- (1897 - 1930) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1897) Stage Play: The Alderman. Drama. Written by William Gill. Haverly's 14th Street Theatre: 24 May 1897- May 1897 (closing date unknown/unknown performances). Cast: Marion Abbott (as "Mrs. Tremont Fordham") [Broadway debut], Paul Menifee (as "Jack"), Mark Price (as "Blanchard Maxwell"), May Wheeler (as "Dora Wellesley"), Odell Williams (as "Andrew McSlathers"), Zenaidee Williams (as "Fanny").
- (1900) Stage Play: Sag Harbor. Drama. Written by James A. Herne [final Broadway credit]. Scenic Design by Frank E. Gates, E. A. Morange and Ernest Albert. Theatre Republic: (closing date unknown/76 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Lionel Barrymore (as "Frank Turner") [Broadway debut], T.H. Burke, John D. Garrick, Robert Gillig, Chrystal Herne, James A. Herne, Julia A. Herne (as "Martha Reese"), William T. Hodge, Harriett McDonald, Frank Monroe, C. Dibden Pitt, Margaret Dibden (as "Pitt"), Mollie Revel, Forrest Robinson (as "Ben Turner"), Mrs. Sol Smith.
- (1901) Stage Play: The Bonnie Brier Bush. Drama. Written by James MacArthur. Based on the novel by Ian Maclaren [earliest Broadway credit]. Scenic Design by Joseph A. Physioc. Directed by John Stapleton. Theatre Republic: 23 Sep 1901- Nov 1901 (closing date unknown/56 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Bessie Baldwin, Gertrude Bennett, Sydney Booth, Augustin Duncan, R.C. Easton, Reuben Fax, Frank B. Foote, Charles Hutchinson, John Jennings, Irma La Pierre, Charles MacDonald, Charles MacRae, Gertrude Robinson, M.D. Stepner, James H. Stoddart, Edith Taliaferro, W.H. White. Produced by Kirke La Shelle.
- (1901) Stage Play: Quality Street. Drama. Written by J.M. Barrie. Scenic Design by Edward G. Unitt. Directed by Joseph Humphries. Knickerbocker Theatre: 11 Nov 1901- Jan 1902 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Maude Adams, Sydney Brough, R. Payton Carter, Sarah Converse, Joseph Francoeur, George S. Irving, William Lewers, Helen Lowell, Charles Martin, Sara Perry, Fred Santley, Frederick Spencer, Ida Waterman. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1903) Stage Play: The Vinegar Buyer. Comedy. Written by Herbert Hall Winslow. Savoy Theatre: 4 May 1903- May 1903 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Ezra Kendall (as "Joe Miller"), Marion Abbott, Lottie Alter, Charles Bowser, Edward Chapman, Ida Darling, John D. Garrick, Harry Hanlon, Frank A. Howson, Frank Lander, Rose Norris, Walter Thomas. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1903) Stage Play: Are You My Father? Written by Ernest Lacy [final Broadway credit]. Loosely based on incidents in "Japhet in Search of a Father" by Captain Marryat. Bijou Theatre: 8 Oct 1903- Oct 1903 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Louise Allen, Herbert Ayling, William Collier Sr., Jane Dara, Leo Hawley, Wallace McCutcheon Jr. [Broadway debut], George Nash, Laura Palmer, Brigham Royce, John Saville, Redmond St. Croy, Charles Swain, Hugo Toland.
- (1904) Stage Play: That Man and I. Drama. Written by Frances Hodgson Burnett. Directed by Frederick Arthur Stanley. Savoy Theatre: 25 Jan 1904- Feb 1904 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Produced by Frank L. Perley and Company.
- (1904) Stage Play: The Harvester. Drama. Written by Charles M. Skinner. Based on "Le Chemineau" by Jean Richepin. Directed by Otis Skinner. Lyric Theatre: 10 Oct 1904- Nov 1904 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, John Boylan, George Clarke, Lizzie Hudson Collier, J.M. Colville, Russell Crauford, Maud Durbin, Walter P. Lewis, Daniel Pennell, Ben T. Ringgold, Otis Skinner. Produced by Joseph Buckley.
- (1904) Stage Play: A Fool and His Money (Revival). Written by George Broadhurst. Bijou Theatre: 26 Oct 1904- Nov 1904 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Eleanora Allen, Louise Allen, Anita Bridger, Lyster Chambers, William Collier Sr., Jane Dara, Mary Davenport, Mabel Dixey, Edna Faron, Daisy Green, Leo Hawley, Wallace McCutcheon Jr., George Nash, John Saville, Hugo Toland, George Henry Trader. Produced by Broadhurst & Currie.
- (1907) Stage Play: The Aero Club. Comedy. Written by Sydney Rosenfeld. Directed by Herbert Gresham. Criterion Theatre: 28 Jan 1907- Feb 1907 (closing date unknown/22 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, James H. Bradbury, Orme Caldara (as "Jack Chandler"), Samuel Coit, Lizzie Conway, Ada Gilman, Lulu Glaser, William Herbert, Anna Johnson, Frank E. Lamb, Edmund Lawrence, Harry Odlin, John J. Pierson, William Sampson, John F. Ward, Fritz Williams, Olive Wyndham. Produced by Klaw & Erlanger.
- (1907) Stage Play: Personal. Written by Eugene Wiley Presbrey. Bijou Theatre: 3 Sep 1907- Oct 1907 (closing date unknown/38 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Mary Alden, Louise Allen, Herbert Ayling, William Collier Sr., Louise Compton, Nannette Comstock, Cathryn Cooper, Brandon Hurst, Wallace McCutcheon Jr., George Nash, Laura Palmer, Jane Peyton, Brinsley Printie, Brigham Royce, Jack Saville, Grace Thorn. Produced by Weber & Fields (Lew Fields) [credited as Lew M. Fields].
- (1908) Stage Play: Quality Street. Drama (revival).
- (1908) Stage Play: Father and Son. Written by Edgar Selwyn. Majestic Theatre: 24 Sep 1908- Oct 1908 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Nina Ainscoe, Dwight Allen, Edward Chapman, June Chapman, Herbert Corthell, George Derr, Alice Gale, Georgie Lawrence, Madeline Louis (as "Grace"), William Norris (as "Doc Filkins"), Charles Ogle, Nat Royster, George C. Staley (as "Arthur Welby"), John Westley (as "Billy Filkins"). Produced by F. Ray Comstock.
- (1910) Stage Play: Sherlock Holmes (Revival). Written by William Gillette. Based on the books by Arthur Conan Doyle. Empire Theatre: 5 Dec 1910- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Frank Andrews, Charles H. Bradshaw, Josephine Brown, Clifford Bruce, Griffith Evans, William Gillette (as "Sherlock Holmes"), Margaret Greene, Riley Hatch [credited in William Riley Hatch], George D. Hubbard, John Miltern, Albert Parker, Stewart Robbins, Louise Rutter, Marie Wainwright. Produced by Charles Frohman. Note: played in repertory with The Private Secretary, Secret Service, Too Much Johnson, and Held by the Enemy.
- (1912) Stage Play: The Girl from Montmartre. Musical/farce. Material by Harry B. Smith and Robert B. Smith. Music by Henri Bereny. Lyrics by Harry B. Smith and Robert B. Smith. Adapted from the French farce "La Dame de chez Maxim" by Georges Feydeau. Based on a French operette 'Das Madel von Montmarte' by Rudolph Schanzer. Additional music by Jerome Kern, Howard Talbot, Lionel Monckton and Franz Wagner. Additional lyrics by M.E. Rourke, Clifford Harris, Arthur Wimperis, John Golden and Percy Greenbank. Musical Director: Harold Vicars. Directed by Thomas Reynolds. Criterion Theatre (on hiatus from 29 Sep 1912 to 6 Apr 1913 then moved to The Grand Opera House from 7 Apr 1913- close): 5 Aug 1912- Apr 1913 (closing date unknown/72 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Grace Beaumont, Natalie Burr, Audrey Burr, Audrey Burton, Richard Carle, Alice Carrington, Frances Carter, George T. Chance, Maud Clare, Katherine Daly, William Danforth, Lillian Davis, Louise Donovan, Clara Eckstrom, Merceita Esmonde, Dolly Filly, Hazel Flint, Mary Gilmore, Jeanette Greene, John Hamilton, Al Hart, Viola Harty, Bertha Holly, Ida Howe, Percy F. Leach, Lela Lee, Helene Lucas, George Lydecker, George R. Lynch, Moya Mannering, Marion Miller, Alan Mudie, Ralph Nairn, Lennox Pawle, Lillian Rice, Marie Rose, Cissie Sewell, May Sheldon, Joseph C. Smith, Geraldine Taylor, Hazel Troutman, Dai Turgeon, Angie Weimers, Hattie Williams, Trixie Wilson. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1912) Stage Play: Peter Pan (Revival). Written by J.M. Barrie. Empire Theatre: 23 Dec 1912- Jan 1913 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast included: Maude Adams (as "Peter Pan"), Marion Abbott, Robert Peyton Carter, Dorothy Chesman, Lola Clifton, Dorothy Dunn, Margaret Gordon, Raymond Hackett, Anna Reader, Audrey Ridgewell, William Sheafe, Byron Silvers, Dorothy Tureak, Fred Tyler, Edwin Wilson, Jane Wren. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1913) Stage Play: The Land of Promise. Written by W. Somerset Maugham. Lyceum Theatre: 25 Dec 1913- Mar 1914 (closing date unknown/76 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Billie Burke, Selma Hall, Lumsden Hare, Shelly Hull, Lillian Kingsbury, Leopold Lane, Gladys Morris, Mildred Orme, Barnett Parker, Thomas Reynolds, Norman Tharp, Henry Warwick. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1914) Stage Play: Secret Strings. Written by Kate Jordan. Longacre Theatre: 28 Dec 1914- Jan 1915 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Charles Coleman, Frederic De Belleville, Charles K. Gerard, Leonard Grey, Arthur P. Hyman, Franklyn Kingsley, Mary Nash, Emmy Oswald, Hamilton Revelle, Frank Sterling, Sidney Stone, Lou Tellegen, Blanche Yurka. Produced by H.H. Frazee. Note: Filmed by Metro Pictures as Secret Strings (1918).
- (1916) Stage Play: Seven Chances. Written by Roi Cooper Megrue. George M. Cohan's Theatre (moved to the Belasco Theatre on 23 Oct 1916 to close): 8 Aug 1916- Dec 1916 (closing date unknown/151 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Charles Brokate, Emily Callaway, Alice Carroll, Frank Craven, Florence Deshon, Hayward Ginn, Otto Kruger, Rowland Lee [credited as Rowland Lee], Harry Leighton, Helen MacKellar, Carroll McComas, Anne Meredith, Lillian Spencer, Allen Thomas, Beverly West. Produced by David Belasco. Note: Filmed by Buster Keaton Productions as Seven Chances (1925).
- (1917) Stage Play: Lombardi, Ltd. Written by Frederic Hatton and Fanny Hatton. Morosco Theatre: 24 Sep 1917- Jun 1918 (296 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott (as "Millie McNeal"), Warner Baxter (as "Riccardo Tosello") [only Broadway role], Hallam Bosworth (as "James Hodgkins"), Winifred Bryson (as "Muriel"), Leo Carrillo (as "Tito Lombardi"), Janet Dunbar (as "Norah Blake"), Maude Gilbert (as "Lida Moore"), Charles Hammond (as "Robert Tarrant"), Judy Harris (as "Yvette"), Sue MacManamy (as "Phyllis Manning"), Carrington North (as "Miss Curran"), Mary Robinson (as "An Errand Girl"), Ina Rorke (as "Mrs. Warrington Brown"), Harold Russell (as "Max Strohm"), Ruth Terry (as "Eloise"), Grace Valentine (as "Daisy"), Percival Vivian (as "An Expressman"). Produced by Oliver Morosco. Note: Filmed by Screen Classics Inc. [distributed by Metro Pictures Corporation] as Lombardi, Ltd. (1919).
- (1919) Stage Play: The Son-Daughter. Written by George Scarborough and David Belasco. Belasco Theatre: 19 Nov 1919- Jun 1920 (closing date unknown/223 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott (as "Doctor Lum Low"), John Amory (as "Wu Git"), Albert Bruning (as "Sin Kai"), Charles R. Burrows (as "Chow Chang"), Frederick Burt [credited as Frederic Burt] (as "His Excellency, Fang Fou Hy"), W.T. Clark (as "Kai Pai"), Jane Ferrell (as "Toy Yah"), Thomas Findlay (as "Doctor Dong Tong"), Nick Long (as "Chao Pingkium"), Edmund Lowe (as "Tom Lee"), Richard Malchien (as "Kang"), 'Harry Mestayer' (as "Fen-sha"), Lenore Ulric (as "Lien Wha"), Henry Weaver (as "General Yuan"), John Willard (as "Wing"). Produced by David Belasco. Note: Filmed by MGM as The Son-Daughter (1932).
- (1921) Stage Play: The Wren. Comedy. Written by Booth Tarkington. Directed by Howard Lindsay. Gaiety Theatre: 10 Oct 1921- Oct 1921 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott (as "Mrs. Freehart"), Pauline Armitage (as "Mrs. Frazee"), George Fawcett (as "Cap'n Olds"), John Flood (as "Frazee"), Helen Hayes (as "Seeby"), Leslie Howard (as "Roddy"), Sam Reed (as "Francis"). Produced by George C. Tyler and Abraham L. Erlanger.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Mountain Man. Comedy. Written by Clare Kummer. Directed by Clare Kummer and Edward Elsner. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 12 Dec 1921- Apr 1922 (closing date unknown/163 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott (as "Laura Bayne, a Neighbor"), Sidney Blackmer (as "Aaron Winterfield, from High Mountain, Heir to the Winterfield Estate"), E.J. DeVarney (as "General Verterin, a French Army Officer"), Laurence Eddinger (as "Wellington, a Servant of the Delaney's"), George Fawcett (as "Jess, a Mountaineer"), Fred Karr (as "Major Miles McCloud, Del's Uncle"), Marjorie Kummer (as "Lulie, Mary Vaughan's Daughter"), Lucia Moore (as "Mary Vaughan, Aaron's Cousin by Marriage"), Chester Morris (as "Carey, a Distant Connection of Aaron's"), Catherine Dale (as "Owen Delaney McCloud, "Del"), Grace Reals (as "Virginia Delaney, Lulie's Sister"), Leonard Rowe (as "Stephen Bayne"). Produced by Charles L. Wagner.
- (1922) Stage Play: Dolly Jordan. Romance.
- (1923) Stage Play: The Exile. Comedy/drama. Written by Sidney Toler. Directed by José Ruben. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 9 Apr 1923- May 1923 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Tiny Allen, Aubrey Beattie (as "Journet"), Wallis Clark, Etienne Girardot (as "Baptsiste"), Leonard Ide (as "Lafleur"), Rikel Kent, Eleanor Painter, Sidney Riggs, José Ruben (as "Jacques Cortot"). Produced by Joseph Sidney.
- (1923) Stage Play: For All of Us.
- (1926) Stage Play: Slaves All. Written by Edward Percy. Directed by Lumsden Hare. Bijou Theatre: 6 Dec 1926- Dec 1926 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott (as "Julia Rigordan"), Vera Allen (as "Ann Rigordan"), Herbert Ashton (as "Captain Sheamus Blagdon"), Lionel Atwill (as "John Rigordan"), Stanley Drewitt (as "Squitch"), Halliwell Hobbes (as "Rev. Matthew Holdsworth"), Nancie Halliwell Hobbes (as "Charlotte Holdsworth"), Marguerite Mosier (as "Jenny Venn"), Thomas Wigney Percyval (as "Dr. Felix Burn"), Reginald Sheffield (as "George Squitch"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1927) Stage Play: Lombardi, Ltd. Comedy (revival). Written by Frederic Hatton and Fanny Hatton. Directed by Cecil Owen. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 6 Jun 1927- Jun 1927 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Leo Carrillo (as "Tito Lombardi") [final Broadway role], Evelyn Carter Carrington, Helen Dedens, Eunice Hunt, Adele Le Roy, Beresford Lovett, Marion Martin, Audrey Ridgewell [credited as Audrey Ridgwell], Arthur Ross, John Saunders, Edward Shaw, Philip Tonge (as "Riccardo Tosello"), Rita Grapel (as "Phyllis Manning"), Barbara Weeks (as "Eloise"). Produced by Murray Phillips' Repertory Theatre and Murray Phillips. Note: Previously filmed by Screen Classics Inc. [distributed by Metro Pictures Corporation] as Lombardi, Ltd. (1919).
- (1927) Stage Play: The 19th Hole.
- (1930) Stage Play: I Want My Wife. Comedy.
- (1930) Stage Play: Gold Braid. Drama.
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