- (1910) Stage: Wrote "The Heights", produced on Broadway. Savoy Theatre: 31 Jan 1910-Feb 1910 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Hugo Baldici, J.H. Benrimo [credited as J. Harry Benrimo], Mrs. Charles G. Craig, Frank Keenan, Hilda Keenan, Willette Kershaw, Frank Mills. Produced by Henry B. Harris.
- (1919) Stage: Wrote "A Good Bad Woman", produced on Broadway. Directed by Richard Bennett. Harris Theatre: 8 Apr 1919-May 1919 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: Robert Edeson, Margaret Illington, Katherine Kaelred, Wilton Lackaye, Amy Ongley, [error], Hazel Turney. Produced by H.H. Frazee.
- (1920) Stage: Wrote book for "Frivolities of 1920", produced on Broadway. Musical revue. Music / lyrics / musical staging by William B. Friedlander. Additional music by Harry Archer [credited as Harry Auracher] and Tom Johnstone. Musical Director: Harry Auracher [credited as Harry Auracher]. Featuring songs by Albert Gumble, Andrew B. Sterling, Henry Lewis, Dave Dreyer and Carl Eckert. Featuring songs with lyrics by Andrew B. Sterling, Henry Lewis, Jack Yellen and Dave Dreyer. Choreographed by Edward P. Bower and Allan K. Foster. Production Supervised / produced by Gilbert M. 'Broncho Billy' Anderson and James C. Huffman. 44th Street Theatre: 8 Jan 1920-Mar 1920 (closing date unknown/61 performances). Cast: Florenz Ames, Dolly Best, Richard Bold, Miriam Breen, Billy Bryant, Thelma Carlton, Colin Chase, Margaret Clayton, Muriel Cort, Helen Crewe, Delle Darnell, Frank Davis, Irene Delroy, Mercedes Demordant, Doraldina, Evelyn Downing, Rae Fields, John Flynn, Bernice Frank, Fay Franklin, Agnes Frawley, Edward Gallagher, Alfred Girard, Will Goodawl, Marie Grenville, Ruby Hart, Merle Hartwell, Carol Haydon, Helen Jackson, Adele Kane, Mildred Kay, May Keefe, Irma King, Nellie Kouns, Sara Kouns, Ruth Kraft, Alice Lawlor, Grace Lee, Henry Lewis, Doris Lloyd, May Lockwood, Josie McRae, Marie Messier, Moss & Fry, Helen Neary, Anita Nenci, Frances Ney, Tom Nip, Fletcher Norton, Charles O'Brien, Dorothy Parker, Emily Proctor, Peggy Purtell, Mabel Roberts, Joseph Rolley, Zelda Santley, Marie Stafford, The Barr Twins, Peggy Van, Jeanne Voltaire, Victorine Voltaire, Vesta Wallace, Vivien West, Alice Winters, Adelaide Winthrop, Betty Wright.
- (1921) Stage: Wrote "Six-Cylinder Love", produced on Broadway. Comedy. Directed by Sam Forrest. Sam H. Harris Theatre: 25 Aug 1921-Jul 1922 (closing date unknown/344 performances). Cast: Berton Churchill (as "George Stapleton"), Howard Hull Gibson, Eleanor Gordon, Harry Hammill, Kenneth Hill, Hedda Hopper (as "Margaret Rogers"), Betty Linley (as "Phyllis Burton"; Broadway debut), Donald Meek (as "Richard Burton"), Ralph Sipperly (as "William Donroy"), Calvin Thomas (as "Bertram Rogers"), Ernest Truex (as "Gilbert Sterling"), Fay Walker (as Mary"), June Walker (as "Marilyn Sterling"). Produced by Sam Harris. NOTES: (1) Filmed as Six Cylinder Love (1923), Six Cylinder Love (1923), The Honeymoon's Over (1939). (2) An early Tom Mix short, _Six Cylinder Love (1917)_qv), is not to be confused with this work. .
- (1922) Stage: Wrote "It's a Boy!" produced on Broadway. Comedy.
- (1923) Stage: Wrote (w/Otto A. Harbach) "Kid Boots", produced on Brodway. Musical comedy ("A Musical Comedy of Palm Beach and Golf"). Music by Harry Tierney. Lyrics by Joseph McCarthy. Musical Direction by Louis Gress. Music orchestrated by Frank E. Barry. Directed by Edward Royce. Earl Carroll Theatre: (moved to The Selwyn Theatre from 1 Sep 1924 to close): 31 Dec 1923-21 Feb 1925 (489 performances). Cast: Eddie Cantor (as "Kid Boots, Caddy Master"), Mary Eaton, Jack Andrews, Dove Atkinson, Robert Barrat (as "Randolph Valentine"), Beth Beri, William Blett, Eugenie Brew, Violet Brown, Marie Callahan, Eleanor Dell, Doris Dixon, Harland Dixon, Elizabeth Dougher, Juanita Erickson, Rass Erickson, Paul Everton, Harry Fender, Joan Gardner, Mareta George, Pearl Germond, Thomas Green, Betty Grey, Eunice Hall, Carlos Hatvary, Jobyna Howland, Sonia Ivanoff, Gladys Keck, Lloyd Keyes, Lily Kimari, Sylvia Kingsley, Edna Locke, Jessie Madison, William Maguire, Alma Mamay, Muriel Manners, Morton McConnachie, Frances McHugh (as "Lady of the Ensemble"), Madelyn Morrisey, Victor Munroe, Dennis Murray, Polly O'Claire, George Olsen, John Patterson, Jessie Payne, Elva Pomfret, Violet Regal, Waldo Roberts, John Rutherford, Evelyn Sayers, Harry Short, Carolyn Smith, Robert Spencer, Diana Stegman, Katharine Stuart, Ayres Tavitt, Mrs. Taylor, Carola Taylor, Ethelind Terry, Blossom Vreeland, Dick Ware, Florence Ware, Rella Winn, Velma Ziegler, Frank Zolt. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. NOTE: (1) This production was one of the biggest hits of the Roaring '20s and is considered by many to be the quintessential Jazz Age Broadway musical. (2) Filmed as Kid Boots (1926).
- (1924) Stage: Wrote (w/Will Rogers) dialogue for "Ziegfeld Follies of 1924" on Broadway. Musical revue. Music by Victor Herbert, Raymond Hubbell, Dave Stamper, Harry Tierney and Dr. Albert Szirmai. Lyrics by Gene Buck and Joseph McCarthy. Musical Director: Victor Baravelle. Music orchestrated by Robert Russell Bennett, Fred Barry, Harold Sanford and Steven Jones. Featuring songs by Fred Mels and Leon Jessel. Featuring songs with lyrics by Laurant Halet. Directed by Julian Mitchell. New Amsterdam Theatre: 24 Jun 1924-7 Mar 1925 (295 performances). Cast included: Bernice Ackerman, Miss Andrea, Lina Basquette, Marian Benda, Miss Boatwright, Arthur Brown, Dorothy Brown, Catherine Burke, Miss Byron, Miss Calame, Cynthia Cambridge, Louise Carlton, Mae Daw, Gloria Dawn, Alma Drange, Giole Eller, Helen Ellsworth, Hilda Ferguson, Irving Fisher, Miss Francis, Evelyn Goodwin, Beryl Halley, Lorette Hurley, Alf James, Miss Johnson, Mary Julian, Kelo Brothers, Dorothy Knapp, Frank Lambert, Lupino Lane, Evelyn Law, Edna Leedom, Dorothy Leet, Marjorie Leet, Tom Lewis, Miss Littlefield, Doris Lloyd, Gladys Loftus, Martha Lorber, Miss Martin, Miss McDonald, Miss McGee, Constance McLaughlin, Mitty and Tillio, Polly Nally, Al Ochs, George Olsen's Band, Ann Pennington, Serge Pernikoff, Martha Pierre, Miss Rasche, Anastasia Reilly, Francis Reveaux, Russian Lilliputians, Phil Ryley, Vivienne Segal, Jack Shannon, Miss Sheldon, Mark Truscott, Brandon Tynan, Miss Wildo, Cricket Wooten. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1925) Stage: Directed (w/Ira Hards / produced / wrote "Twelve Miles Out", produced on Broadway. Melodrama/romance. Playhouse Theatre: 16 Nov 1925-Apr 1926 (closing date unknown/188 performances). Cast: Lance Burritt, F.H. Day, Mildred Florence, Gilbert Girard, Peter Chong Goe, Albert Hackett (as "Charles Raymond, or Chuck, Jane's brother"), Alfred Hese (credited as Alfred A. Hesse), Frank Hilton, James P. Houston, Saul Z. Martell, Howard Morgan, Frank Shannon, John Westley (as "John Burton"), Warren William (as "Gerald Fay").
- (1926) Stage: Wrote / produced / directed "If I Was Rich" on Broadway. Mansfield Theatre: 2 Sep 1926-Nov 1926 (closing date unknown/92 performances). Cast: Joseph Baird (as "Richard McDermott"), G.D. Byron, Charles Dow Clark, Ruth Donnelly (as "Elizabeth McCue"), John T. Doyle, Dorothy Fenron, Howard Hull Gibson (as "Burke"), Joseph Kilgour (as "R. Murray Pembrook"), Joe Laurie, Fred Irving Lewis, Mildred Lillard, May McCabe, Lu McGuire, Mildred McLeod, Al Ochs (as "Henry King"), Vola Price, Isabel Randolph, Raymond Walburn (as "William Dunroy").
- (1926) Stage: Directed "Betsy" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Music by Richard Rodgers. Based on material by Irving Caesar and David Freedman. Lyrics by Lorenz Hart. Musical Director: Victor Baravalle. Featuring songs with lyrics by A. Segal. Choreographed by Sammy Lee. Production Supervised by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. New Amsterdam Theatre: 28 Dec 1926-29 Jan 1927 (39 performances).
- (1928) Stage: Wrote (w/Guy Bolton) material for / directed "Rosalie", produced on Broadway. Musical. Music by George Gershwin and Sigmund Romberg. Lyrics by P.G. Wodehouse and Ira Gershwin. Vocal arrangements by Arthur Johnston. Music orchestrated by Emil Gerstenberger, William Daly, Maurice De Packh, Max Steiner and Hilding Andersson. Choreographed by Seymour Felix. New Amsterdam Theatre: 10 Jan 1928-27 Oct 1928 (335 performances). Cast included: Joan Adaire, Bobbe Arnst, Frank Atwell, Jeanne Audree, Colette Ayers, Mabel Baade, Berkman Bauer, Jack Bauer, Elsie Behrens, Marion Benda, Joey Benton, Caryl Bergman, Claudia Dell, A.P. Kaye, David Labris, Frank Morgan (as "His Royal Highness King Cyril"), Marion Young. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- (1928) Stage: Wrote book for / directed "The Three Musketeers", produced on Broadway. Musical drama. Music by Rudolf Friml. Lyrics by Clifford Grey and P.G. Wodehouse. Based on the story by Alexandre Dumas. Musical Director: Gus Salzer. Musical Staging by Albertina Rasch. Staged by Richard Boleslawski. Lyric Theatre: 13 Mar 1928-15 Dec 1928 (318 performances). Cast: Pirkko Ahlquist (as "Ensemble"), Lester Allen (as "Planchet"), Virginia Beardsley (as "Ensemble"), Yvonne Beaupre as "Ensemble"), Marye Bern (as "Ensemble"), Jeanette Bradley (as "Ensemble"), Harrison Brockbank (as "Innkeeper"), Eleanor Buffington (as "Ensemble"), Edna Bunte (as "Ensemble"), Robert D. Burns (as "Jussac"), Katherine Cavelli (as "Ensemble"), Margaret Clark (as "Ensemble"), John Clarke (as "The Duke of Buckingham"), Nancy Corrigan (as "Ensemble"), Dona Desne Curry (as "Ensemble"), Yvonne D'Arle (as "Anne, Queen of France"), Audrey Davis (as "Ensemble"), Helen Derby (as "Ensemble"), Sylvia Derby (as "Ensemble"), Clarence Derwent (as "Louis XIII"), William Dillon (as "Ensemble"), Marion Dodge (as "Ensemble"), L. Dumbadse (as "Ensemble"), Douglass Dumbrille (as "Athos"), Ernest Ehler (as "Ensemble"), Marguerite Eisele (as "Ensemble"), Byrdeatta Evans (as "Ensemble"), Rose Gale (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Greenley (as "Ensemble"), Evelyn Groves (as "Ensemble"), Emily Hadley (as "Ensemble"), Sally Hadley (as "Ensemble"), William Hagen (as "Ensemble"), Pauline Hall (as "Ensemble"), Libby Hanley (as "Ensemble"), Vida Hanna (as "Ensemble"), Catherine Hayes (as "Aubergiste"), Louis Hector (as "Comte De La Rochefort"), Eve Hellesness (as "Ensemble"), Harriet Hoctor (as "Premiere Danseuse of the Court"), Stanley Howard (as "Ensemble"), Ivan Ismailov (as "Ensemble"), Norman Ives (as "Ensemble"), Harry James (as "Ensemble"), Andy Jochim (as "Cardinal's Guard"), Naomi Johnson (as "Zoe"), Wilma Kaye (as "Ensemble"), Frances Kelly (as "Ensemble"), William Kershaw (as "Brother Joseph"), Dennis King (as "D'Artagnan"), Charles Kirby (as "Ensemble"), John Kline (as "M. De Treville"), Lydia Krushinsky (as "Ensemble"), Julia Lane (as "Ensemble"), Elaine Lank (as "Ensemble"), Randolph Leyman (as "Cardinal's Guard"), Eleanor Little (as "Ensemble"), Joseph Macaulay (as "Aramis"), Glenn Macauley (as "Ensemble"), Mary MacDonald (as "Ensemble"), Lottie Marcy (as Ensemble"), Joan Marren (as "Ensemble"), Marie Merrifield (as "Ensemble"), G. Moore (as "King's Attendant"), Ellen Moray (as "Ensemble"), Ann Moss (as "Ensemble"), Armundi Muzzi (as "Ensemble"), Raymond O'Brien (as "Patrick"), Lucille O'Connor (as "Ensemble"), Vivienne Osborne (as "Lady De Winter"), Nona Otero (as "Ensemble"), Reginald Owen (as "Cardinal Richelieu"), Ivy Palmer (as "Ensemble"), Esther Peters (as "Ensemble"), Detmar Poppen (as "Porthos"), Nora Puntin (as "Ensemble"), Louise Raymond (as "Ensemble"), Elsie Reign (as "Ensemble"), Lee Russell (as "Ensemble"), Vivienne Segal (as "Constance Bonacieux"), Martin Sheppard (as "Ensemble"), Robert Shields (as "Ensemble"), Hilda Steiner (as "Ensemble"), Miriam Stockton (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Sutton (as "Ensemble"), Richard Thornton (as "The Bo'sun"), Mildred Turner (as "Ensemble"), Regina Tushinska (as "Ensemble"), Margaret Valient (as "Ensemble"), A. Van Mueller (as "Ensemble"), Serge Vino (as "Ensemble"), Lillian White (as "Ensemble"), Gertrude Williams (as "Ensemble"), Helen Withers (as "Ensemble"), John Zak (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1929) Stage: Wrote material for / directed "Show Girl", produced on Brodway. Musical comedy. Music by George Gershwin. Lyrics by Ira Gershwin and Gus Kahn. Based the novel by J.P. McEvoy. Musical Director: William Daly. Additional lyrics by Thomas Malie, Sidney Skolsky, W.H. Farrell and Jimmy Durante. Additional music by W.H. Farrell and Jimmy Durante. Featuring songs by J. Little. Musical Staging by Bobby Connolly. Ballets by Albertina Rasch. Ziegfeld Theatre: 2 Jul 1929-5 Oct 1929 (111 performances). Cast: Florence Allen, Virginia Allen, Jean Althan, Selma Althan, Jane Barry, Betty Bassett, Marcia Bell, Eddee Belmont, Caryl Bergman, Hazel Boffinger, Dorothy Bow, Bobby Brodsley, Pamela Bryant, Orine Bryne, Edna Bunte, Emily Burton, Dorothy Carrigan, Doris Carson, Peggy Carthew, Virginia Case, Lew Clayton, Blaine Cordner, Billie Cortez, Cleo Cullen, Dona Desne Curry, Gertrude Dahl, Dolores De Fina, Mildred Defina, Violet Dell, Katherine Downer, Doris Downes, Alma Drange, Sadie Duff, Jimmy Durante (as "Snozzle" / "Sombre Eyes"), Kay English, Caja Eric, Austin Fairman (as "John Milton"), Eddie Foy Jr. (as "Denny Kerrigan"), Noel Francis (as "Peggy Ritz"), Virginia Frank, Vera Frederick, Janet Gibbard, Dolores Grant, Viola Hage, Ruth Hayden, Althea Heinly, Kathryn Hereford, Harriet Hoctor, Maurine Holmes, Eddie Jackson, Andy Jochim, Agatha Johann, Juliette Jones, Ruby Keeler (as "Dixie Dugan"), Mildred Klaw, Renee Landeau, Ada Landis, Camille Lanier, Ruth Love, Nick Lucas, Joseph Macauley, Mary MacDonald, Lottie Marcy, Doris May, Patricia McGrath, Frank McHugh (as "Jimmy Doyle"), Dorothy Morgan, Howard Morgan, Barbara Newberry, Evelyn Nichols, Dore Nodine, Lucille O'Connor, Pat O'Keefe, Georgia Payne, Lois Peck, Leonia Pennington, Vivian Porter, Beatrice Powers, Dolores Ray, Louise Raymond, Dorothy Ryan, Blanche Satchell, Matthew Smith, Wanda Stevenson, Mildred Swunke, Calvin Thomas, Mildred Turner, Sunny Van, Claire Wayne, Jean Wayne, Virginia Whitmore. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- (1930) Stage: Wrote book for / directed "Ripples" on Broadway. Musical comedy. Music by Oscar Levant and Albert Sirmay. Lyrics by Irving Caesar and Graham John. Musical Director: Gus Salzer. Choreographed by William Holbrook and Mary Read. Scenic Design by Joseph Urban. Costume Design by Charles Le Maire and James Reynolds. New Amsterdam Theatre: 11 Feb 1930-29 Mar 1930 (55 performances). Cast: Edward Allen, Sally Anderson, Myrtle Arnette, Peggy Bancroft, Dorothy Bond, Helen Cant, Joe Carroll, Colonel Casper, Mildred Clark, Charles Collins, May Cornes, Arthur Cunningham, Anna May Dennehy, Major Doyle, Carl Duart, Ann East, Floyd English, Ruth Farrar, Eddie Foy Jr. (as "Cpl. Jack Sterling"), Gaby France, Collette Frances, Helene Franz, Evelyn Greer, Kathleen Gue, Helene Haskin, Althea Heinly, Kathryn Hereford, Pearl Hight, Winnie Hollingshead, Elsie Holt, Gladys Holt, Grace Holt, Ann Horace, Charles Hoy, Elizabeth Hoy, Helen Hoy, Marguerite Hoy, Raymond Hunt, Ray Johnson, William Kerschell, Lillian Lorray, Prince Ludwig, Ned Lynn, Charles Mast, Beth Milton, Robert Milton, Frank Packerd, Paul Paulus, Adolph Piccolo, Nickie Pittell, Del Porter, Margaret Porter, Margaret Purple, Marjorie Purple, Ethel Raye, Richard Renaud, Florence Rice, Herbert Rice, Dimples Riede, Lily Riley, Wilma Roeloff, Iris Smith, J. Marshall Smith (as "State Trooper"), Roslyn Smith, Dwight Snyder, Peggy Sowden, Dorothy Stone (as "Ripples"), Fred Stone, Mrs. Fred Stone, Paula Stone, Andrew Tombes (as "John Pillsbury"), Rosalie Trego, Nina Valero, Kathleen VanNoy, Mary Grace Van Noy, Robert Vreeland, Alma Walker, Doris Waterworth, Claire Wayne, Jean Wayne, Hilda Winstanley. Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1930) Stage: Wrote "Smiles", produced on Broadway. Musical comedy.
- (2/8/79-8/12/79) StAGE: Wrote book for "Whoopee!", produced on Broadway. Lyrics by Gus Kahn; music by Walter Donaldson; based on "The Nervous Wreck" by Owen Davis; musical direction by Lynn Crigler; music orchestrations and dance arrangements by Russell Warner; directed by Frank Corsaro; choreography by Dan Siretta. ANTA theatre, New York City (212 total performances, including 8 previews beginning February 8, 1979).
- (1984) Stage: Wrote "The Three Musketeers", produced on Broadway. Musical (revival).
- (1931) Short story: "Don't Bet on Women" (filmed as Don't Bet on Women (1931)).
- (1913) Stage: Wrote "Cost of Living". NOTE: Filmed as Money Means Nothing (1934).
- (1946) Guy Bolton and his operetta, "Rosalie," was performed at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, New Jersey with Andzia Kuzak, Donald Gage, Clarence Nordstrom, Billie Worth, and Albert Carroll in the cast. Frank Carrington and Agnes Morgan were directors.
- (1948) Guy Bolton and his musical, "Rosalie," was performed at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, New Jersey with Evelyn Wyckoff, Donald Gage, and Clarence Nordstrom in the cast. Frank Carrington and Agnes Morgan were directors.
- (Summer 1984) His play, "Whoopee!" was performed in a Kenley Players production in Akron, Ohio with Jay Johnson and Karen Morrow in the cast. John Kenley was artistic director.
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