- (1901 - 1936) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1901) Stage Play: Don Caesar's Return. Written by Victor Mapes. Scenic Design by Arthur Voegtlin. Directed by Victor Mapes. Wallack's Theatre: 3 Sep 1901- Nov 1901 (closing date unknown/87 performances). Cast: Virginia Buchanan, Herbert Carr, Egbert Case, Edward Donnelly, Fernanda Eliscu, James K. Hackett, Thomas A. Hall, Hale Hamilton, Theodore Hamilton, Ira Hards [Broadway debut], Florence Kahn, Wilton Lackaye (as "King Carlos"), William Lamp, W.J. Le Moyne, George LeSoir, John E. Mackin, Sidney Price, Theodore Roberts, Maude Roosevelt, Charlotte Walker. Produced by James K. Hackett.
- (1902) Stage Play: Soldiers of Fortune. Drama. Written by Augustus Thomas, from a story by Richard Harding Davis. Savoy Theatre: 17 Mar 1902- 31 May 1902 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Charles Abbott, Edwin Brandt, Marie Derickson, Dorothy Donnelly (as "Madame Alvarez"), 'Edward Dresser' (as "Weimer"), Wallace Eddinger (as "Ensign Macauley"), Robert Edeson (as "Robert Clay"), Ira Hards (as "Captain Burke"), Macy Harlam, Harry Harwood, Thomas W. Lawrence, Gretchen Lyons, E.W. Morrison, Byron Ongley (as "General Rojas/Fileo"), Charles Ongley (as "Sandro/First Soldier"), Guy Bates Post (as "Captain Stuart"), Gabriel Ravenelle, Thomas W. Ross, E.V. Whitty. Produced by Henry B. Harris. Note: Filmed by All Star Feature Film Corp. as Soldiers of Fortune (1914).
- (1902) Stage Play: Soldiers of Fortune. Drama [return engagement]. Written by Augustus Thomas, from a story by Richard Harding Davis. Savoy Theatre: 30 Aug 1902- Oct 1902 (closing date unknown/41 performances). Cast: Frank Aiken, Edwin Brandt (as "General Mendoza"), Ellen Burg, Dorothy Donnelly (as "Madame Alvarez"), Wallace Eddinger (as "Captain Stuart"), Robert Edeson, Ira Hards, Macy Harlam, Harry Harwood, Thomas W. Lawrence, John Meehan, Guy Bates Post, Gabriel Ravenelle, Lawrence Sheehan, Richard Sterling, Dorothy Tennant (as "Alice Langham") [Broadway debut], E.V. Whitty. Produced by Henry B. Harris. Note: Filmed by All Star Feature Film Corp. as Soldiers of Fortune (1914).
- (1903) Stage Play: Miss Elizabeth's Prisoner. Written by Robert N. Stephens and Lyall Swete. Criterion Theatre: 23 Nov 1903- Dec 1903 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: John Armstrong, Charles Avery, William Faversham, George Gaisford, Charles Harbury, Ira Hards, Maud Hosford, Gordon Lee, Percy Lyndal, Hilda Spong (as "Elizabeth Philipse"). Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1903) Stage Play: Lord and Lady Algy. Comedy (revival). Written by R.C. Carton. Criterion Theatre: 14 Dec 1903- Dec 1903 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: John Armstrong, E.Y. Backus, Charles Bertram, Marian Childers, Albert Cowles [credited as Albert Cowels] (Broadway debut), William Faversham, Edwin Hale, Charles Harbury, Ira Hards, Maud Hosford, Stanley Jessup, Louis La Bey, Rose Le Moine, Percy Lyndal, H. Carlton Redding, Madelaine Rives, Madeline Rives, Mabel Roebuck, Hilda Spong, John C. Tremayne. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1904) Stage Play: Brother Jacques (1904). Comedy/Farce. Written by Henri Bernstein and Pierre Veber. Directed by Edward E. Rose. Garrick Theatre: 5 Dec 1904- Jan 1905 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Grena Bennett, Lou W. Carter, Elizabeth Churchill, J.R. Cooley, Mary Gordon, Ira Hards, May Hennessey, Elizabeth Johnson, Sidney Mansfield, Annie Russell, May Davenport Seymour, Grant Stewart, Mrs. Charles Walcot, Joseph Wheelock Jr., George W. Wilson, Claire Winston, William Wray, Oswald Yorke. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1909) Stage Play: The Conflict. Written by Maurice V. Samuel [credited as Maurice V. Samuels]. Adapted from "La Peau de Chagrin" by Balzac. Directed by Ira Hards. Garden Theatre: 29 Mar 1909- Apr 1909 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Helen Beresford, Harry E. (H.E.) De Lasaux, Robert Drouet, Romaine Fielding, Harry Leighton, Florence Lester, Sheldon Lewis, Edmund W. Lyons, Helen Robertson. Produced by Paul H. Liebler.
- (1910) Stage Play: Bobby Burnit. Written by Winchell Smith. Directed by Ira Hards. Theatre Republic: 22 Aug 1910- Sep 1910 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Leslie Bassett, Sidney Bent, Henry Carlin, Harvey T. Clark, Frank Daniels, Laurence Eddinger, Wallace Eddinger, Thomas Findlay, Frank Hughes, Charles Lane, John D. O'Hara, John S. Robertson, Fred Strong, John Webster, George A. Wright. Produced by Henry B. Harris. Note: Filmed as The Making of Bobby Burnit (1914).
- (1917) Stage Play: The Claim. Written by Charles Kenyon and Frank Dare. Directed by Ira Hards. Fulton Theatre: 9 Oct 1917- Oct 1917 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Florine Arnold, Walter Baldwin, Melton Clodagh, Charles Halton, Horace James, Geraldine O'Brien, Florence Roberts, Edward H. Robins, Al Stuart, Reina Thomas, George Thompson, Lorna Volare, J.H. Williams. Produced by The Estate of Henry B. Harris.
- (1918) Stage Play: The Unknown Purple. Written by Roland West and Carlyle Moore. Directed by Ira Hards and Charles H. Smith. Lyric Theatre: 14 Sep 1918- May 1919 (closing date unknown/273 performances). Cast: Herbert Ashton, Richard Bennett, Curtis Benton, Earle Brown, E.L. Duane, Lorraine Frost, Marion Kerby, Arthur Le Vien, Helen MacKellar, Frank McCormack, Edward Van Sloan. Produced by Roland West.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Scarlet Man. Comedy/farce. Written by William LeBaron. Directed by Ira Hards. Henry Miller's Theatre: 22 Aug 1921- Sep 1921 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Don Borroughs (as "Richard Talbot"), Frances Carson (as "Mary Talbot"), John Cumberland (as "Wilbur Lawrence"), John Gray (as "Jackson"), Olive May (as "Mrs. Talbot"), Patricia Morris, William Morris (as "Daniel G. Talbot"), Alice Putnam (as "Mrs. Delafield"), Beatrice Tremaine (as "Margaret") [only active Broadway role]. Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Intimate Strangers. Comedy. Written by Booth Tarkington. Directed by Ira Hards. Henry Miller's Theatre: 7 Nov 1921- Jan 1922 (closing date unknown/91 performances). Cast: Billie Burke (as "Isabel"), Charles S. Abbe (as "The Station Master"), Frances Howard (as "Florence"), Glenn Hunter (as "Johnnie White"), Frank J. Kirk (as "Henry"), Alfred Lunt (as "Ames"), Elizabeth Patterson (as "Aunt Ellen"), Clare Weldon (as "Mattie"). Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr., A.L. Erlanger and Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Cat and the Canary. Melodrama. Written by John Willard. Directed by Ira Hards. National Theatre: 7 Feb 1922- May 1922 (closing date unknown/148 performances). Cast: Florence Eldridge, Edmund Elton, Beth Franklin, Blanche Friderici, Henry Hull, Ryder Keane, Percy Moore, Harry D. Southard, Jane Warrington, John Willard. Produced by Kilbourn Gordon Inc.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Charlatan. Melodrama/mystery. Written by Leonard Praskins and Ernest Pascal. Directed by Ira Hards. Times Square Theatre: 24 Apr 1922- Jun 1922 (closing date unknown/61 performances). Cast: Lewis Broughton, Margaret Dale, William Ingersoll (as "Mason Talbot"), Florence Johns, Crauford Kent, Fania Marinoff, William Podmore, Edward Powers, Purnell Pratt (as "Herbert Deering"), Howard Ragsdale, Jane Thompson, Frederick Tiden, Olive Wyndham (as "Avril Penniston"). Produced by Adolph Klauber.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Drums of Jeopardy. Melodrama/mystery.
- (1922) Stage Play: Queen O' Hearts. Musical comedy. Music by Lewis E. Gensler and Dudley Wilkinson. Book by Frank Mandel and Oscar Hammerstein II. Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II. Additional lyrics by Sydney Mitchell, Nora Bayes, Morrie Ryskind, Harry Richman, Cliff Friend, Bill Dugan and Lou Davis. Additional music by Harry Richman, Cliff Friend, Bill Dugan and Lou Davis. Musical Director: Gene Salzer. Scenic Design by H Robert Law Studios and Herbert Ward. Costume Design by Cora MacGeachy and Schneider-Anderson Company. Choreographed by David Bennett. Directed by Ira Hards. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 10 Oct 1922- 11 Nov 1922 (40 performances). Cast: Laura Alberta, Nora Bayes (as "Elizabeth Bennett"), Bernice & Emily, Thomas Bradley, Sidney Brook, Georgie Brown, Gladys Dore, Irene Enright, Consuelo Flowerton, Muriel Harrison, Edna Hibbard, Betty Hill, Max Hoffman (as "Tom"), Lillian McKenzie, Janet Megrew, Loretta Morgan, Florence Morrison, Elza Petersen, Lorin Raker, Harry Richman (as "Henry Rivers"), Cecille Ann Stevens, Eva Taylor, Norma Terris (as "Grace") [Broadway debut], Arthur Uttry, Dudley Wilkinson (as "Dudley"), Franker Woods (as "Ferdinand Budd"). Produced by Max Spiegel.
- (1922) Stage Play: Listening In. Comedy. Written by Carlyle Moore. Directed by Ira Hards. Bijou Theatre: 4 Dec 1922- Feb 1923 (closing date unknown/99 performances). Cast: Frank Andrews (as "Dr. Emil Bachman"), William B. Davidson, C.L. Emerson (as "Police Officer"), Herbert Farjeon (as "Abu"), Helen Flint (as "Miriam Adrian"), George Gaston (as "Messenger") [final Broadway role], Ernest Glendinning (as "John Coomber"), 'William Keighley' (as "William Archer"), Frank J. Kirk (as "Jonas McKesson"), Margaret Linden (as "Mrs. Grace Pemberton"), George Majeroni (as "Mr. Morrison"), Dodson Mitchell (as "Johnathan Cumberland"), Gerald Stopp, Harry Stubbs (as "Harry Van Sloan"). Produced by Milton Productions.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Clinging Vine. Musical comedy. Book by Zelda Sears. Music by Harold A. Levey. Lyrics by Zelda Sears. Musical Director: Harold A. Levey. Music orchestrated by Robert Russell Bennett. Costume Design by Peggy Hoyt. Scenic Design by William Castle. Musical Staging by Julian Alfred. Directed by Ira Hards. Knickerbocker Theatre: 25 Dec 1922- 2 Jun 1923 (188 performances). Cast: Cast: Josephine Adair (as "Mildred Mayo"), Jane Arrol, Virginia Clark, Raymond Crane, Eleanor Dawn, Charles Derickson Jimmy Manning, Irene Dunne (as "Tessie"), Jean Ferguson, Louise Galloway, Earl Gates, William C. Gordon, Royal Hallee, Helen Hipkins, Christian Holtum, Bradford Hunt, Eleanor Livingston, James C. Marlowe, Roy Marvin, Florence McGuire, Reginald Pasch, William Rogers, Louise Scheerer, Charles Schofield, Rosa Vera, Nathaniel Wagner, Margery Wall, Joyce White, Victoria White, Peggy Wood (as "Antoinette Allen"). Produced by Henry W. Savage.
- (1923) Stage Play: Magnolia. Comedy. Written by Booth Tarkington. Directed by Ira Hards. Liberty Theatre: 27 Aug 1923- Oct 1923 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: James Bradbury (as "Joe Patterson"), Martha Bryan-Allen (as "Lucy"), Leo Carrillo (as "Tom"), Barrington Carter (as "Rumbo"), John Harrington (as "Blackie"), J.K. Hutchinson (as "General Rumford"), Elizabeth Patterson (as "Madame Rumford"), Jack Rutherford [credited as John Rutherford] (as "Major Patterson"), Phyllis Schuyler (as "Elvira"), Malcolm Williams (as "General Orlando Jackson"), Ethel Wilson (as "Mexico"). Produced by Alfred E. Aarons.
- (1923) Stage Play: The Magic Ring. Musical comedy.
- (1924) Stage Play: Lollipop. Musical comedy. Music by Vincent Youmans. Book by Zelda Sears. Lyrics by Zelda Sears and Walter De Leon. Musical Director: Russell Tarbox. Music orchestrated by Robert Russell Bennett. Choreographed by Bert French, John Tiller and Mary Read. Directed by Ira Hards. Knickerbocker Theatre: 21 Jan 1924- 31 May 1924 (152 performances). Cast: Connie Aldis (as "Ensemble"), Adora Andrews (as "Mrs. Mason"), Doris Carter (as "Ensemble"), Leonard Ceiley (as "Don Carlos"), April Child (as "Ensemble"), Lucille Constant (as "Ensemble"), Guerida Crawford (as "Ensemble"), Walter Crisham (as "Ensemble"), Bobby Culbertson (as "Ensemble"), Eleanor Dana (as "Ensemble"), Gloria Dawn (as "Virginia"), Addison Fowler (as "Specialty Dancer"), Ethel Fraser (as "Ensemble"), Pat Fraser (as "Ensemble"), Elsa Gray (as "Ensemble"), Royal Halee (as "Ensemble"), Ethel Helliwell (as "Ensemble"), Elsie Holt (as "Ensemble"), Katherine Huth (as "Ensemble"), Mary Jayne (as "Ensemble"), Carol Joyce (as "Ensemble") [Broadway debut], Carl Judd (as "Ensemble"), Evelyn Kindler (as "Ensemble"), Charles King (as "Ensemble"), Nick Long (as "Omar K. Garrity"), Vera Longren (as "Ensemble"), Muriel Marlowe (as "Ensemble"), Ada May (as "Laura Lamb"), Florence McCabe (as "Ensemble"), Aline McGill (as "Tessie"), Edith Morgan (as "Ensemble"), Katherine Odell (as "Ensemble"), Veronica Preston (as "Ensemble"), Harry Puck (as "Bill Geohagen"), George Rand (as "Ensemble"), Harold Raymond (as "Ensemble"), Louise Scheerer (as "Ensemble"), Zelda Sears (as "Mrs. Gerrity"), Gus Shy (as "George Jones"), Mark Smith (as "Parkinson"), Virginia Smith (as "Petunia"), Leonard St. Leo (as "Adrian"), Karl Stall (as "Lindsay"), Norene Swinton (as "Ensemble"), Florenz Tamara (as "Specialty Dancer"), Ruth Tester (as "Ensemble"), Charles Townshend (as "Ensemble"), Maude Troup (as "Ensemble"), Florence Webber (as "Helene"), Alice Wright (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Henry W. Savage.
- (1925) Stage Play: Lass O'Laughter. Comedy. Written by Edith Carter and Nan Marriott-Watson [earliest Broadway credit]. Directed by Ira Hards. Comedy Theatre: 8 Jan 1925- Feb 1925 (closing date unknown/28 performances). Cast: Leslie Austen (as "Ronald, Lord Maxwell"), St. Clair Bayfield (as "Davie Nicholson"), Cosmo Bellew (as "James Cox"), Barlowe Borland (as "Sandy MacDougall"), Miriam Elliott, Jean Gordon, Anthony Kemble-Cooper (as "Hon. Ian Maxwell") [Broadway debut], Flora Le Breton, Lewis Sealy (as "Richards"), Alma Tell (as "Lady Ailsa Weyman"), J.R. Tozer. Produced by Henry W. Savage.
- (1925) Stage Play: Twelve Miles Out. Melodrama/romance. Written by William Anthony McGuire. Directed by Ira Hards and William Anthony McGuire. Playhouse Theatre: 16 Nov 1925- Apr 1926 (closing date unknown/188 performances). Cast: Lance Burritt, F.H. Day, Mildred Florence, Gilbert Girard, Peter Chong Goe, Albert Hackett (as "Charles Raymond, or Chuck, Jane's brother"), Alfred Hese (credited as Alfred A. Hesse), 'Frank Hilton' (I) (as "Spike") [final Broadway role], James P. Houston, Saul Z. Martell, Howard Morgan, Frank Shannon (as "Michael McCue"), John Westley (as "John Burton"), Warren William (as "Gerald Fay"). Produced by William Anthony McGuire.
- (1926) Stage Play: Kept. Comedy. Written by Pierre Gendron. Directed by Ira Hards. Comedy Theatre: 17 Sep 1926- Sep 1926 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: Jack Bennett, Marie Curtis, Minnie Dupree (as "Netty Estel"), Edmund Elton, Dorothy Estabrook, Philip Heege, Edgar Henning, Lenita Lane, Zolya Talma (as "Vera Robins"), Valerie Valaire, Robert Williams (as "Norman Henderson"), Emma Wise. Produced by Chamberlain Brown.
- (1927) Stage Play: Blood Money. Melodrama. Written by George Middleton, from a story by H.H. Van Loan. Directed by Ira Hards. Hudson Theatre: 22 Aug 1927- Oct 1927 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Reginald Barlow (as "Captain Harry Dark"), Robert Brister (as "Ned Timmins"), Lawrence Cecil (as "Smith"), Malcolm Cuncan (as "Tom Jefferson"), Harold De Becker (as "Wu Fang"), Kate McComb (as "Nellie McKenna"), Thomas Mitchell (as "James Bolton"), Beatrice Nichols (as "Mary Jefferson"), Phyllis Povah (as "Julia Jones"), John Davenport Seymour (as "Passenger"). Produced by Mrs. Henry B. Harris.
- (1927) Stage Play: Dracula. Drama. Written by Hamilton Deane and John L. Balderston. Based on the novel by Bram Stoker. Directed by Ira Hards. Fulton Theatre: 5 Oct 1927- May 1928 (closing date unknown/261 performances). Cast: Herbert Bunston (as "Dr. Seward"), Alfred Frith (as "Butterworth"), Nedda Harrigan (as "Miss Wells, a maid"), Bernard Jukes (as "R.M. Renfield"), Bela Lugosi (as "Count Dracula"), Terence Neill (as "Jonathan Harker"), Dorothy Peterson (as "lucy Seward"), Edward Van Sloan (as "Abraham Van Helsing"). Produced by Horace Liveright. Note: Filmed by Universal Pictures as Dracula (1931), concurrently with the Spanish language version, Drácula (1931) (starring Carlos Villarías as "Count Dracula"), by Universal Pictures/The Mirisch Corporation as Dracula (1979), and by American Zoetrope/Columbia Pictures Corporation/Osiris Films as Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992).
- (1928) Stage Play: Red Dust. Written by Wilson Collison. Directed by Ira Hards. Cast: Jerome Collamore (as "Andre Chauvenet"), Curtis Cooksey (as "Lucien Fourville"), Leo Curley (as "McHorg"), Lenore Meyrick-Sorsby (as "Maurice Chauvenet"), Leonard Mudie (as "Jacques Guidon"), Sydney Shields (as "VanTene"), Reo Suga (as "Hoi"). Produced by Hugo W. Romberg. Filmed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as Red Dust (1932).
- (1928) Stage Play: Atlas and Eva. Comedy. Written by Harry Delf. Directed by Ira Hards. Mansfield Theatre: 6 Feb 1928- Feb 1928 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Tom Brown (as "Herbie, A Nebblepredder"), Dorothea Chard (as "Josie, A Nebblepredder"), Harry Delf (as "Elmer, A Nebblepredder"), Donald Dillaway (as "Al Sprocket"), Sara Floyd (as "Cousin Bessie, A Nebblepredder"), Herbert Fortier (as "Mr. Mullen"), Charles Hanna (as "Bill Donahue"), A.C. Henderson (as "A Gatekeeper"), Leona Hogarth (as "Eva, A Nebblepredder"), Lottie Linthicum (as "Aunt Emma, A Nebblepredder"), Helen Lowell (as "Ma, A Nebblepredder"), George F. Marion (as "Pop, A Nebblepredder"), Arthur C. Morris (as "Dr. Parker"), Clara Thropp (as "Mrs. McGorky"). Produced by Harry Delf.
- (1928) Stage Play: Diamond Lil. Comedy/melodrama.
- (1929) Stage Play: Be Your Age. Written by Thomas P. Robinson and Esther Willard Bates. Directed by Ira Hards. Belmont Theatre: 4 Feb 1929- Mar 1929 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Romney Brent (as "Dr. Gage"), Edward Broadley (as "Forbes"), Spring Byington (as "Mrs. Merriam"), Halliwell Hobbes (as "Bishop Bradford"), John Miltern (as "Philip Latimer"), Mary Stills. Produced by Richard Herndon.
- (1929) Stage Play: Young Alexander. Written by Hardwick Nevin. Directed by Ira Hards. Biltmore Theatre: 12 Mar 1929- Mar 1929 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: A.E. Anson (as "Aristotle/Aristandos"), Doan Borrup [credited as Doan Borup] (as "Clitus"), Cleo Coil (as "Another Courtesan"), Charles Dalton (as "Darius III"), Henry Davis (as "Slave"), James B. Devereaux (as "Macedonian Soldier"), Edward Donnelly (as "Parmenio"), Don Goss (as "Persian Captain"), Henry Hull (as "Alexander'), Jessie Royce Landis' (as "Statira"), Gladys Lloyd (as "A Courtesan"), A. McWaith (as "Slave"), Francis Moran (as "Persian Captain"), Peter Parke (as "Philotas"), Edward Rigby (as "Spirthrides"), Ben Starkie (as "A Young Greek Boy"), Bernard Thornton (as "Themakales"), William Wallack (as "Macedonian Soldier"), Arthur West (as "Persian Soldier"), Lawrence Zavell (as "Coenus").
- (1929) Stage Play: Scarlet Pages. Drama. Written by Samuel Shipman and John B. Hymer. Directed by Ira Hards. Morosco Theater: 9 Sep 1929- Nov 1929 (closing date unknown/72 performances). Cast: Jean Adair, Lee Baker, J. Moy Bennett, William Burnett, Elmer Cornell, John Costello, Elizabeth Council, Gilberta Faust, Elsie Ferguson (as "Mary Bancroft"), Jack Fifer, Albert Hall, David Higgins, Francesca Hill, Claire Luce, Lily Marne, John Martin, Donald McClelland, Sue Moore, John Moran, Henry Pemberton, A.H. Reno, Glen Snyder, Robert Williams. Produced by A.H. Woods. Note: Filmed by First National Pictures [distributed by Warner Bros.] as Scarlet Pages (1930).
- (1929) Stage Play: Cortez. Comedy. Written by Le Roy Clemens and Ralph Murphy. Directed by Ira Hards. Mansfield Theatre: 4 Nov 1929- Nov 1929 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: George Barbier (as "Lorin X. Pendelton"), Helen Baxter (as "Diane Meredith"), Monroe Bennett (as "Chauffeur"), Dorothea Chard (as "Nancy Helton"), Maxwell Driscoll (as "Locke"), Walter Fenner (as "J. Stanwood Drexel"), Thomas V. Gillen (as "Mickey O'Day"), Robert Harrison (as "Felipe"), William Jeffrey (as "J. W. Temple"), Edward Kay (as "Smithers"), Richard K. Keith (as "Steve"), T. Kunihara (as "Gin Long"), Lipari Trio (as "Spanish Troubadours"), Eugenie Reid (as "Myrtle"), John Philip Ryder (as "Jose"), Lou Tellegen (as "Senor Don Hernando Cortez y Romero"), Clyde Veaux (as "Miguel"), Juan Villasano (as "Sancho"). Produced by Jack Linder.
- (1931) Stage Play: Dracula. Drama (revival). Written by Hamilton Deane and John L. Balderston. Based on the novel by Bram Stoker. Directed by Ira Hards. Royale Theatre: 13 Apr 1931- Apr 1931 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Arnold Daly (as "Jonathan Harker"), Edward Forbes (as "R. M. Renfield"), Marcella Gaudel (as "Lucy Seward"), William Melville (as "Dr. Seward"), William Olathe (as "Miller Butterworth"), Maurice Morris (as "Abraham Van Helsing"), Alfreda Sill (as "Miss Wells, a maid"), Courtney White (as "Count Dracula"). Produced by O.E. Wee.
- (1936) Stage Play: Summer Wives. Comedy. Written by Mark Linder and Dolph Singer. Music by Sam Morrison. Lyrics by Dolph Singer. Music for "Us on a Bus" by Vee Lawnhurst. Lyrics for "Us on a Bus" by Tot Seymour. Directed by Ira Hards. Mansfield Theatre: 13 Apr 1936- 18 Apr 1936 (8 performances). Cast: Bassine Alfaux, Phil Arnold, Miriam Battista (as "Helen La Mott"), Max Beck, Helen Charleston, Morgan Conway (as "Dan McGillicuddy"), Charles Dale, Saul Daniel, Debby Dare, Mary Douglas, Milton Douglas, Laura Gilbert, Jack Hassler, Linda Lee Hill, Annette Hoffman, Marjorie Joyce, Roslyn Kay, Seymour Linder, Herbert Ritter Lynne, Bertha Mack, Daniel Makarenko, Ben Marks, Fay Martin, Sam Morrison, Gertrude Mudge, William B. Newgard, Jhoreck Rai, Clarence Rock (as "Joe Wilder"), Alma Ross (as "Ensemble"), J. Raymond Savich, Freya Schorr, Joseph Smith, Jeanne Temple, Robert Turner, Jane Walsh, Herbert Warren, John Wheeler, Eddie Yubell, Jack Zero. Produced by Jack Linder and D.F. Wolfson.
- (1929) Stage Play: Cortez. Comedy. Written by Le Roy Clemens and Ralph Murphy. Directed by Ira Hards. Mansfield Theatre: 4 Nov 1929- Nov 1929 (closing date unknown/8 performances).
- (1936) Stage Play: Arrest That Woman. Melodrama. Written by Maxine Alton. Directed by Ira Hards [final Broadway credit]. National Theatre: 18 Sep 1936- Sep 1936 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Frank Andrews (as "Brown"), Merle Clayton (as "Buddy"), Lillian Emerson (as "Madlyn Harcourt"), Walter Greaza (as "Robert Dorgan, District Attorney"), Harry Hanlon (as "Kelly"), Roger Hundley (as "Police Radio Announcer"), Gerald Kent (as "Davis"), Walter Kinsella (as "Marine"), George Lessey (as "Judge Marvin Drake"), Dave Mallen (as "Sailor'), Hugh Marlowe (I)' (as "Donald Drake") [Broadway debut], Doris Nolan (as "Marie Smith"), Francis Roberts (as "Police Telephone Operator"), Gertrude Short (as "Go-Go") [only Broadway role], Charles Wiley Jr. (as "Officer McCarthy"), Mervin Williams (as "Tom Thornton"). Produced by A.H. Woods.
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