- (1920 - 1958) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1920) Stage Play: Samson and Delilah. Comedy-tragedy. Written by Sven Lange, as translated by Samuel S. Grossman. Greenwich Village Theatre: 17 Nov 1920- Mar 1921 (closing date unknown/143 performances). Cast: Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Peter Krumback") [Broadway debut], Marie Bruce, Robert T. Haines, Robert Harrison, Sam Jaffe, Jacob Kingsbury, Manart Kippen (as "Lundberg"), Stella Larrimore, Pauline Lord, Thomas Meegan, Olga Olonova, Alexis M. Polianov, A.W. Reno, Edward G. Robinson (as "The Director"). Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1921) Stage Play: The Idle Inn. Book by Peretz Hirschbein. Book adapted by Isaac Goldberg and Louis Wolheim. Plymouth Theatre: 20 Dec 1921- Jan 1922 (closing date unknown/25 performances). Cast: Shirley Albert, Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Eisik"), Julius Bliech, Juliet Brenon, A.M. Bush, George Casselberry, Lucy English, Margaret Fareleigh, Frohman Foster, Anton Grubman, Lionel Hogarth, Stanley Howlett, Elizabeth Hunt, Sam Jaffe (as "Leibush"), Whitford Kane (as "Schakne"), Alice Kiesler, Jacob Kingsbury (as "Guest"), Ellen Larned, Andrey Lensky, David Leonard, Eva MacDonald, Gertrude Mann, Bella Nodell, Daisy Rieger, Gregory Robbins, Edward G. Robinson (as "Mendel"), Joanna Roos (as "Esther") [Broadway debut], Philip Scherman, William Schukin, Leon Seidenberg, Henry Sharp, Mary Shaw, Henry Simons, Maud Sinclair, Bennie Wagschall, Boris Weiner, Ottie Wetter, Leo Witko, Louis Wolheim (as "Bendet"). Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1922) Stage Play: Johannes Kreisler. Melodrama/fantasy. Written by Louis N. Parker. Apollo Theatre: 20 Dec 1922- Feb 1923 (closing date unknown/65 performances). Cast: Fritz Adams (as "Vincent / Baron Puckler"), Anna Bates (as "Mrs. Mark"), Joseph Batistich (as "Don Ottavio"), Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Johannes Kreisler"), Charles R. Burrows (as "Mr. Mark"), Berthold Busch (as "The Fisherman / Don Juan"), A.M. Bush (as "The Schoolmaster / Assistant Stage Manager"), Millie Butterfield (as "Madame Von Benzon"), Burr Caruth (as "Sekonda"), F. Eckhard Dawson (as "Prince Von Soden"), Alta Virginia Houston (as "The Fisherman's Wife / Elvira"), Allyn Joslyn (as "Cuno"), Manart Kippen (as "Cyprian / Father Ignatius / The Lord Chamberlain"), Edward Le Duc (as "Gottlieb / Dittmaier"), William Lilling (as "A Lackey"), Oliver T. McCormick (as "Sylvester / Leporello"), Hyman Meyer (as "Othmar / Bartoni"), Rosa Nier (as "Undine's Voice / Voice of Donna Anna"), Cecil Owen (as "Ludwig, The Rich Man"), Lotus Robb (as "Julia Mark, Undine/Euphemia/Donna Anna"), Erskine Sanford (as "Theodor"), Hilda Steiner. Produced by The Selwyns.
- (1923) Stage Play: The Failures. Drama. Written by H.R. Lenormand, as translated by Winifred Katzin. Garrick Theatre: 19 Nov 1923- Jan 1924 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Herbert Ashton, Nell Barnes, Alice Belmore [credited as Alice Belmore Cliffe], Jacob Ben-Ami (as "He"), Morris Carnovsky, Henry Clement, Polly Craig, Henry Crosby, Ernest A. Daniels, Dudley Digges, Hildegarde Halliday, Sterling Holloway, Winifred Lenihan, Jo Mielziner, Erskine Sanford, Helen Tilden, Henry Travers, Helen Westley, Ida Zeitlin. Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1924) Stage Play: Welded. Drama. Written by Eugene O'Neill. 39th Street Theatre: 17 Mar 1924- Apr 1924 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Michael Cape"), Catherine Collins (as "A Woman"), Curtis Cooksey (as "John Darnton"), Doris Keane (as "Eleanor Owen"). Produced by Kenneth Macgowan, Robert Edmond Jones and Eugene O'Neill. Produced in association with The Selwyns.
- (1924) Stage Play: Man and the Masses. Tragedy. Written by Ernst Toller. Translated by Louis H. Untermeyer. Cast: Jacob Ben-Ami (as "The Nameless One/The Spirit of the Masses"), Marling Chilton (as "Third Working Man"), Sidney Dexter (as "Messenger Boy"), William Franklin (as "Second Banker"), Ullrich Haupt (as "The Man/The Woman's Husband"), Arthur Hughes (as "The Companion/A Dream Figure"), Mariette Hyde (as "Second Woman Prisoner"), Zita Johann (as "First Woman Prisoner") [Broadway debut], Barry Jones (as "Fifth Banker/An Officer"), Allyn Joslyn [credited as Allyn Morgan Joslyn] (as "Second Working Man"), A.P. Kaye (as "First Banker"), Leonard Lean (as "Fourth Banker"), John McGovern (as "The Condemned One"), Maurice McRae (as "First Working Man"), Pauline Moore (as "A Working Woman"), Samuel Rosen (as "Fourth Working Man"), Erskine Sanford (as "Third Banker/A Priest"), Charles Tazewell (as "Sixth Banker"), Blanche Yurka (as "The Woman"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Goat Song. Written by Franz Werfel, as translated by Ruth Langner. Directed by Jacob Ben-Ami. Guild Theatre: 25 Jan 1926- Mar 1926 (closing date unknown/58 performances). Cast: Anthony Andre (as "Elder of Medegya/An Old Man"), Bela Blau (as "Messenger"), Albert Bruning (as "Physician"), Harold Clurman (as "Clerk"), Edward Fielding (as "The American"), Lynn Fontanne (as "Stanja"), Dwight Frye (as "Mirko"), George Gaul (as "Gospodar Stevan Milie"), William Ingersoll (as "Gospodar Jevrem Vesilie/Scavenger"), House Jameson [credited as House Baker Jameson] (as "Bashi Bazook"), Zita Johann (as "Kruna"), Philip Loeb, Judith Lowry, Alfred Lunt, Frank Reicher (as "Bogoboj"), Edward G. Robinson (as "Reb Feiwel"), Erskine Sanford (as "Starsina/Priest"), Helen Westley (as "Babka"), Martin Wolfson (as "Innkeeper"), Stanley G. Wood, Herbert Yost, Blanche Yurka. Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1926) Stage Play: Schweiger. Written by Franz Werfel. Translated by Jack Charash and William A. Drake. Directed by Jacob Ben-Ami. Mansfield Theatre: 23 Mar 1926- Apr 1926 (closing date unknown/30 performances). Cast: Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Franz Schweiger"), Hugh Buckler (as "Travnick"), Minnie Dupree (as "Mrs. Stroschneider"), Edward Forbes (as "Topas"), Ann Harding (as "Anna Schweiger"), Philip Leigh (as "Dr. Ottokar Grund"), Herbert Ransom (as "Father Rotter"), Samuel Rosen (as "Selcher"), Georgina Tilden, Edward Van Sloan (as "Dr. Burghardt Von Viereck"). Produced by The Fifth Avenue Playhouse.
- (1927) Stage Play: John. Written by Philip Barry. Directed by Guthrie McClintic. Klaw Theatre: 2 Nov 1927- Nov 1927 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: William Adams, Luther Adler (as "Old Man"), Jacob Ben-Ami (as "John"), Constance Collier (as "Herodias"), Anna Duncan, George Graham, Gordon Gunniss, Benjamin Hoogland, Donald Lee, Lawrence Leslie, Gordon McRae (as "Second Guard"), Richard Nicholls, Harry Redding, Ralph Roeder (as "Aaron Hanan"), Ben Smith, James Todd, Marshall Vincent, Albert West, George White. Produced by The Actors Theatre.
- (1928) Stage Play: Diplomacy (Revival). Written by Victorien Sardou. Directed by Campbell Gullan. Erlanger's Theatre: 28 May 1928- Jul 1928 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Margaret Anglin (as "Lady Fairfax"), Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Count Orloff"), Charles Coburn (as "Baron Stein"), Georgette Cohan (as "Mion"), Guy Cunningham (as "Sheppard"), William Faversham (as "Henry Beauclerc"), Helen Gahagan (as "Countess Zicka"), Antony Holles (as "Algie Fairfax"), Cecilia Loftus (as "Marquise De Rio Zares"), Rollo Peters (as "Capt. Julian Beauclerc"), Tyrone Power Sr. (as "Markham"), Georges Renavent (as "Antonio"), Frances Starr (as "Dora"). Produced by George C. Tyler.
- (1929) Stage Play: The Seagull. Comedy/drama (revival). Written by Anton Chekhov. Translated by Constance Garnett. Directed by Eva Le Gallienne. Civic Repertory Theatre: 16 Sep 1929- Nov 1929. Cast: Walter Beck (as "Dr. Dorn"), Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Trigorin"), Egon Brecher (as "Shamrayev"), Josephine Hutchinson (as "Nina"), David Kerman (as "The Cook"), Eva Le Gallienne (as "Masha"), Paul Leyssac (as "Sorin"), Merle Maddern (as "Madame Arkadina"), Harold Moulton (as "Medvedenko"), Leona Roberts (as "Polina"), Robert Ross (as "Konstantin Treplev"), Herbert Shapiro (as "Yakov"), Elisabeth Shelley (as "A Housemaid"). Produced by Civic Repertory Theatre Inc.
- (1929) Stage Play: The Cherry Orchard. Drama (revival). Written by Anton Chekhov. Translated by Constance Garnett. Directed by Eva Le Gallienne. Civic Repertory Theatre: 23 Sep 1929- Oct 1929. Produced by Civic Repertory Theatre Inc.
- (1929) Stage Play: The Living Corpse. Tragedy. Written by Lev Tolstoy [credited as Leo Nikolayevitch Tolstoy]. Directed by Jacob Ben-Ami. Civic Repertory Theatre: 6 Dec 1929- Jan 1930 (closing date unknown/33 performances). Cast: Walter Beck, Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Feyda, an Examining Magistrate"), Egon Brecher (as "Ivan Petrovitch Alexandrov"), J. Edward Bromberg (as "Ivan Markarovitch, Petrushin"), Donald Cameron (as "Victor Michailovitch Karenin"), Sayre Crawley, Mooney Diamond, Leonard Farley (as "Lackey"), Florida Friebus (as "Sasha"), Robert H. Gordon (as "Artemyev"), Lee Hillery, Henry Howard, Josephine Hutchinson, David Kerman (as "Stackov"), Joseph A. Kramm (as "Voznesensky, an Army Officer"), Alma Kruger (as "Anna Pavlovna"), Eva Le Gallienne (as "Anna Dimitrievna Karenina"), Robert Lewis, Paul Leyssac (as "Prince Sergei Dimitrievitch Abrezkov"), Ria Mooney (as "A Drunken Woman"), Arnold Moss (as "Koratkov"), Harold Moulton, Leona Roberts (as "Nastasia Ivanovna"), Rita Romilly (as "Masha"), Robert Ross (as "Court Attendant"), Mary Sarton, Blake Scott (as "Butkevitch"), Herbert Shapiro, Elizabeth Shelly, Constantine Shevtchen (as Gypsy Musician"), William Steinhorn, David Turk (as "A Gypsy Mna"), Gordon Wallace (as "Footman/Petushkov"), Mary Ward (as "Nurse"), Ruth Wilton (as "A Gypsy Girl"), Paul Zamulenko (as "Gypsy Musician"), Theodore Zarkevitch (as "Gypsy Choir Leader").
- (1930) Stage Play: Romeo and Juliet. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Eva Le Gallienne (also appeared as "Juliet"). Civic Repertory Theatre: 21 Apr 1930- May 1930 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Walter Beck (as "Capulet"), Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Escalus, prince of Verona"), J. Edward Bromberg (as "Mercutio, kinsman to the prince and friend to Romeo"), Donald Cameron (as "Romeo, son of Montague"), Amy Chandler (as "Page to Capulet"), Sayre Crawley (as "Friar Laurence, a Franciscan"), Howard Da Silva [Broadway debut] (as "Apothecary"), Mooney Diamond (as "Ensemble"), Florida Friebus (as "Ensemble"), Frederic Giuliano (as "Ensemble"), Robert H. Gordon (as "Tybalt, nephew to Lady Capulet"), Lee Hillery (as "Abraham, servant to Montague/Ensemble"), Henry Howard (as "Watchman/Ensemble"), Vernon Jones (as "Page to Mercutio"), David Kerman (as "Watchman"), Joseph A. Kramm (as "An Old Man of the Capulet family/Friar John, a Franciscan"), Robert Lewis (as "Gregory, servant to Capulet/Watchman"), Merle Maddern (as "Lady Capulet, wife to Capulet"), Burgess Meredith [Broadway debut] (as "Peter, servant to Juliet's nurse/Ensemble"), Arnold Moss (as "Balthasar, servant to Romeo"), Harold Moulton (as "Montague"), Renee Orsell (as "Ensemble"), Leona Roberts (as "Nurse to Juliet"), Robert F. Ross (as "Benvolio, nephew to Montague and friend to Romeo"), May Sarton (as "Ensemble"), Estelle Scheer (as "Ensemble"), Blake Scott (as "Paris, a young nobleman, kinsman to the prince"), Herbert Shapiro (as "Sampson, Servant to Capulet"), Irene Sharaff (as "Ensemble"), William Steinhorn (as "Ensemble"), David Turk (as "Chief Officer of the Town"), Gordon Wallace (as "Page to Paris/Ensemble"), Mary Ward (as "Lady Montague, wife to Montague"), Ruth Wilton (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Civic Repertory Theatre Inc.
- (1930) Stage Play: The Green Cockatoo. (Revival/repertory production; performed in rotation with "Romeo and Juliet," "The Cradle Song" and "The Lady from Alfaqueque"). Written by Arthur Schnitzler. Civic Repertory Theatre: 6 Oct 1930- unknown (unknown performances). Cast: Walter Beck, Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Henri"), Egon Brecher (as "Prospere, Host of the Green Cockatoo"), J. Edward Bromberg (as "Grasset"), Donald Cameron (as "Rollin"), Sayre Crawley (as "Guillaume"), Howard Da Silva (as "Scaevola"), Beatrice De Neergaard (as "Leocadie"), Robert H. Gordon (as "Lebret"), David Kerman, Joseph A. Kramm (as "Sergeant"), Paul Leyssac (as "Marquis de Lansac"), Burgess Meredith (as "Grain"), Ria Mooney (as "Michette"), Arnold Moss, Harold Moulton, Estelle Scheer, Herbert Shapiro, Sala Staw, Gordon Wallace (as "Albin, Chevalier de la Tremouille"). Produced by Civic Repertory Theatre Inc.
- (1930) Stage Play: Romeo and Juliet. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Eva Le Gallienne. Civic Repertory Theatre: 6 Oct 1930- Nov 1930 (closing date unknown/44 performances). Cast: Walter Beck (as "Capulet"), Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Escalus, prince of Verona"), J. Edward Bromberg (as "Mercutio, kinsman to the prince and friend to Romeo"), Donald Cameron (as "Romeo, son of Montague"), Amy Chandler (as "Page to Capulet"), Sayre Crawley (as "Friar Laurence, a Franciscan"), Howard Da Silva (as "Apothecary"), Mooney Diamond (as "Ensemble"), Florida Friebus (as "Ensemble"), Frederic Giuliano (as "Ensemble"), Robert H. Gordon (as "Tybalt, nephew to Lady Capulet"), Lee Hillery (as "Abraham, servant to Montague/Ensemble"), Henry Howard (as "Watchman/Ensemble"), Vernon Jones (as "Page to Mercutio"), David Kerman (as "Watchman"), Joseph A. Kramm (as "An Old Man of the Capulet family/Friar John, a Franciscan"), Alma Kruger (as "Lady Capulet, wife to Capulet"), Marc Lawrence (as "Watchman") [Broadway debut], Eva Le Gallienne (as "Juliet, daughter to Capulet"), Robert Lewis (as "Gregory, servant to Capulet/Watchman"), Merle Maddern (as "Lady Capulet, wife to Capulet"), Burgess Meredith (as "Peter, servant to Juliet's nurse/Ensemble"), Arnold Moss (as "Balthasar, servant to Romeo"), Harold Moulton (as "Montague"), Renee Orsell (as "Ensemble"), Leona Roberts (as "Nurse to Juliet"), Robert F. Ross (as "Benvolio, nephew to Montague and friend to Romeo"), May Sarton (as "Ensemble"), Estelle Scheer (as "Ensemble"), Blake Scott (as "Paris, a young nobleman, kinsman to the prince"), Herbert Shapiro (as "Sampson, Servant to Capulet"), Irene Sharaff (as "Ensemble"), William Steinhorn (as "Ensemble"), David Turk (as "Chief Officer of the Town"), Gordon Wallace (as "Page to Paris/Ensemble"), Mary Ward (as "Lady Montague, wife to Montague"), Ruth Wilton (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Civic Repertory Theatre Inc.
- (1930) Stage Play: Siegfried. Drama. Written by Philip Carr, from the French of Jean Giraudoux. Directed by Eva Le Gallienne. Civic Repertory Theatre: 20 Oct 1930- Nov 1930 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Walter Beck (as "Gen. von Waldorf"), Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Siegfried"), Egon Brecher (as "Baron Von Zelten"), J. Edward Bromberg (as "Pietri"), Donald Cameron (as "Robineau"), Howard Da Silva (as "Mr. Patchkoffer/Schumann"), Sean Dillon, Robert H. Gordon, Joseph A. Kramm (as "Keller"), Edith Lane (as "Mrs. Patchkoffer"), Eva Le Gallienne (as "Genevieve"), Paul Leyssac, Agnes McCarthy, Burgess Meredith (as "Kratz, Orderly"), Arnold Moss, Harold Moulton, Margaret Mower (as "Eva"), Robert Ross, Herbert Shapiro. Produced by Civic Repertory Theatre Inc.
- (1931) Stage Play: Camille. Drama (revival). Written by Alexandre Dumas, fils. Translated by Henriette Metcalf. Directed by Constance Collier. Civic Repertory Theatre: 26 Jan 1931- Mar 1931 (closing date unknown/57 performances). Cast: Walter Beck (as "The Doctor"), Jacob Ben-Ami (as "M. Duval"), Donald Cameron (as "Count De Giray"), Howard Da Silva (as "Guest"), Beatrice De Neergaard (as "Olympe"), Morgan Farley (as "Armand Duval"), Robert H. Gordon (as "Baron De Varville"), Josephine Hutchinson (as "Nichette"), David Kerman (as "Servant"), DeWitt Kiernan (as "Servant"), Joseph A. Kramm (as "Guest"), Alma Kruger (as "Nanine"), Eva Le Gallienne (as "Marguerite Gautier"), Paul Leyssac (as "Saint Gaudens"), Morris Morrison (as "Guest"), Arnold Moss (as "Guest"), Harold Moulton (as "Gaston Rieux"), Peter Railey, Leona Roberts (as "Prudence"), Jacob F. Ross, Robert F. Ross, Jack Saltzman, Estelle Scheer, Joan Van Seyfertitz (as "Guest"), Gordon Wallace (as "Arthur"), Richard Waring (as "Servant/Guest"), Antonia Warren. Produced by Civic Repertory Theatre Inc.
- (1933) Stage Play: Evensong. Written by Edward Knoblock and Beverley Nichols. Adapted from a novel by Beverley Nichols. Directed by Paul Smythe. Selwyn Theatre: 31 Jan 1933- Feb 1933 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Walter Armin (as "Julius Rosenberg"), Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Arthur Kober"), Holland Bennett, Luis Bruno, Brian Buchel, Reginald Carrington, Hugh F. S. Casson, Marjorie Chard, Doris Crandall, Willard Dashiell, Natalie Davis, Owen Davis Jr., Claude Disney-Roebuck, John Dunn, Edith Evans, Jane Evans, Beatrix Fielden-Kaye, Walter Fitzgerald, Freda Gaye, Leyla Georgie, Alice Griswold, Leopoldo Gutierrez, Joan Hamilton, Gladys Hanson, Florence Heller, Natalie Hess, Jean Howard, Frederick Jordan, Helen Judge, Virginia Ann Kaye, Frederick Leister, Christine Lindsay, A.C. Fotheringham-Lysons, Nellie Malcolm, Mary Melhado, Mary Morrison, Florence Selwyn, Hilda Spong [erroneously credited as Hilda Sprong on opening night] (as "Nurse Phillips"), Margot Stevenson (as "Guest"), Ripples Swan, Zolya Talma (as "Señora De Carranza"), William J. Tannen, Dennis Val-Norton, Harry Warwick, Jane Wyatt (as "Pauline Lacey"), Valerie Ziegler. Produced by Archibald Selwyn and Sir Barry Jackson.
- (1934) Stage Play: A Ship Comes In. Drama. Written by Joseph Anthony. Scenic Design by Herbert Ward and Walter Harvey. Directed by Augustin Duncan. Morosco Theatre: 19 Sep 1934- Oct 1934 (closing date unknown/38 performances). Cast: Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Dr. Victor Bard"), Edwin Cooper (as "Mr. Jenkins"), Elizabeth Farrar (as "Mrs. Jenkins"), Manart Kippen (as "Dr. Carl Brenner"), Bjorn Koefoed (as "Dr. Sawyer"), Boris Korlin (as "Oblanitcheff"), Anna Lubowe (as "Stella Rickert"), Frank Manning (as "Johann"), William Packer (as "Dr. Marvin"), Arthur Row (as "Ship's Steward"), Virginia Stevens (as "Blanche Mortimer"), Calvin Thomas (as "H. Gordon Mortimer"). Produced by Richard Herndon. Produced in association with John C. Mayer.
- (1936) Stage Play: Bitter Stream. Drama. Written by Victor Wolfson. From "Fontamara" by Ignazio Silone. Directed by Jacob Ben-Ami and Charles Freidman. Civic Repertory Theatre: 30 Mar 1936- May 1936 (closing date unknown/61 performances). Cast: Frances Bavier (as "Soreanera"), Walter Beck (as "Della Croce"), Malcolm Lee Beggs (as "Don Abacchio/Prison Guard"), John Boruff (as "The Stranger"), Lee J. Cobb (as "Don Circonstantza"), Frank Conlan (as "Baldissera"), Carlo Conte (as "Pelino/Santo"), Lizzie Cubitt (as "Ensemble"), Harry Davis (as "Ensemble"), Billy Dunkley (as "Ensemble"), Sam Gordon (as "Ensemble"), Millicent Green (as "Maid/Rosalia"), Robert Harris (as "Losurdo"), Franklin Heller (as "Farmer From Sulmona/Blackshirt"), David Hoffman (as "Teofilo"), Charles Jordan (as "Michel Zompa"), Regina Kahn (as "Ensemble"), Manart Kippen (as "Inspector"), Harry Levian (as "Farmer From Sulmona/Goriano"), Edward Mann (as "Ensemble"), Paul Marian (as "Ensemble"), Sydney Mason (as "Fillipo"), Rolla Normund (as "Ensemble"), Sidney Packer (as "Promoter/Ensemble"), Vincent Sherman (as "Scarpone"), Hester Sondergaard (as "Lisabetta"), Jerry Sylvan (as "Blackshirt"), Lili Eisenlohr Valenty (as "Elvira"), Albert Dekker (as "Berardo"), Marjorie Wood (as "The Promoter's Wife/Angelina"), P.A. Xantho (as "Farmer"). Produced by The Theatre Union.
- (1958) Stage Play: The Infernal Machine. Written by Jean Cocteau. New adaptation by Albert Bermel. Directed by Herbert Berghof. Phoenix Theatre: 3 Feb 1958- 9 Mar 1958 (40 performances). Cast: Jacob Ben-Ami (as "The Old Shepherd"), Clarice Blackburn (as "A Theban Mother"), Roberts Blossom (as "Anubis, The Egyptian God of the Dead"), Philip Bourneuf (as "Teiresias, The High Priest"), Peter Brandon (as "The Young Soldier"), Claude Dauphin (as "The Voice"), June Havoc (as "Queen Jocasta"), Earle Hyman (as "Ghost of Laius"), 'John Kerr' (qvV) (as "Oedipus"), Kimetha Laurie (as "Antigone, Daughter of Jocasta and Oedipus"), Joan McCracken (as "The Sphinx, The Goddess of Vengeance"), Albert Paulsen (as "The Soldier"), Bill Penn (as "The Messenger from Corinth"), Byrne Piven (as "The Drunk"), Joey Renda (as "Her Son"), Martin Rudy (as "Creon, Jocasta's Brother"), Gene Saks (as "The Captain of the Patrol"). Produced by The Phoenix Theatre (T. Edward Hambleton: Co-Founder and Managing Director. Norris Houghton: Co-Founder).
- (December 25, 1961) He acted in Somerset Maugham's play, "The Tenth Man," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio.
- (January 7, 1963) He acted in Henry Denker's play, "A Far Country," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio with Viveca Lindfors in the cast.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content