- (1903 - 1928) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (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") [final Broadway role], 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).
- (1924) Stage Play: That Awful Mrs. Eaton. Drama. Written by John Farrar and Stephen Vincent Benet. Morosco Theatre: 29 Sep 1924- Oct 1924 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Cordelia Howard Aiken (as "Mrs. John Quincy Adams"), Katharine Alexander (as "Peggy O'Neal Eaton"), Mary Allen (as "Dolly Madison"), Frank Andrews (as "Mordecai Noah/John Branch, Secretary of the Navy"), Margaret Armstrong (as "Mrs. Everett"), Lee Beggs (as "Daniel Webster") [Broadway debut], James A. Bliss (as "U.S. Senator Peleg Sprague"), Joyce Borden (as "Emily Donelson"), Laura Brittan (as "Mrs. Henry Clay"), Herbert Bunston (as "Sir Charles Vaughan, British Ambassador"), Ulric Blair Collins (as "Duff Green"), Henry Crosby (as "Colonel Towson"), Harry Davies (as "Major-General Alexander Macomb"), H.G. Emerson (as "Samuel D. Ingham, Secretary of Treasury"), Franklyn Fox (as "Richard Hibson"), Elmer Grandin (as "John C. Calhoun"), Virginia Howell (as "Mrs. Sprague"), Margot Lester (as "Mary Vaughan"), Kirah Markham (as "Mrs. Daniel Webster"), Frank McGlynn (as "Andrew Jackson"), Isabel O'Madigan (as "Mrs. John C. Calhoun"), Ernest E. Pollock (as "John McPherson Berrien, Attorney General"), William R. Randall (as "John Henry Eaton, Secretary of War"), Mary Ellen Ryan (as "Mrs. Hibson"), Lota Sanders (as "Mrs. Branch"), Clifford Sellers (as "Mrs. Ingham"), Mary Taylor (as "Mrs. Berrien"), Lou Turner (as "William Taylor Barry, Postmaster General"), Minor Watson (as "Major William B. Taylor"), Robert Wayne (as "Martin Van Buren, Secretary of State"), Thomas H. Wenning (as "Commodore John Rodgers"), William Walcott [erroneously credited as William Wolcott] (as "Dr. Campbell"), Walter Young (as "Jim"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1925) Stage Play: Young Woodley. Comedy. Written by John Van Druten. Directed by George C. Tyler and Basil Dean. Belasco Theatre: 2 Nov 1925- Jun 1926 (closing date unknown/260 performances). Cast: Esther Bell (as "Parlor Maid"), Herbert Bunston (as "Simmons"), Edward Crandall (as "Ainger"), Helen Gahagan (as "Laura Simmons"), John Gerard, Geoffrey John Harwood, Glenn Hunter (as "Woodley"), Grant Stewart (as "Mr. Woodley"), George Walcott (as "Cope").
- (1923) Stage Play: The Enchanted Cottage. Written by Sir Arthur Wing Pinero. Directed by Jessie Bonstelle and William A. Brady. Ritz Theatre: 31 Mar 1923- May 1923 (closing date unknown/65 performances). Cast: Geraldine Ballard (as "Cherub"), Merlin Ballard (as "Imp/Corsellis Child"), Seldon Bennett (as "Rigg"), Clara Blandick (as "Mrs. Minnett/First Witch"), Thomas Broderick (as "First Groom"), Herbert Bunston (as "Rupert Smallwood"), Norman Byron (as "Corsellis Child/Cherub"), Cora Calkins (as "Third Witch"), Elizabeth Collins (as "Bridesmaid"), Katharine Cornell (as "Laura Pennington"), Gertrude Dailey (as "Corsellis Child/Imp"), Dorothy Dorbandt (as "Cherub"), Grace Dougherty (as "Third Bride"), Gilbert Emery (as "Major Murray Hillgrove, D.S.O., M.C."), Francis Fay (as "Cherub"), Winifred Frazer (as "Mrs. Smallwood"), Harry Garwood (as "Cherub"), Gwyneth Gordon (as "Ethel"), Julia Gorman (as "Imp/Corsellis Child"), Roland Hanson (as "Second Groom"), Phyllis Jackson (as "First Bride"), Genevieve Kane (as "Corsellis Child"), Margaret Kastner (as "Cherub"), Stanley Lindahl (as "Third Groom"), Gudrun Mantzius (as "Second Bride"), Harry Neville (as "Rev. Charles Corsellis"), Dorothy Revere (as "Bridesmaid"), George Ryan (as "Corsellis Child"), Helen Ryan (as "Second Witch"), Eileen Smith (as "Cherub"), Noel Tearle (as "Oliver Bashforth"), Dolly Tigue (as "Imp/Corsellis Child"), Ethel Wright (as "Mrs. Corsellis"). Produced by William A. Brady Ltd. Note: Filmed by Inspiration Pictures [distributed by Associated First National Pictures] as The Enchanted Cottage (1924), and by RKO Radio Pictures as The Enchanted Cottage (1945).
- (1924) Stage Play: Simon Called Peter. Drama. Written by Jules Eckert Goodman and Edward Knoblock. Based on the novel by Robert Keable. Klaw Theatre: 10 Nov 1924- Jan 1925 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: John Barry (as "Wilkins"), William Edwin Barry (as "Lieut. Donovan"), Herbert Bunston (as "Major Langton"), Henry Crosby (as "Capt. Mackaye"), Carson Davenport (as "George Lessing"), H. Tyrrell-Davis (as "Lieut. Bobby Jenks"), Harold De Becker (as "Private Sharp"), Riccardo De Sylva (as "Lieut. Pennel"), Josephine Evans (as ""Tommy" Raynard"), George Fuller (as "Lieut. Jones"), John Gray (as "Capt. Drayton"), Joseph Merryman (as "The Leader of the Band"), Lota Sanders (as "Louise"), Richard Simson (as "Capt. Curry"), Harry Ullock (as "Capt. Fraser"), June Webster (as "Madeleine"), Evelyn Wight (as "Hilda Lessing"), Catherine Willard (as "Julie Gamelyn"), Leonard Willey (as "Peter Graham"). Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1903) Stage Play: Drink. Written by Charles Reade. Book adapted by William Busnach and Octav Gastineau. Based on "L'Assommoir" by Émile Zola. Academy of Music: 14 Sep 1903- Oct 1903 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Gordon Bailey [only Broadway role], Lucy Wilson Bailey, Herbert Bunston [Broadway debut], E. Contree, Zelina Harrington, Clement R. Kirby, Henry Martin, Vivian Martin, James W. Mullin, Alfred Phillips, Jennie Reiffarth, Harry Sefton, Robert C. Turner, Charles Walters, Charles Warner. Produced by Rich & Harris.
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