- Vaudeville pianist and songwriter. Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- The Summer Widowers (1910).
- Hands Up (1915). Musical comedy/melodrama. Book by Edgar Smith. Music by E. Ray Goetz and Sigmund Romberg. Lyrics by E. Ray Goetz. Additional music by Jean Schwartz, Bert Grant, Joe Young and Cole Porter. Additional lyrics by Cole Porter, Grant Clarke, Harold Atteridge and William Jerome. Musical Director: William Daly. Music orchestrated by Frank Saddler. Choreographed by Theodore Kosloff. Polish Ballet in Act 2 arranged by Jack Mason. Modern dances arranged by Maurice Barrett. Directed by J.H. Benrimo. 44th Street Theatre: 22 Jul 1915- 3 Sep 1915 (52 performances). Cast: Maurice Barrett (as "Waltz King"), Vincent Cassidy (as "Chorus"), Alice Dovey (as "Helene Fudge"), Sidgewick Draper (as "Chorus"), Irene Franklin (as "Violet Lavender"), James Gillespie (as "Chorus"), Stewart Gilmore (as "Chorus"), Burton Green (as "Mr. Need-in-time"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- The Passing Show of 1917 (1917). Musical revue. Book by Harold Atteridge. Music by Sigmund Romberg and Otto Motzan. Lyrics by Harold Atteridge. Musical Director: Oscar Radin. Additional music by Clifton Crawford, Benjamin Hapgood Burt, Ted Snyder, Burton Green and Harry Tierney. Additional lyrics by Clifton Crawford, Joe Young, Sam M. Lewis, Benjamin Hapgood Burt, Burton Green, Irene Franklin and Alfred Bryan. Musical Staging by Allan K. Foster. Choreographed by Jack Manning. Directed by J.C. Huffman. Winter Garden Theatre: 26 Apr 1917- 13 Oct 1917 (196 performances). Cast: Claude Allen, Effie Allen, Ted Andrews, Fred Ardath, Franklyn Batie, Gussie Berg, Kitty Berg, Henry Bergman, Hazel Black, Betty Brown, Nat Carr, Nell Carrington, Gladys Clark, E.B. 'Zeke' Colvan, Dolly Connolly, John Crone, Muriel Dae, Babe Dakin, Louise Dale, Jefferson De Angelis, Andrew Demarest, Peggie Dempsey, Adrienne Dillon, Johnny Dooley, Florence Elmore, Murray Evans, Nancy Everett, Dudley Farnsworth, Inez Francis, Irene Franklin, Elsie Froehlich, Ada Fuld, Bobbie Gaylor, Dorothy Godfrey, Yvonne Gouraud, Burton Green, Lenora Greenwood, Lillian Griffith, Agnes Hall, Grace Hall, Rae Hartley, DeWolf Hopper Sr., Grace Keeshon, Gladys Kelley, Helen Kelley, Donald Kerr, Elvira Kramer, Mildred La Gue, Marjorie Lane, Eleanor Leigh, Lois Leigh, Evelyn LeRoy, Tom Lewis, Wanda Lyon, James Mack, Carolyn Maywood, Bobbie McCree, Ed. McHenry, Dolores Mendez, Emily Miles, Clyde Miller, John Miller, Marilynn Miller, John Mills, Helen Montague, Marion Mooney, Glory Mora, John T. Murray, Marie Nordstrom, O.E. Patapovitch, Vera Pearsall, Stafford Pemberton, Edith Pierce, Rosie Quinn, Viola Quinn, Frances Ramey, Trixie Raymond, Jessie Reed, Nora Reed, John Ross, Tess Rubin, Yvette Rugel, Edna Russell, 'Charles "Chic' Sale', Dorothy Scofield, George Shiller, Rae Shirley, William Singer, Daniel Sparks, Jean Staples, Clay Stearns, Reba Stewart, Thamara Swirskaia, Charles Thatcher, John Thomas, Fay Tunis, Alice Van Ryker, Leila Von Holk, Irene Wallace, Lorraine Waters, Effie Weston. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- Always You (1920). Musical comedy. Music by Herbert Stothart. Book by Oscar Hammerstein II. Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II. Musical Director: Herbert P. Stothart. Choreographed by Robert Marks. Pianist: Burton Green [final Broadway credit]. Directed by Arthur Hammerstein. Central Theatre (moved to The Lyric Theatre from 26 Jan 1920- close): 5 Jan 1920- 28 Feb 1920 (68 performances). Cast: Joseph Barton (as "Thomas"), Rose Cardiff, Jose Carmen, Eduardo Ciannelli (as "An East Indian Peddler"), Virginia Clark, Cortez and Peggy (as "Dancers"), Elinore Cullen, Helen Ford (as "Toinette Fontaine"), Bernard Gorcey (as "A Mysterious Conspirator"), George Hale (as "Ensemble"), Lillian Held, Ralph Herz (as "Montmorency Jones"), Leo Howe, Julie Kelety, Russell Mack (as "Charlie Langford"), Irma Marwick, Gene Morrison, Helen Neff, Marietta O'Brien, Mildred Rowland, Emily Russ, Memphis Russell, Walter Scanlan, Anna Seymour, Marvee Snow, Jacques Stone, Beatrice Summers, Jack Zambouli. Produced by Arthur Hammerstein.
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