- (1909) Stage Play: The Boy and the Girl. Musical comedy.
- (1921) Stage Play: Bulldog Drummond. Melodrama. Written by "Sapper." Directed by Fred G. Latham. Knickerbocker Theatre: 26 Dec 1921- May 1922 (closing date unknown/162 performances). Cast: J.W. Albaugh Jr. (as "Hospital Attendants"), G. Tracy Barlow (as "A Chinese Mute"), George Barraud (as "Wm. G. Travers"), St. Clair Bayfield (as "Jas. Handley"), H. Franklyn Bellamy (as "Peter Darrell"), Jas. A. Boshell (as "Brownlow"), Charles Croker-King (as "Dr. Lakington"), Augusta Davis (as "Maid"), Edward M. Favor (as "Denny"), Thomas Gillen (as "Derbyshire"), Wallace Hickman (as "Marcovitch"), J.H. Hunt (as "Hospital Attendants"), Sam Livesey (as "Carl Peterson"), A.E. Matthews (as "Capt. Hugh Drummond"), Wm. W. McNeill (as "W. Hocking"), Geoffrey Millar (as "Algy Longworth"), Mary Robson (as "Irma Peterson"), Dorothy Tetley (as "Phyllis Benton"). Produced by Charles B. Dillingham. Note: Filmed as Bulldog Drummond (1929).
- (1906 - 1934) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1906) Stage Play: The Blue Moon. Musical comedy. Music by Howard Talbot and Paul Rubens. Interpolated songs by Addison Burkhard and Gus Edwards. Book by Harold Ellis. Lyrics by Percy Greenbank and Paul A.N. Rubens. Musical Direction by Albert Krausse. Directed by Frank Smithson. Casino Theatre: 3 Nov 1906- 5 Jan 1907 (76 performances). Cast: La Petite Adelaide (as "Tootsa"), Donald Archer (as "Abdul"), Gertrude Barnes (as "Dancer"), Arthur Bell (as "Clive Mansfield"), Lillian Boardman (as "Dancer"), Loreen Bordman (as "Dancer"), Virginia Cameron (as "Dancer"), Maude Carey (as "Dancer"), Arthur Donaldson (as "The Prince Badahur Sanatsinjhi"), Edward M. Favor (as "Major Vivian Callabone") [Broadway debut], Louis Franklin (as "Hon. Archie May"), Ada Gordon (as "Bingo"), Elizabeth Hawman (as "Dancer"), Dolly Honey (as "Dancer"), Ethel Jackson (as "Chandra Nil"), Lucy Jane Johnstone (as "Chua"), Ruth Julien (as "Dancer"), Richard Knollenberg (as "Hafiz"), John Kuester (as "Mail Carrier"), Grace La Rue (as "Evelyn Ormsby"), Effie LaVarre (as "Dancer"), Lillian Leon (as "Miss Lillian Moore"), Ethel Mostyn (as "Dancer"), Marjorie Nevin (as "Oma"), Clara Palmer (as "Millicent Leroy"), James T. Powers (as "Private Charlie Taylor"), Lillian Rice (as "Dancing Girl/Dancer"), O.W. Risley (as "Beggarman"), Kathryn Robinson (as "Miss Lovehill"), Phil Ryley (as "Moolraj"), Clarence Satchell (as "Private Atkins"), Templar Saxe (as "Captain Jack Ormsby"), Max Sharpe (as "Beggarman"), Edith Sinclair (as "Lady Brabasham"), Dick Temple (as "Bobbie Scott"), Angie Weimers (as "Dancing Girl/Dancer"), Joseph West (as "Leslie Arbuthnot"), Blanche Wilmot (as "Dancer"). Produced by The Shubert Theatrical Company.
- (1907) Stage Play: Fascinating Flora. Musical comedy. Music by Gustav Kerker. Book by R.H. Burnside and Joseph Herbert. Musical Director: Gustav Kerker. Lyrics by R.H. Burnside. Featuring songs by Jerome Kern, A. Baldwin Sloane, Fred Fisher, Harry C. Sutton, John Kemble and Lester W. Keith. Featuring songs with lyrics by John Kemble, Lester W. Keith, Paul West, Jerome Kern, James O'Dea, Jean Lenox and Louis Harrison. Scenic Design by Frank E. Gates and E.A. Morange. Costume Design by Caroline Seidle. Choreographed by Jack Mason. Directed by R.H. Burnside. Casino Theatre: 20 May 1907- 7 Sep 1907 (113 performances). Cast: Fremont Benton (as "Fifi"), Dorothy Bertrand (as "Chorus"), Frederick Bond (as "Gulliver Gayboy"), Alice Clifford (as "Chorus"), Kathleen Clifford (as "Rose Gayboy"), Fred W. Cousins (as "Chorus"), Edward Craven (as "Reuben Brown"), Nathalie Dagwell (as "Chorus"), James Dealy (as "Chorus"), Alice Eis (as "Chorus"), Edward M. Favor (as "Edouard Valliere"), Louis Harrison (as "Alphonse Allegretti"), Charles Jackson (as "Baron Reynard"), Jackson Karlyle (as "Chorus"), E.S. Kinslow (as "Butler"), Richard J. Kirkwood (as "Chorus"), Miss LeRoy (as "Chorus"), Adah Lewis (as "Winnie Wiggles"), Freda Linyard (as "Chorus"), May Millard (as "Chorus"), Frank Miller (as "Mr. Ferret"), Julia Mills (as "Chorus"), Mae Murray (as "Chorus"), Vera Pindar (as "Chorus"), Florence Ravel (as "Chorus"), Adele Ritchie (as "Flora Duval"), Ella Snyder (as "Dolly Wagner"), Arthur Stanford (as "Jack Graham"), James E. Sullivan (as "Professor Ludwig Wagner"), Miss Whiteford (as "Chorus"). Produced by Burnside & Comstock (F. Ray Comstock [earliest Broadway credit]) Inc. and R.H. Burnside.
- (1908) Stage Play: The Queen of the Moulin Rouge. Musical comedy/drama. Music by John T. Hall. Material by Paul M. Potter. Lyrics by Vincent Bryan. Musical Direction by Charles Zimmerman. Dances arranged by Joseph C. Smith. Directed by Frank Smithson. Circle Theatre: 7 Dec 1908- 24 Apr 1909 (160 performances). Cast: Richard Field Carroll (as "Sergius"), Carter DeHaven, Edward M. Favor (as "Savourette, art teacher"), Fletcher Norton, Flora Parker, Veola Adams, Frances Alain, Louise Alexander, Rudolph Allen, George Anderson, Odette Auber, Albert Barlow, Inez Blair, Horace Blankinship, Francis X. Bushman (as "Durand, a citizen") [credited as Frank X. Bushman] (only Broadway role), Doris Cameron, A. Alan Campbell, Patricia Collinge, Regina Connelly, Gail Crandall, Edward Crawford, Billee Cuppia, Charles Dalton, Ethel Davis, Thomas De Vassey, Reginald DeVeulle, Harry Dee, Juliette Dika, Lillian Dowd, Hattie Forsythe, Irene George, Stephen Haggery, John Hamilton, Stella Hansen, Trudie Hatch, Waldo Heinemann, Jeanette Horton, Harry Humphreys, Joel Johnson, Eileen Kearney, Al LaCroix, Grace Lester, May Maloney, Adele Marie, Lotta McCree, Berta Mills, Ethel Mostyn, Leila Parker, Anita Pollock, Charles Price, Russell Price, Eloise Reed, Genevieve Reed, P.H. Riblet, Fred Rivenhall, Grace Russell, Madeline Seville, Frank Sherlock, Joseph C. Smith, Marguerite St. Clair, Eleanor Thorne, Florence Townshend, Joseph V. Tullar, George Wharnock, Elizabeth Whitney, Edward Wilson, Violet Zell. Produced by Thomas W. Ryley. Note: Produced on film as Queen of the Moulin Rouge (1922) by Pyramid Pictures [film is presumed lost as of 2011].
- (1909) Stage Play: The Mascot. Musical/opera.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Three Musketeers. Musical/operetta. Book by Richard Temple (I)'. Music by Richard Temple. Lyrics by Richard Temple. Based on the novel by 'Alexandre Dumas', père. Musical Director: Ernest Knoch. Directed by Richard Temple. Manhattan Opera House: 19 May 1921- 23 May 1921 (5 performances). Cast: Charles Angelo (as "Louis XIII"), Leonard Booker (as "De Treville"), Percy Carr (as "Athos"), Ethel Cook (as "Madame de Lannoy"), J. Humbird Duffey (as "Aramis"), Edward Emery (as "Armand, Jean Duplesis, Duc de Richelieu"), Gerald Ewing (as "Bernajoux"), Edward M. Favor (as "Monsieur Bonacieux"), Annabel Grey (as "Donna Estafania"), Hedley Hall (as "de Jussac/A Jeweler"), Edith Hughes (as "Madame d'Estrees"), J.H. Kline (as "Landlord of the Jolly Miller/Patrick"), Lionel Langtry (as "De Busigny"), B.N. Lewin (as "George Villiers"), Elsie Meyer (as "Madame de Bois-Tracy"), Hiram Murphy (as "Cahusac"), John Parsons (as "Porthos"), J. Perloff (as "A Waiter"), Frank Petell (as "The Monk"), Percy Richards (as "An Agent of the Cardinal"), Frederick Saunders (as "Biscarat"), Leo Stark (as "Comte de Rochefort"), Hilda Steiner (as "Madame de Surgis"), Sidney Stone (as "The Spanish Grandee/Secretary to the Duke of Buckingham"), Paula Temple (as "Anne of Austria"), Richard Temple (as "D'Artagnan"), Winifred Verina (as "Lady de Winter"), Lorenzo Vitale (as "A Chamberlain"), Beatrice Whitney (as "Gabrielle"), Jean Wilkins (as "Constance Bonacieux"), Grace Wood (as "Madame d'Aigullon"). Produced by Richard Temple.
- (1922) Stage Play: Merton of the Movies. Comedy. Written by George S. Kaufman and Marc Connelly. Adapted from the story by Harry Leon Wilson. Directed by Hugh Ford. 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. Produced by George C. Tyler and Hugh Ford. Note: Filmed as Merton of the Movies (1947), Merton of the Movies (1924), Merlene of the Movies (1981).
- (1926) Stage Play: The Pearl of Great Price. Drama. Written by Robert McLaughlin. Directed by James C. Huffman. Century Theatre: 1 Nov 1926-Nov 1926 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Myrtle Adams (as "Folly"), Herbert Ashton (as "Smug"), Lee Beggs (as "Vulgarity"), Irma Bertrand (as "Flirt"), Amelia G. Bingham (as "Shame"), Sydna Black (as "Flip"), Laline Brownell (as "Primp/Prudence"), Millie Butterfield (as "Slander"), Kathleen Cambridge (as "Preen"), Claudette Colbert (as "Pilgrim"), Marie Desyls (as "Lesbia"), Peter Doyle (as "Hunger/Bailiff"), William Dupont (as "Quill/Want"), Malcolm Fassett (as "Truth"), Mrs. William Faversham (as "Envy"), Edward M. Favor (as "Greed"), Booth Franklin (as "Beggar/Blase/Despair"), 'Albert Froome' (as "Bore/Law"), Bernice Gardener (as "Lure"), Hazel Goodwin (as "Pert"), Elmer Grandin (as "Prejudice"), Frank Green (as "Idle Rich"), Julia Hoyt (as "Luxury"), Millie James (as "Loneliness"), Frances Kelly (as "Swirl"), Margot Kelly (as "Any Man's Sister"), Marion Kerby (as "Pander"), H. Kurasaki (as "Cringe"), Adele Le Roy (as "Primp"), Ross Neal (as "Queer"), John Nicholson (as "Adventure/Drink/Foreman of the Jury"), Dagmar Oakland (as "Beauty"), Eugene Ordway (as "Lust"), Florence Pendleton (as "Despair"), Marie Pettes (as "Pride"), Adele Ranson (as "Flounce"), Effie Shannon (as "Mother of Pilgrim"), Reginald Sheffield (as "Love"), Marcella Swanson (as "Vanity"), Richard Temple (as "Fame/Humanity"), Helen Tucker (as "Indolence"), Valdeo (as "Orgy"), Betty Webb (as "Smirk"), Mae Welch (as "Swish"), Irene Whipple (as "Wanton"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1927) Stage Play: The Banshee. Melodrama/mystery. Written by W.D. Hepenstall and Ralph Cullinan. Directed by Charles J. Mulligan. Daly's 63rd Street Theatre: 5 Dec 1927- Jan 1928 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Joseph Brennan (as "Peter Adair"), Kitty Collins (as "Mrs. Grimes"), Edward M. Favor (as "Sheriff Abner Heckenshell"), Edmund George (as "Clem Durward"), Dan Kelly, Marion Kerby, Barry Macollum (as "Tom Scott"), Frank Peters (as "Walter Payne"), Herbert Ranson (as "Dr. Neville Lacey"), Michael Rice (as "Jim Sprague"), Lillian Walker (as "Joan Walker"), Richard Whorf (as "Yuru") [Broadway debut], H. Conway Wingfield (as "Dr. Morrison"). Produced by Banshee Inc.
- (1928) Stage Play: Eva the Fifth. Written by Kenyon Nicholson and John Golden. Directed by John Golden. Little Theatre: 28 Aug 1928- Oct 1928 (closing date unknown/63 performances). Cast: Buford Armitage (as "Mal Thorne"), Philip Barrison (as "Newton Wampler"), May Duryea (as "Lorna Montrose"), Edward M. Favor (as "Ed Blondell"), Claiborne Foster (as "Hattie Hartley"), Diana G. (as "Violet"), Ross Hertz, Nila Mack (as "Connie Bard"), Florence Pendleton (as "Jane Truxton"), Al Roberts, William Sellery (as "Ernest Beaumont"), Lois Shore (as "Oriole Hartley"), Harry Swan (as "A Flagman"), Sheila Trent (as "Grace Steeple"), William Wadsworth (as "Leon Montrose"). Produced by Edgar Selwyn and John Golden.
- (1929) Stage Play: Man's Estate. Written by Charles Bruce Gould and Beatrice Blackmar Gould. Directed by Dudley Digges. Biltmore Theatre: 1 Apr 1929- May 1929 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Dudley Digges (as "William P. Jordan"), Edward M. Favor (as "Joseph Jordan"), Florence Gerould (as "Caroline Jordan"), Margalo Gillmore (as "Sesaly Blaine"), Earle Larimore (as "Jerry Jordan"), Armina Marshall [credited as Armina Marshall] (as "Emily Bender"), Elizabeth Patterson (as "Minnie Jordan"), Edward Pawley (as "Dr. Frank Bender"), Louis Veda (as "Rev. Dr. Eustace Potter"), Maria Ziccardi (as "Cousin Grace"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1930) Stage Play: Purity. Drama.
- (1932) Stage Play: The Round Up. Melodrama.
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