- (1917 - 1937) Active on Broadway as a writer, director and/or actor in the following productions:
- (1917) Stage Play: The Deluge. Drama. Written by Henning Berger. Adaptation by Frank Allen. Hudson Theatre: 20 Aug 1917- Sep 1917 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: William Dick, Henry E. Dixey, Riley Hatch, Pauline Lord, Robert McWade, Guy Nichols, Clyde North, Frederick Perry, William J. Phinney, Edward G. Robinson. Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1918) Stage Play: Mr. Barnum. Written by Harrison Rhodes and Thomas A. Wise. Criterion Theatre: 9 Sep 1918- Sep 1918 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Undetermined role.
- (1918) Stage Play: Nothing But Lies. Written by Aaron Hoffman. Longacre Theatre: 8 Oct 1918- Feb 1919 (closing date unknown/135 performances). Cast: Jane Blake, Malcolm Bradley, James Bryson, Gordon Burby, William Collier Sr. (as "George Washington Cross"), Harry Cowley, Florence Enright (as "Lorna Temple"), Riley Hatch [credited as William Riley Hatch], Rapley Holmes (as "Jefferson Nigh"), Frank Monroe, Clyde North (as "Allen Nigh"), Grant Stewart, Robert Strange, Olive Wyndham. Produced by Gilbert M. 'Broncho Billy' Anderson and L. Lawrence Weber.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Tavern. Melodrama (revival). Written by Cora Dick Grant. Directed by John Meehan and George M. Cohan. Hudson Theatre: 23 May 1921- Jun 1921 (closing date unknown/27 performances). Undetermined role. Cast included: George M. Cohan. Produced by George M. Cohan.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Varying Shore. Drama. Written by Zoe Akins. Directed by Sam Forrest. Hudson Theatre: 5 Dec 1921- Feb 1921 (closing date unknown/66 performances). Cast: Charles Baldwin (as "Tom (2)"), Donald Bethune (as "Tom (1)"), James Crane (as "Joe Leland"), Blythe Daly (as "Kitty"), Herbert Evans (as "An Englishman"), Paul Everton (as "Garreth Treadway"), Elsie Ferguson (as "The Ghost of Madame Leland/Madame Leland/Julie Venable), Charles Francis (as "Larry Sturgis"), Harris Gilmore (as "Roger") [Broadway debut], Sylvia Gough (as "Laura"), Norman Houston (as "William Blevins"), Wright Kramer (as "Governor Venable"), Clyde North (as "Vernon Baird"), Geraldine O'Brien (as "Hester"), Rollo Peters (as "Richard/John Garrison"), Margot Rieman (as "Marie"), Maidel Turner (as "Mrs. Venable"). Produced by Sam H. Harris.
- (1923) Stage Play: Peter Weston. Drama. Written by Frank Mitchell Dazey and Leighton Osmun. Directed by Frank Keenan. Sam H. Harris Theatre: 18 Sep 1923- Oct 1923 (closing date unknown/23 performances). As "John Weston." Cast included: Judith Anderson. Produced by Sam Harris.
- (1924) Stage Play: What Price Glory. Drama. Written by Maxwell Anderson and Laurence Stallings. Directed by Arthur Hopkins. Plymouth Theatre: 3 Sep 1924- 12 Sep 1925 (closing date unknown/433 performances). Cast: Luis Alberni (as "Monsieur Pete De La Cognac"), William Barstow Smith (as "A Captain, Headquarters Staff"), Francis Bolan (as "A Brigade Runner"), William 'Stage' Boyd (as "First Sergeant Quirt"), Fred Brophy, Thomas Buckley (as "Another Lieutenant, Headquarters Staff"), Arthur Campbell (as "Another Brigade Runner/Lieutenant Lundstrom"), John J. Cavanaugh (as "A Brigade Runner"), Charles Costigan, John C. Davis (as "A Chaplain"), James Devine [credited as James A. Devine] (as "Sergeant Ferguson") [final Broadway role], Brian Donlevy (as "Cpl. Gowdy") [Broadway debut], Sidney Elliott, Leyla Georgie, J. Merrill Holmes, Dan Kelly, Roy LaRue, Jack MacGraw, Fuller Mellish (as "Cpl. Kiper"), Clyde North (as "Lt. Moore"), Fay Roope, Harold Salter, Henry G. Shelvey, Thomas Sullivan, George Tobias (as "Cpl. Lipinsky") [Broadway debut], Robert Warner (as "Lieutenant Lundstrom"), Keane Waters (as "A Colonel, Headquarters Staff/Spike"), Louis Wolheim (as "Captain Flagg"). Produced by Arthur Hopkins. Note: Filmed by Fox Film as What Price Glory (1926) and by Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation as What Price Glory (1952).
- (1927) Stage Play: Yours Truly. Musical. Book by Clyde North. Directed by Paul Dickey. Shubert Theatre: 25 Jan 1927- 14 May 1927 (127 performances). Cast included: Irene Dunne, Leon Errol. Produced by Gene Buck. Note: Production resumed at the Century Theatre and ran from 12 Mar 1928- Mar 1928 (closing date unknown/16 performances) with Gene Buck directing. Irene Dunne was not in this reassembled cast.
- (1928) Stage Play: Yours Truly. Musical [return engagement]. Music by Raymond Hubbell. Book by Clyde North. Lyrics by Anne Caldwell. Directed by Gene Buck. Century Theatre: 12 Mar 1928- Mar 1928 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Theodore Babcock (as "J.P. Stillwell"), Edith Babson (as "Miss Stuyvesant"), Victor Casmore (as "Bonzolino"), Diane Du Verne (as "Miss Longstreet"), Elizabeth Duray (as "Diana"), Leon Errol (as "Truly"), Lotta Fanning (as "Ruth/Miss Tillinghast"), Irving Fisher (as "Shuffling Bill"), Peggy Frawley (as "Chinese Girl"), Queenie French (as "Miss Buskminster"), Eunice Hall (as "A Bowery Rose/Miss Nembury"), Virginia Hawkins (as "Miss Hemingway"), Evelyn Hoey (as "Mary Stillwell"), Eve Johnston (as "Minnie Fletcher/Miss Butterfield"), John Kearney (as "Mac"), Jean Kirkland (as "Phil/Bandit/Victor"), Gladys Lake (as "Flower Girl/Miss Glendening"), Betty MacDonald (as "Miss Northcliffe"), Olive Manlet (as "Miss Southworth"), Marguerite Marano (as "Paquita"), Vera Meyers (as "Scats"), Dolly Pross (as "Chinese Girl"), Valerie Raemere (as "Miss Fairweather"), Valerie Raemore (as "Tillie Dupont"), Lucille Rich (as "Miss Matteson"), Jack Stanley (as "Joey Ling"), Earl Van Horn (as "Abe Levy"), Inez Van Horn (as "Cynthia Jones"), Tom Waters (as "Dinty Moore"), Forrest Yarnall (as "Chang").Produced by Gene Buck.
- (1929) Stage Play: Remote Control. Drama. Written by Clyde North and Albert C. Fuller and Jack T. Nelson. Directed by Clyde North. 48th Street Theatre: 10 Sep 1929- Nov 1929 (closing date unknown/79 performances). Cast: Dave Abrams, Patricia Barclay, Louise Barrett, Frank Beaston, Audrey Berry, Hobart Cavanaugh, Polly Clarke, Alice Davenport, Consuelo Flowerton (as "Anges Joyce"), William Foran, William Honohan, Raleigh Kennedy, Donald Kirke, George Leach, Mimi Lehman, Lawrence Leslie, George Lessey (as "W.L. Oakwood"), Michael Markham, James V. Nolan, Claire Nolte, Al Ochs (as "Professor Murrey"), Arthur Pierson, Edward Van Sloan (as "Doctor A.P. Workman"), Harold Woolf. Produced by A.L. Jones and Morris Green. Note: Produced as a William Haines vehicle by MGM as Remote Control (1930) (released 15 Nov 1930). The characters' names were altered completely for the film and re-written as a comedy.
- (1931) Stage Play: In Times Square. Comedy. Written by Dodson Mitchell and Clyde North. Longacre Theatre: 23 Nov 1931- Nov 1931 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: James Anderson (as "Cameraman"), Wyrley Birch (as "The Stage Manager"), Ninon Bunyea (as "Gladys Earle"), John S. Butler (as "Jack Logan"), Walter Greaza (as "Austin Jewett"), Frederick Lewis (as "Hamilton Hart"), Barry Macollum (as "Cokey Davis"), Reginald Mason (as "J. Wilbur Craig"), May McCabe (as "Rose Hobarth"), Dodson Mitchell (as "David Benson"), Thelma Ritter (as "Sally Stewart"), Frank Shannon (as "Chick Rivers"), Harvey Walters (as "A Stranger"). Produced by Barry Macollum and Maurice Greet.
- (1936) Stage Play: All Editions. Comedy. Written by Charles Washburn and Clyde North. Directed by Clyde North [final Broadway credit]. Longacre Theatre: 22 Dec 1936- Jan 1937 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Albert Bergh (as "Danny Dowd"), Frank Dae [credited as Franklyn Dae] (as "Rollo Heppleworth") [final Broadway role], Nancy Evans (as "Dot Melrose"), Clyde Franklin (as "Mortimer Caldwell"), Walter Greaza (as "Clarence Class"), Gladys Griswold, Ruth Holden, Frederick Howard, Carrington Lewis, Claire Nolte, John Ravold, Jerry Sloane, Eric Udo, Joseph Vitale (as "Spike Hennessy"), John Zoller. Produced by Juliana Morgan.
- (1936) Stage Play: All Editions. Comedy. Written by Charles Washburn and Clyde North. Directed by Clyde North [final Broadway credit]. Longacre Theatre: 22 Dec 1936- Jan 1937 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Albert Bergh (as "Danny Dowd"), Frank Dae [credited as Franklyn Dae] (as "Rollo Heppleworth") [final Broadway role], Nancy Evans (as "Dot Melrose"), Clyde Franklin (as "Mortimer Caldwell"), Walter Greaza (as "Clarence Class"), Gladys Griswold, Ruth Holden, Frederick Howard, Carrington Lewis, Claire Nolte, John Ravold, Jerry Sloane, Eric Udo, Joseph Vitale (as "Spike Hennessy"), John Zoller. Produced by Juliana Morgan.
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