep 1922- Apr 1923 (closing date unknown/220 performances). Cast: Felix Aylmer (as "Gen. Canynge"), Diana Bourbon (as "Mabel"), Henry Carvill (as "Treisure" / "Ricardos"), James Dale (as "Ferdinand De Lewis"), Lawrence Hanray (as "Lord St. Erth" / "Jacob Twisden"; Broadway debut), Henry Morrell (as "A Constable" / "A Club Footman" / "Edward Graviter"), Charles Quartermaine (as "Capt. Ronald Dancy, D.S.O."), Wilfrid Seagram (as "Maj. Colford"), Jeannette Sherwin (as "Margaret Orme"), H.G. Stoker (as "Charles Winsor"), Victor Tandy (as "Insp. Dede" / "Gilman"), Deering Wells (as "Augustus Borring, A Young Clerk"), Cathryn Young (as "Lady Adela"). Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1923) Stage: Wrote "Windows", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Garrick Theatre: 8 Oct 1923-Dec 1923 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: George Baxter (as "Blunter"), Alice Belmore (as "Cook"), Frieda Inescort (as "Mary March"), Moffat Johnston (as "Geoffrey March"), Kenneth MacKenna (as "Johnny March"), Phyllis Povah (as "Faith Bly"), Henry Travers (as "Mr. Bly"), Francis Tweed (as "Mr. Barnabas"), Helen Westley (as "Joan March"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1924) Stage: Wrote "Old English", produced on Broadway. Directed by Edward L. Swete. Ritz Theatre: 23 Dec 1924-Jun 1925 (closing date unknown/183 performances). Cast: George Arliss (as "Sylvanus Heythorp, Chairman of "The Island Navigation Company"), Norman Cannon (as "Mr. Brownbee, a Credito of old Heythorp"), Horace Cooper (as "Mr. Westgate, Shareholder of the Company"), Stafford Dickens (as "Charles Ventnor, a Solicitor"; Broadway debut), Cecile Dixon (as "Phyllis, Larne's Child"), Thomas Donnelly (as "Mr. Appleby, Shareholder of the Company"), Frederick Earle (as "Gilbert Farney, Secretary of the same"), Edmund George (as "Clerk, of "The Island Navigation Company"), Henrietta Goodwin (as "Letty, the Larnes' Maid-of-all-work"), Ethel Griffies (as "Adela Heythorp, Daughter of old Heythorp"), Langford Hayes (as "A Director"), James Hughes (as "Mr. Batterson, Shareholder of the Company"), Mollie Johnson (as "Molly, his Daughter's House-maid"), Irby Marshall (as "Rosamund Larne. a connection of Old Heythorp"), Henry Morrell (as "Meller, old Heythorp's Body-servant"), Ivan F. Simpson (as "Joseph Pillin, Senior Partner of Pillin & Son"), Murray Stephens (as "Mr. Winkley, Shareholder of the Company"), Arthur Villars (as "Mr. Budgeon, Shareholder of the Company"), Deering Wells (as "Bob Pillin, of Pillan & Son, shipowners"), Victor Weston (as "Clerk, of "The Island Navigation Company"), George Wolcott (as "Jock, Larne's Child"), Eustace Wyatt (as "Clergyman, another Creditor"). Produced by Winthrop Ames and Edward L. Swete.
- (1925) Stage: Wrote "A Bit of Love", produced on Broadway. Drama. Directed by Robert Milton. 48th Street Theatre: 12 May 1925-May 1925 (closing date unknown/4 performances). Cast: St. Clair Bayfield (as "Trustaford"), John Brewer (as "Sol Potter"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Jarland"), Charles Cheltenham (as "Villager"), Roy Cochrane (as "Morse"), Alice Fischer (as "Mrs. Bradmere"), Harry Hatch (as "Villager"), 'O.P Heggie' (as "Michael Strangway"), Alf Helton (as "Burlacombe"), Chrystal Herne (as "Beatrice Strangway"), 'Philip Leigh (as "Clyst"), Joseph Macaulay (as "Freman"), Beryl Mercer (as "Mrs. Burlacombe"), Herbert Ranson (as "Jim Bere"), Edward Rigby (as "Godleigh"), Ernest Rowan (as "Jack Cremer"), Rufus Barner (as "Villager"). Produced by The Actors Theatre.
- (1927) Stage: Wrote "Escape", produced on Broadway. Directed by Winthrop Ames. Booth Theatre: 26 Oct 1927-Mar 1928 (closing date unknown/173 performances).
- (1928) Stage: Wrote "The Silver Box", produced on Broadway. Comedy (revival). Directed by Laurence Hanray. Morosco Theatre: 17 Jan 1928-Feb 1928 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Lance Burritt (as "Livens"), Charles Cardom, James Dale (as "Jones"), J. Malcolm Dunn (as "Roper"), Isobel Elsom (as "Mrs. Jones"), Mary Forbes, Florence Guise, Charles Hampden, Sheelagh Hayes (as "An Unknown Lady"), Halliwell Hobbes (as "John Barthwick, M.P."), Louise MacKintosh, Isidore Marcid, Gerald Rogers, Arthur Stenning, Martin Walker, Eddie Wragge, Elizabeth Wrangle [credited as Elizabeth Wragge] (as "Little Girl"). Produced by Henry Baron.
- (1931) Stage: Wrote "The Roof", produced on Broadway [final Broadway credit]. Drama. Directed / produced by Charles Hopkins. Charles Hopkins Theatre: 30 Oct 1931-Nov 1931 (closing date unknown/28 performances). Cast: Hajop Boyajian, Ralph Cataly, Robert Cummings (credited as Blade Stanhope Conway; as "The Hon. Reggie Fanning"; Broadway debut), Ernest Cossart (as "Mr. Beeton"), Jaques C. Dancy, Austin Fairman (as "Baker"), Anne Forrest, Charlotte Granville (as "Mrs. Beeton"), Henry Hull (as "A Young Man"), Vernon Kelso (as "Brice"), Edouard La Roche, Helen Rowland, Selena Royle (as "A Nurse"), William Sauter, Vernon Steele, Frances Tannehill (as "Brye"), Charlotte Walker.
- (1920) Novel: "The Forsyte Saga: Awakening." ASIN: B000JQU834. Publisher: Public Domain Books. Amazon digital services (Kindle) edition available. NOTE: This was the third in the trilogy about Galsworthy's family, the Forsytes. The series enjoyed a resurgence in popularity as a result of the 26-part 1967 BBC series, "The Forsyte Saga" (1967).
- (1920) Novel: "In Chancery".
- (1918) Novel: 'Indian Summer of a Forsyte".
- (1928) Novel: "Swan Song".
- (1927) Novel: "Passers By".
- (1926) Novel: "The Silver Spoon". NOTE: This is the fifth novel in his saga of the Forsyte family.
- (1927) Novel: "A Silent Wooing".
- (1924) Stage: "Hail and Farewell", performed off-Broadway.NOTE: Filmed as The White Monkey (1925).
- (1934) Stage: Stage: Wrote "The Little Man," performed in a People's National Theatre production at the Little Theatre on John Street in London, England, and at the Adelphi Theatre in London, England, with Sybil Thorndike, Finlay Currie, Andrew Leigh, Robert Speaight, Edward Wheatley and Arthur Wontner in the cast. Nancy Price was director.
- (3/12/26-10/26) Stage: Wrote "Escape," performed at the Ambassadors Theatre in London, England, with Leon M. Lion, Nicholas Hannen, Ursula Jeans, Frank Freeman, Molly Kerr, Phyllis Konstam, Ann Codrington, Margaret Halstan, Ethel Manning, Paul Gill, Stafford Hilliard, Betty Astell and Auston Trevor in the cast.
- (1909) Novel: "Fraternity." 288 pages. Publisher: Kessinger Publishing, LLC. ISBN-10: 116931256X. ISBN-13: 978-1169312562.
- (1908) Novel: "A Commentary." 276 pages. ISBN-10: 1272877027. ISBN-13: 978-1272877026. Nabu Press (21 Jan 2012).
- (1907) Novel: "The Country House." ASIN: B002RKRTUA. Publisher: Public Domain Books. NOTE: Free Kindle edition available.
- (1921) Novel: "To Let." ASIN: B002RKRQ3K. Publisher: Public Domain Books. NOTE: A continuation or epilogue to "The Forsyte Saga." Primary criticism is that it requires the reader to have read the Forsyte trilogy and that the most recent digital (Kindle) free edition is a scanned version, containing numerous typos that detract from the quality of the original work.
- (1906) Novel: "The Forsyte Saga: The Man of Property." ASIN: B005CIREYA. 388 pages. Publisher: Public Domain Books. Amazon digital services (Kindle) edition available. FQ Books Edition (6 Jul 2010): ASIN: B003VS0HFG. 254 pages. NOTE: This was the first in the trilogy about Galsworthy's family, the Forsytes.
- (2003) Stage: Wrote "The Mob," performed at the Orange Tree in London, England, with Kevin Doyle, Bernard Holley and Robert Benfield in the cast.
- (2007) Stage: Wrote "The Skin Game," performed at the Orange Tree Theatre in London, England, with Geoffrey Beevers, Lynn Farleigh, Graham Seed, Richard Hollis and Clive Francis in the cast. Sam Walters was director.
- (12/10/1912) Stage: Wrote "Justice," performed in a Hull House Players production at the Fine Arts Theatre in Chicago, IL. Laura Dainty Pelham was director. NOTE: Former American President Theodore Roosevelt attended this performance.
- (1941) Stage: Wrote "Old English," performed at the Cape Playhouse in Dennis, MA, with C. Aubrey Smith in the cast.
- (1941) Stage: Wrote "Old English," performed at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, NJ, with C. Aubrey Smith in the cast. Frank Carrington and Agnes Morgan were directors.
- (7/15/35) Stage: Wrote "The Silver Box," performed at the Ogunquit Playhouse in Ogunquit, ME, with Ethel Barrymore (also director) in the cast.
- (3/23/22-4/1/22) Stage: Wrote "Strife," performed in a Pasadena Community Playhouse production at the Savoy Theatre in Pasadena, CA. Gilmor Brown was director and artistic director.
- (6/7/27-6/9/27) Stage: Wrote "Justice," performed at the Pasadena Playhouse in Pasadena, CA. Gilmor Brown was artistic director. Maurice Wells was director.
- (1900) Novel: "Villa Rubein".
- (1910) Novel: "A Motley".
- (1915) Novel: "The Little Man".
- (1906) Novel: "The Man of Property".
- (1913) Novel: "The Dark Flower".
- (1918) Novel: "Five Tales".
- (1897) Novel: "From the Four Winds".
- (1919) Novel: "The Burning Spear".
- (1917) Novel: "Beyond".
- (1915) Novel: "The Freelands".
- (1919) Novel: "Saint's Progress".
- (1898) Novel: "Jocelyn".
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