Narcissa, or The Cost of Empire,
libretto by Sara Pratt Carr
(1911)
The Leper,
libretto by Dudley Burrows
(1912)
Memories,
libretto by Charles Eugene Banks
(1914)
Harmony,
libretto by Mission High School students
(1917)
The Flaming Arrow, or, The Shaft of Ku' Pish-ta-ya
libretto by the Sarah Pratt Carr
(1922)
A Chinese Legend "The Immortal Lovers,"
libretto by F. H. Bruner
(1922)
[pantomime]
David Rizzio,
grand opera in two acts;
libretto by Emmanuel Mapleson Browne
(26 May 1928, Los Angeles Shrine Aud.)
[Op. 89]
Los Rubios,
libretto by Neeta Marquis
(1931)
Flutes of Jade Happiness,
libretto by Laura Sweeney Moore
(1933)
Légende Provençale,
libretto by Eleanore Flaig
(1935)
About Mary Carr Moore
Born Mary Louise Carr, Mary Carr Moore was a music educator as well as a composer. Though she wrote a great deal of music for the stage, none of her works recieved professional productions during her lifetime; her David Rizzio briefly gained notoriety for a planned Italian production that was abandoned.