Adams's third appearance on stage was at the Knickerbocker Theatre on Broadway on April 27, 1909, playing Miss Glick in The Candy Shop.
She was next in Florenz Ziegfeld's A Winsome Widow (1912), at the Moulin Rouge, in New York, playing the role of Tony.
[7]Adams's last known theatrical appearance was as Jane Gerson in the play Inside the Lines (1917), which had a long run at the Apollo Theatre, London.
[2] The Sketch said of Inside the Lines "The charm and beauty of Miss Ida Adams are very attractive features of a remarkable and topically interesting production, in which also appear Miss Grace Lane, Mr. Eille Norwood, Mr. Frederick Ross, Mr. E. Dagnall, and other well-players.
[9] A costume drawing, “Miss Ida Adams”, in the Museum of the City of New York, is attributed to Lucy, Lady Duff-Gordon, who worked on Ziegfeld Follies.