- (1910 - 1925) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1910) Stage Play: Get-Rich-Quick Wallingford. Written by George M. Cohan. Music by George M. Cohan. Additional music by Leo Fall, Karl Hoschna and Egbert Van Alstyne. Musical Director: Max Schmidt. Based on the novel by George Randolph Chester. Directed by George M. Cohan. Gaiety Theatre (moved to George M. Cohan's Theatre from 13 Feb 1911- close): 19 Sep 1910- unknown (424 performances). Cast: Ida Lee Caston, Spencer Charters (as "Tom Donahue, A Pinkerton Detective"), Edward Ellis (as "Horace Daw/Blackie"), Daniel Gold, Grace Goodall, Hale Hamilton (as "J. Rufus Wallingford, A Get-Rich-Quick Man"), Fletcher Harvey (as "E.B. Lott, of the Midland Valley Lines") [Broadway debut], George K. Henery, Horace James, J.C. Marlowe, Frederick Maynard, Grant Mitchell (as "Edward Lamb, The Head Clerk"), Scamp Montgomery, Russell Pincus, Purnell Pratt (as "Clint Harkins, Reporter on the Blade), Frances Ring (as "Fannie Jasper, A Stenographer), Frederick Seaton, Daniel Sullivan, Marie Taylor, Fay Wallace. Produced by George M. Cohan and Sam Harris. Note: Filmed by Cosmopolitan Productions [distributed by Paramount Pictures/Famous Players-Lasky Corp.] as Get-Rich-Quick Wallingford (1921).
- (1916) Stage Play: Cheating Cheaters. Written by Max Marcin. Directed by Franklin Underwood [direction assumed by Edgar J. MacGregor during production run]. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 9 Aug 1916- Apr 1917 (closing date unknown/286 performances). Cast: Martin Alsop (as "George Brockton"), Arthur Barry, Edouard Durand (as "Antonio Verdi"), Winifred Harris, Fletcher Harvey, Riley Hatch, Cyril Keightley, Robert McWade (as "Steve Wilson"), Frank Monroe, William Morris, Gypsy O'Brien, William J. Phinney, Marjorie Rambeau (as "Nan Carey, alias Ruth Brockton"), Anne Sutherland. Produced by A.H. Woods. Note: Filmed by Select Pictures Corporation as Cheating Cheaters (1919) [believed to be lost as of May 2014], by Universal Pictures as Cheating Cheaters (1927), a Betty Compson vehicle, and by Universal Pictures as Cheating Cheaters (1934).
- (1918) Stage Play: Carmen. Music by Georges Bizet. Libretto by Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halévy. Based on the novella by Prosper Merimee. Park Theatre: 30 Sep 1918- 12 Apr 1919 (unknown performances). Cast: Blanche Da Costa, Yvonne De Treville, Carl Formes, Walter Greene, John Hand, Fletcher Harvey, Riccardo Martin, Ruth Miller, Florence Mulford, John Phillips, Franklin Riker, Bianca Saroya, Henri Scott, Marguerita Sylva, Maggie Teyte, Howard White, Harvey Wilson. Produced by The Society of American Singers.
- (1918) Stage Play: The Voice of McConnell. Comedy. Written by George M. Cohan. Music by George M. Cohan. Lyrics by George M. Cohan. Musical Director: George Lydwig. Additional music by Ernest R. Ball, Chauncey Olcott, Monte Carlo and Alma M. Sanders. Additional lyrics by Rida Johnson Young and Richard W. Pascoe. Directed by Sam Forrest and George M. Cohan. Manhattan Opera House: 25 Dec 1918- 18 Jan 1919 (30 performances). Cast: Constance Beaumar (as "Miss Collinsby"), Alice Chapin (as "Mrs. Dwight McNamara"), Roy Cochrane (as "Hendricks"), Harold De Becker (as "Douglas Graham"), Bert Dunlap (as "Mr. Smithers"), Edward Fielding (as "J. Austin Severard"), Agnes Gildea (as "Miss Hemingway"), Fletcher Harvey (as "Mr. Jackson"), Mae Jennings (as "Miss Drake/Guest"), Gilda Leary (as "Evelyn McNamara"), Edna Leslie (as "Miss Giles"), Elsie Lyding (as "Susan"), Wilda Maria Moore (as "Miss Embree"), Edward O'Connor (as "Barry"), Chauncey Olcott (as "Tom O'Connell"), Ruth Price (as "Guest/Miss Copeland"), Arthur Shields (as "Bell Boy/Guest"), Richard Tabor (as "Harry McNamara"), David V. Wall (as "Mr. Sullivan"), H.P. Woodley (as "Waiter"). Produced by Cohan & Harris.
- (1919) Stage Play: She Would and She Did. Comedy. Written by Mark Reed. Directed by John Cromwell. Vanderbilt Theatre: 11 Sep 1919- Oct 1919 (closing date unknown/36 performances). Cast: John Adair (as "Wallie Byrnes"), Edward Arnold (as "Charlie Vincent"), Ned Burton, May Collins, John Cromwell (as "Frank Goward"), Lemist Esler (as "Harley Hunt"), Grace George (as "Frances Nesmith"), Fletcher Harvey (as "Dr. Coburn"), Esther Howard, Arthur Keith, George MacQuarrie (as "Fisher Brigham"), John Stokes, Isabel West, Cora Witherspoon (as "Elsie Goward").
- (1920) Stage Play: The Meanest Man in the World. Comedy. Written by Augustin MacHugh. Based on a skit by Everett Ruskay. Directed by John Meehan. Hudson Theatre: 12 Oct 1920-Apr 1921 (closing date unknown/202 performances). Cast: George M. Cohan (as "Richard Clarke"), Elwood Fleet Bostwick (as "Frederick Leggitt"), Howard Boulden (as "Andy Oatman"), George W. Callahan, Hugh Cameron, Alice Chapin, Marion Coakley, Leo Donnelly (as "Carlton Childs"), Ruth Donnelly (as "Kitty Crockett"), John T. Doyle, Fletcher Harvey (as "Franklyn Fielding"), Leona Hogarth, Norval Keedwell (as "Ned Stephens"), Peter Raymond, Ralph Sipperly (as "Bart Nash"). Note: Filmed by Sol Lesser Productions [distributed by Associated First National Pictures] as The Meanest Man in the World (1923), and by Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation as The Meanest Man in the World (1943).
- (1925) Stage Play: Hell's Bells. Comedy. Written by Barry Connors. Directed by John Hayden. Wallack's Theatre: 26 Jan 1925- May 1925 (closing date unknown/120 performances). Cast: Humphrey Bogart (as Jimmy Todhunter"), Shirley Booth (as "Nan Winchester") [Broadway debut], James Cherry, Camilla Crume, Violet Dunn, Eddie Garvie, Joseph Greene, Fletcher Harvey (as "Dr. Bushnell") [final Broadway role], Virginia Howell, Olive May, Ernest Pollock, Clifton Self, Converse Tyler, Tom H. Walsh. Produced by Herman Grantvoort.
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