- (1900 - 1924) Active on Broadway [credited as Eleanor Robson] in the following productions:
- (1906) Stage Play: Merely Mary Ann. Comedy (revival).
- (1900) Stage Play: Arizona. Drama. Written by Augustus Thomas. Scenic Design by Walter Burridge and Charles H. Ritter. Herald Square Theatre: 10 Sep 1900- 14 Jan 1901 (140 performances). Cast: Sidney Ainsworth (as "Lt. Young"), Adora Andrews (as "Lena Kellar"), Louise Closser Hale [credited as Louise Closser] (as "Miss McCullagh") [Broadway debut), Mattie Earle (as "Mrs. Canby"), Stephen B. French (as "Sam Wong"), Malcolm Gunn (as "Lt. Hallack"), Walter Hale (as "Capt. Hodgman"), Edwin Holt (as "Col. Bonham") [Broadway debut], Jane Kennark (as "Estrella Bonham"), George Morehead (as "Maj. Cochran"), Thomas Oberle (as "Sgt. Kellar"), George O'Donnell (as "Dr. Fenlon"), Theodore Roberts (as "Henry Canby"), Eleanor Robson Belmont [credited as Eleanor Robson] (as "Bonita Canby") [Broadway debut], Edgar Selwyn (as "Tony Mostano"), Vincent Serrano (as "Lt. Denton") [Broadway debut]. Produced by Kirke La Shelle and Fred R. Hamlin. Note: Filmed by All-Star Features as Arizona (1913), substantially rewritten as Arizona (1918) as a Douglas Fairbanks feature and by Columbia Pictures as Arizona (1931) as a John Wayne vehicle.
- (1900) Stage Play: The Land of Heart's Desire/In a Balcony.
- (1901) Stage Play: Unleavened Bread.
- (1901) Stage Play: The Land of Heart's Desire/In a Balcony (Revival).
- (1901) Stage Play: A Gentleman of France. Drama/romance. Written by Harriet Ford. Based on the romance of Stanley Weyman. Directed by H. Kyrle Bellew. and Edmund D. Lyons. Wallack's Theatre: 30 Dec 1901- Apr 1902 (closing date unknown/120 performances). Cast: Frank E. Aiken, E.E. Allen, Charles Barron, H. Kyrle Bellew [credited as Kyrle Bellew] (as "Gaston de Marsac"), Harry Benton, John Blair, Oscar G. Briggs [credited as Oscar Briggs] (Broadway debut), Caroline Butterfield, Simpson Carson, Minna Claussenius, Ada Dwyer, John Flood, Janet Ford, Clarence Handyside, Howell Hansel, Samuel Lewis, J.R. Martin, George Morton, Charles Randall, Eleanor Robson Belmont [credited as Eleanor Robson] (as "Mlle. de la Vire"), Edgar Selwyn, T.L. Sill, Charlotte Walker. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1902) Stage Play: Audrey. Drama. Written by Harriet Ford and E.F. Boddington. Based on the novel by Mary Johnston. Special music composed by Henry K. Hadley. Directed by Eugene Wiley Presbrey. Hoyt's Theatre: 24 Nov 1902- Jan 1903 (closing date unknown/44 performances). Cast: Freeman Barnes, Constance Berry, Newton Brown, W.E. Butterfield, Argyle Campbell, Anne Caverley, John Dean, Ada Dwyer, Geraldine Furlong, Gertrude Gheen, T.M. Hunter, Selene Johnson, Frank Lamb, Charles Marriott, James O'Neill, Frederick Perry, Lauren Rees, Helen Robertson, Forrest Robinson, Eleanor Robson Belmont [credited as Eleanor Robson], William Story, H.B. Warner [credited as Harry Warner] (Broadway debut), James E. Wilson, George Woodward. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1903) Stage Play: Romeo and Juliet. Tragedy (revival). Written by 'William Shakespeare (I). Directed by Eugene Wiley Presbrey. Knickerbocker Theatre: 25 May 1903- Jun 1903 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Edwin Arden, F.C. Bangs, H. Kyrle Bellew [credited as Kyrle Bellew] (as "Romeo, son of Montague"), Edmund Breese, George Clarke, T.M. Hunter, Franklyn Hurleigh, Mrs. W.G. Jones (as "Nurse to Juliet"), John E. Kellerd, A.W. Mafflin, E.J. Norris, Eben Plympton(as "Mercutio, kinsman to the prince and friend to Romeo"), W.V. Ranous, Forrest Robinson, Eleanor Robson Belmont [credited as Eleanor Robson] (as "Juliet, daughter to Capulet"), William H. Thompson (as "Friar Laurence, a Franciscan"). Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1903) Stage Play: Merely Mary Ann. Drama. Written by Israel Zangwill. Featuring the song "Kiss Me Good-Night, Dear" by Malcolm Williams. Directed by Charles Cartwright. Garden Theatre (moved to The Criterion Theatre from 15 Feb 1904- unknown, then moved to The Garrick Theatre from 4 Apr 1904- close): 28 Dec 1903- May 1904 (closing date unknown/148 performances). Cast: Laura Hope Crews (as "Rosie") [Broadway debut], Edwin Arden, Herbert Carr, Julia Dean, Frank Doane, Ada Dwyer, Margaret Fuller, Thomas Graham, William Hackett [credited as William A. Hackett], Ida Lewis, Kate Pattison Selton, Henry Robinson, Eleanor Robson Belmont [credited as Eleanor Robson] , Marguerite St. John, Arthur Story, Ethel Strickland, Mabel Strickland. Produced by Liebler & Co. Notes: (1) Play was considered a huge hit by the standards of the day. (2) Filmed by Fox Film Corporation as Merely Mary Ann (1916), by Fox Film Corporation as Merely Mary Ann (1920), and by Fox Film Corporation as Merely Mary Ann (1931) as a Janet Gaynor vehicle.
- (1905) Stage Play: She Stoops to Conquer. Comedy (revival). Written by Oliver Goldsmith. New Amsterdam Theatre: 17 Apr 1905- May 1905 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: H. Kyrle Bellew (as "Young Marlow"), H.A. Bethuy, Mrs. Charles Calvert (as "Mrs. Hardcastle"), J.E. Dodson (as "Diggory"), Sidney Drew (as "Tony Lumpkin"), Thomas F. Graham, William Hackett [credited as William A. Hackett], George Holland, Willard Howe, Isabel Irving (as "Constance Neville"), Louis James (as "Squire Hardcastle"), William Little, Herbert Mainwaring, Richard Meeking, Frank Mills (as "George Hastings"), Fred Quimby, Eleanor Robson Belmont [credited as Eleanor Robson] (as "Kate Hardcastle"), Olive Wyndham. Produced by Liebler & Co. Note: Play has long been popular in Britain, filmed many times from as early as She Stoops to Conquer (1914) (a UK short by London Film Productions], and another UK short by British & Colonial Kinematograph Company [distributed in Europe by Walturdaw] as She Stoops to Conquer (1923). All subsequent productions have been produced for UK television, most recently in 2012 on National Theatre Live.
- (1906) Stage Play: Nurse Marjorie. Comedy. Written by Israel Zangwill. Directed by Charles Cartwright. Liberty Theatre: 3 Oct 1906- Nov 1906 (closing date unknown/49 performances). Cast: A.G. Andrews, Essex Dane, Ada Dwyer, Reuben Fax, Eleanor Robson Belmont [credited as Eleanor Robson], Leslie Kenyon, Ernest Manwaring, Eleanor Robson Belmont [credited as Eleanor Robson], Hassard Short, H.B. Warner, Kate Denin Wilson. Produced by Liebler & Co. Note: Filmed by Realart Pictures Corporation as Nurse Marjorie (1920) [film was re-released in 1926 by Woolf & Freedman Film Service].
- (1906) Stage Play: Susan in Search of a Husband/A Tenement Tragedy [joint production]. Liberty Theatre: 20 Nov 1906- Dec 1906 (closing date unknown/14 performances). Susan in Search of a Husband. Comedy. Written by Eugene Wiley Presbrey. Adapted from a story by Jerome K. Jerome. Cast: A.G. Andrews, Essex Dane, Ada Dwyer, Reuben Fax, Isabel Irving, Ernest Mainwaring [final Broadway role], Eleanor Robson Belmont[credited as Eleanor Robson] (as "Susan"), H.B. Warner. A Tenement Tragedy. Written by Clotilde Graves. Cast: Frederick de Belleville [credited as Frederic de Belleville], Ada Dwyer, Thomas Graham, Emily Rigl, Eleanor Robson, H.B. Warner. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1906) Stage Play: The Girl Who Has Everything. Comedy.
- (1907) Stage Play: Salomy Jane. Melodrama/romance. Written by Paul Armstrong. Based on "Salomy Jane's Kiss" by Bret Harte. Directed by Hugh Ford. Liberty Theatre: 19 Jan 1907- 4 May 1907 (122 performances). Cast: Ruth Abbott Wells, Holbrook Blinn, Earl Browne, Ralph Delmore, Ada Dwyer, Reuben Fax, Frances Golden Fuller, Master Donald Gallaher, Henry Harmon, Eleanor Robson Belmont[credited as Eleanor Robson] (as "Salomy Jane"), James Seeley, Horace Vinton, H.B. Warner, Stephen Wright. Produced by Liebler & Co. Note: Filmed by California Motion Picture Corporation [distributed by Alco Film Corporation] as Salomy Jane (1914), by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as Salomy Jane (1923), and by Fox Film Corporation as Wild Girl (1932).
- (1909) Stage Play: The Dawn of a Tomorrow.
- (1923) Stage Play: In the Next Room. Melodrama. Written by Eleanor Robson Belmont [credited as Eleanor Robson] (final Broadway credit) and Harriet Ford. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Vanderbilt Theatre: 27 Nov 1923- Apr 1924 (closing date unknown/159 performances). Cast: Arthur Albertson (as "James Godfrey"), Morris Ankrum (as "Rogers"), Edward Butler, Mary Kennedy, Claude King (as "Felix Armand"), William J. Kline, Wright Kramer (as "Philip Vantine"), Merle Maddern, George Riddell, Leighton Stark (as "Inspector Grady"), Olive Valerie. Produced by Winthrop Ames and Guthrie McClintic. Note: Filmed by Warner Bros. as The Case of the Black Parrot (1941).
- (July 1 to 10, 1926) Harriet Ford and her play, "In The Next Room," was performed in a Pasadena Playhouse production at the Pasadena Playhouse in Pasadena, California. Maurice Wells was director. Gilmor Brown was artistic director.
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