- (play) "The Watched Pot" (1931) (his first play)
- (Play) "The Things That Are Caesar's" (1932). Won the Abbey Theatre Award.
- (play) "The Wise Have Not Spoken" (1933).
- (play) "Shadow and Substance" (1937). Won the Casement Award of the Irish Academy of letters and the New York Drama Critics Circle's Foreign Award.
- (play) "The White Steed" (1939). New York Drama Critics Circle's Foreign Award winner.
- The Strings, My Lord, Are False (1942). Drama. Written by Paul Vincent Carroll. Directed by Elia Kazan. Royale Theatre: 19 May 1942- 30 May 1942 (15 performances). Cast: Frances Bavier (as "Sarah"), Philip Bourneuf (as "Jerry Hoare"), Ralph Cullinan (as "Alec"), Constance Dowling (as "Maisie Gillespie "), Reynolds Evans (as "Monsignor Skinner"), Ruth Gordon (as "Iris Ryan"), Margot Grahame (as "Sadie O'Neill"), Walter Hampden (as "Canon Courtenay"), Hurd Hatfield (as "Religious Man"), Colin Keith-Johnston, Will Lee (as "Louis Liebens"), Sherman MacGregor, Alice MacKenzie, John McKee, Anna Minot, Gordon Nelson, Hale Norcross (as "Provost Grahamson"), Joan H. Shepard, Art Smith, Tom Tully, Ruth Vivian (as "Ma Morrisey"), Anna Minot Warren. Produced by Edward Choate. Produced in association with Alexander Kirkland and John R. Sheppard Jr.
- (play) "The Old Foolishness" (1945).
- (play) "The Devil Came From Dublin" (1952).
- (play) "The Wayward Saint" (1955).
- (December 5, 1938) His play, "Shadow and Substance," was performed at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio with Cedric Hardwicke in the cast.
- (November 27, 1939 to December 4, 1939) His play, "The White Steed," was performed at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio with Whitford Kane, Grania O'Malley, Tom Bate, Ralph Cullinan, Gertrude Flynn, William H. Malone, Farrell Pelly, Grace Mills, Elizabeth Malone, William Cragin, Thomas P. Dillon, Eleanore Laurence, and Patrick Henry in the cast. Watson Barratt was set designer. Hugh Hunt was director. Eddie Dowling was producer.
- (January 10, 1939) His play, "The White Steed," was performed at the Cort Theatre in New York City and ran for 136 performances.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content