- (1904 - 1938) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1904) Stage Play: "The Baroness Fiddlesticks." Musical comedy. Music by Emil Bruguiere. Book by George De Long. Lyrics by George De Long. Directed by Al M. Holbrook. Casino Theatre: 21 Nov 1904- 10 Dec 1904 (25 performances). Cast: Tony Asher (as "Maurel Trenchant"), Imogene Avis (as "Chorus"), Edith Barr (as "Chorus"), Nella Bergen (as "Geraldine"), Velma Berrell (as "Chorus"), Charles Bickford (as "Chorus") [Broadway debut], Auguste Boulin (as "Chorus"), Aline Boyt (as "Chorus"), Vinnie Bradcome (as "Chorus"), Martha Bright (as "Chorus"), Geraldine Bruce (as "Chorus"), Toby Claude (as "Isabelle") [final Broadway role], Walter A. Cluxton (as "Cholly"), Violet Conrad (as "Chorus"), Charlotte Crane (as "Chorus"), Helen Curzon (as "Chorus"), Bella deFrates (as "Chorus"), Lillian Fitzgerald (as "Chorus"), Anna Fitzhugh (as "Patrina"), Mary Hall (as "Chorus"), Jean Hammel (as "Chorus"), Harold Hendee (as "Chorus"), John E. Henshaw (as "Chorus"), Madaline Hesser (as "Chorus"), Anna Johnston (as "Marionetta/Chorus"), May Kavanaugh (as "Chorus"), Gustav Koldovski (as "Jenkins/Chorus"), Ruth Langdon (as "Chorus"), Cora Lee (as "Chorus"), Richie Ling (as "Archer"), Alden McClaskie (as "Jack Elkins"), Edna McClure (as "Monty"), Minnie Methot (as "The Duchess of Reelboro"), Lillian Rice (as "Chorus"), Marion Ruckert (as "Chorus"), Frieda Salber (as "Chorus"), Mae Sherwood (as "Algy"), Florence Skiff (as "Chorus"), Lillian Spencer (as "Chorus"), Madeline Summerville (as "Chorus"), Mary Ten Broeck (as "Mrs. McGurk"), Charlotte Waldron (as "Chorus"), Minerva Walton (as "Chorus"), Edith Warren (as "Chorus"), Mittie Weedon (as "Chorus"), Angie Weimers (as "Chorus"), Lou Whelan (as "Chorus"), Minthorne Worthley (as "Chorus"). Produced by MacDonald & Sullivan.
- (1919) Stage Play: "Dark Rosaleen." Written by W.D. Hepenstall and Whitford Kane. Belasco Theatre: 22 Apr 1919- Jul 1919 (closing date unknown/87 performances). Cast: John Carmody, Robert Cummings, Henry Duffey, Walter Edwin, George Fitzgerald, Eileen Huban, P.J. Kelly, Charles F. McCarthy, Beryl Mercer, Dodson Mitchell, Thomas Mitchell, Dan Moyles, John Daly Murphy, Seamus O'Brien, Farrell Pelly. Produced by David Belasco.
- (1925) Stage Play: "Houses of Sand." Drama. Written by G. Marion Burton. Directed by Daniel V. Arthur and Clifford Brooke. Hudson Theatre: 17 Feb 1925- Mar 1925 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: Elise Bartlett, Charles Bickford (as "Hugh Schuyler"), Ethelbert Hales, Gladys Hanson, Paul Kelly (as "Arthur Demarest"), Naoe Kondo, Vivienne Osborne (as "Miss Kane; Golden Fragrance"), George Probert, Edith Shayne, Theodore Westman. Produced by Michael Mindlin.
- (1925) Stage Play: "Outside Looking In." Comedy. Written by Maxwell Anderson. Based on the autobiography "Beggars of Life" by Jim Tully. Directed by Augustin Duncan. Greenwich Village Theatre (moved to The 39th Street Theatre from Nov 1925- close): 7 Sep 1925- Dec 1925 (closing date unknown/113 performances). Cast: Reginald Barlow (as "Baldy"), Charles Bickford (as "Oklahoma Red"), Harry Blakemore (as "Mose"), Raphael Byrnes (as "Bill"), James Cagney (as "Little Red"), Blythe Daly (as "Edna"), Wallace House (as "Skelly"), David A. Leonard (as "Arkansas Snake"), Sidney Machat (as "Ukie"), Barry Macollum (as "Hopper"), James Martin (as "Rubin"), Richard Sullivan (as "Blind Sims"). Replacement actors: Morris Armor (as "Deputy"), Walter Downing (as "Chief of Police"), John C. Hickey (as "Sheriff"), Frederick C. Packard (as "Brakeman"), G.O. Taylor (as "Deputy"), George Westlake (as "Railroad Detective"). Produced by 'Kenneth MacGowan', Robert Edmond Jones and Eugene O'Neill.
- (1926) Stage Play: "Glory Hallelujah." Written by Bertram Bloch and Thomas Mitchell. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Broadhurst Theatre: 6 Apr 1926- Apr 1926 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Morris Ankrum (as "Davis"), Charles Bickford (as "Winters"), George Blackwood, Edward Butler, Malcolm Duncan, Allen Jenkins (as "Whitey Adams"), Felix Krembs, Earl Mayne, Phillip M. Sheridan, Lee Tracy (as "Clerk"), Hilda Vaughn, June Walker, Olive West, Augustus Yorke. Produced by Guthrie McClintic.
- (1926) Stage Play: "No More Women." Comedy.
- (1926) Stage: Appeared (as "Jake") in "Chicago" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Maurine Dallas Watkins. Directed by George Abbott. Music Box Theatre: 30 Dec 1926-May 1927 (closing date unknown/172 performances). Cast: George W. Anspeak, Robert Barrat (as "Martin S. Harrison"), Ferike Boros, Doan Borrup (as "Fred Casely"), George Cowell, Juliette Crosby, Carl De Mal, Edward Ellis, Edith Fitzgerald (as "Go-To-Hell Kitty"), Charles Halton (as "Amos Hart"), Eda Heinemann (as "Mary Sunshine"), Charles Kuhn, George Lanning, Francine Larrimore (as "Roxie Hart"), Al Milliken, James C. Pall, Thomas Poland, Charles Slattery, G. Albert Smith, Dorothy Stickney (as "Liz"), Wilma Thompson, Milano Tilden, Arthur Vinton (as "Babe"), Isabelle Winlocke, Vincent York. Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1925) Stage: Appeared in "Something To Brag About" on Broadway.
- (1938) Stage: Appeared in "Casey Jones" on Broadway.
- (1929) Playwright: "The Sandy Hooker", produced on Broadway.
- (1959) Unsold pilot: Starred in an unsold pilot for a police series called "The 33rd".
- (1961) Unsold pilot: Hosted a pilot for an anthology series called "Now Is Tomorrow".
- (1964) Unsold pilot: Co-starred with Mike Connors in a pilot called "The Turning Point" about a teacher who did his best to teach his students life as well as book wisdom.
- (1964) Unsold pilot: Starred in a pilot for a proposed family dramatic series set in a small coastal California town called "Royal Bay". The pilot also featured Paul Burke, Joan Crawford and Richard Carlson.
- (1962) Unsold pilot: Starred in a pilot for an action series produced by Blake Edwards called "House of Seven".
- (1927) Stage: Appeared in "Bless You, Sister" on Broadway.
- (1924) Stage: Appeared in "Brown's Cows" on Broadway.
- (1928) Stage: Appeared in "The Cyclone Lover" on Broadway he also co-wrote..
- (1928) Stage Play: Gods of the Lightning. Drama. Written by Maxwell Anderson and Harold Hickerson. Directed by Hamilton MacFadden. Little Theatre, 24 Oct 1928- Nov 1928 (closing date unknown/29 performances). Cast: Morris Ankrum (as "Spiker"), Jules Artfield (as "Heine"), Charles Bickford (as "Macready"), Harry Bliven (as "Bartlett"), Horace Braham (as "Capraro"), Robert Brister (as "Salter"), Leo Bulgakov (as "Suvorin"), Maynard Burgess (as "Lubin"), Del Cleveland (as "Assistant to the District Attorney"), Samuel Coit (as "Sowerby"), Eva Condon (as "Mrs. Lubin"), Edward Cutler (as "Clerk of the Court"), Willard Dashiell (as "Haslet"), Henry Engel (as "Sheriff Henry"), Jules Ferrar (as "Bauer"), Benjamin Fesseden (as "Policeman"), Moss Fleisig (as "Jerusalem Slim"), John R. Hamilton (as "Gluckstein"), Thomas Kelly (as "Andy"), Barton MacLane (as "Ward"), Arthur Pederson (as "Pete"), Molly Ricardel (as "Salvation Lassie"), Lloyd Sabine (as "Police Sergeant"), Sylvia Sidney (as "Rosalie"), Sam Silverbush (as "Ike"), Ian Wolfe (as "Milkin"), Douglas Wood. Produced by Hamilton MacFadden and Kellogg Gary.
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