- (1921) Novel: "The Wrong Twin".
- (1903) Playwright: "The Spenders".
- (1909) Stage: Wrote (w/Booth Tarkington) "Springtime". produced on Broadway. Based on a short story by George Bronson Howard. Music by Harry Rowe Shelley. Directed / produced by Frederic Thompson. Liberty Theatre: 19 Oct 1909-Dec 1909 (closing date unknown/79 performances). Cast: Joseph Brennan, Sallie Brent, Earle Browne, Charles Butler, Bijou Fernandez, Samuel Forrest, William Harrigan, Edwin Holland, Helen Lindroth, William B. Mack, Mabel Taliaferro, Alice Parke Warren. NOTE: Filmed as Springtime (1914).
- (1908) Stage: Wrote (w/Booth Tarkington) "Cameo Kirby", produced on Broadway. NOTE: Filmed as Cameo Kirby (1923).
- Novel: "Oh, Doctor!". NOTE: Filmed as Oh, Doctor! (1925).
- (1922) Stage: Wrote source material (novel) for "Merton of the Movies", produced on Broaway. Comedy. Written by George S. Kaufman and Marc Connelly. Directed by Hugh Ford (also co-producer). Cort Theatre: 13 Nov 1922-20 Oct 1923 (392 performances). Cast: Mel. A. Buser (as "The Cross-Eyed Man"), Lewis Buxton (as "Weller's Cameraman"), Romaine Callender (as "J. Sloane Henshaw"), E.J. Chatterly (as "Sigmund's Cameraman"), Alexander Clark Jr. (as "Harold Parmalee"), Albert Cowles (as "Sigmund's Cameraman"), A.L. Ehrman (as "Mr. Patterson"), Edward M. Favor (as "Amos G. Gashwiler"), Gladys Feldman (as "Beulah Baxter"), Agnes Findlay (as "Felice"), Mary Elizabeth Forbes (as "Muriel Mercer"), Tom Hadaway (as "Weller Glenn Hunter (as "Merton Gill"), Billy Janney (as "Jimmy"), Wilton Lackaye Jr. (as "Eddie"), Joseph Lothian (as "Weller's Cameraman"), Edwin Maxwell (as "Sigmund Rosenblatt" / "The Man from Bigart"), Bert Melville (as "Elmer Huff"), Saul Mile (as "Max"), J.K. Murray (as "Lester Montague"), Florence Nash (as "The Montague Girl"), Esther Pinch (as "Tessie Kerns"), Lynn Pratt (as "A Mysterious Visitor"), W.H. Seniro (as "Charley Harper"), Clara Sidney (as "Mrs. Patterson"), G.S. Spelvin (as "A Sheik"), Yashi Turi (as "Togo"), John Webster (as "Jeff Baird"), Lucille Webster (as "Casting Director"). Understudy: Maurice Burke. Co-produced by George C. Tyler. NOTE: Filmed as Merton of the Movies (1947), Merton of the Movies (1924), Merlene of the Movies (1981)), Merton of the Movies (1947))).
- (1915) Novel: "Ruggles of Red Gap". NOTE: Filmed as Ruggles of Red Gap (1935), Ruggles of Red Gap (1957), Ruggles of Red Gap (1918), Fancy Pants (1950).
- (1910) Stage: Wrote "Getting a Polish", performed on Broadway. Written by Booth Tarkington and Harry Leon Wilson. Wallack's Theatre: 7 Nov 1910-17 Dec 1910 (48 performances). Cast: May Irwin (as "Mrs. Jim"), Frank Bixby, J.T. Chaillee, Rosalind Coghlan, George Fawcett, Charles A. Gay, Florence Glenn, Mary V. Hall, John Junior, Edward Leibert, John Daly Murphy, Albert Roccardi, Mary K. Taylor, Raymond Watson. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (4/22/77-6/4/77) Stage: Wrote source material (novel) for "Merton of the Movies," adapted by George S. Kaufman and Marc Connelly at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles, CA, with Richard Thomas in the cast. Burt Shevelove was director.
- (1916) Novel: "Somewhere in Red Gap".
- (1909) Novel: Wrote (w/Booth Tarkington) "If I Had Money".
- (1909) Novel: Wrote (w/Booth Tarkington) "Foreign Exchange".
- (1904) Novel: "The Seeker".
- (1908) Novel: Wrote (w/Booth Tarkington) "The Man from Home". NOTES: (1) Filmed as The Man from Home (1914), The Man from Home (1922). (2) Turned into a play, "The Man from Home: A Play".
- (1919) Playwright: "Life".
- (1903) Novel: "The Lions of the Lord, a Tale of the Old West".
- (1894) Novel: "Zigzag: Tales from the East to the West".
- (1919) Novel: "Ma Pettingill".
- (1905) Novel: "The Boss of Little Arkady".
- (1907) Novel: "Ewing's Lady".
- (1919) Novel: Wrote (w/Booth Tarkington) "The Gibson Upright".
- (1902) Novel: "The Spenders: A Tale of the Third Generation"). NOTE: Filmed as The Spenders (1921).
- (1913) Novel: Wrote "Bunker Bean". NOTE: Filmed as His Majesty, Bunker Bean (1918), His Majesty, Bunker Bean (1925), Bunker Bean (1936).
- (1910) Novel: Wrote (w/Booth Tarkington) "Your Humble Servant".
- (6/22/43-6/27/43) Stage: Wrote (w/Booth Tarkington) "The Man from Home," performed in the Ninth Midsummer Festival (Booth Tarkington Plays) production at the Pasadena Playhouse in Pasadena, CA. Gilmor Brown was artistic director. Onslow Stevens was director.
- (1896 - 1902) Editor of "Puck", a national humor magazine.
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