Ida Adams

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.