Francis Grover Cleveland, an actor, producer and director in summer stock as well as the nation's senior Presidential offspring, died on Wednesday at Huggins Hospital in Wolfeboro, N.H. He was 92.

Mr. Cleveland, who lived in Tamworth, a resort center in eastern New Hampshire, in the southern foothills of the White Mountains, was a founder of the Barnstormers, a troupe that traveled in New Hampshire starting in 1931. The company found a permanent home in a remodeled barn in Tamworth after World War II.

Starting in 1966, Mr. Cleveland perennially talked of retirement and the possibility that his aptly called nonprofit theater might have to close. Yet, despite failing eyesight, Mr. Cleveland again directed some of last summer's fare, opening the season with "The Front Page" in July and closing with "The Fantasticks" in early September.

Mr. Cleveland was born in Buzzards Bay, Mass., the youngest of four children of Grover Cleveland, the nation's 22d and 24th President. His father, a frequent summer visitor in Tamworth, died in 1908, when the boy was 5.