- TV commercial for Murphy's Oil soap (1991)
- (1966 - 1983) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1966) Stage Play: Help Stamp Out Marriage! Comedy. Written by Keith Waterhouse [earliest Broadway credit] and Willis Hall [earliest Broadway credit]. Directed by George Abbott. Booth Theatre: 29 Sep 1966- 15 Oct 1966 (20 performances + 2 previews that began on 27 Sep 1966). Cast: Ann Bell (as "Valerie Pitman"), Valerie French (as "Sarah Lord"), Francis Matthews (as "Stuart Wheeler"), Roddy Maude-Roxby (as "David Lord") [only Broadway role]. Standby: Joanna Morris (as "Sarah Lord/Valerie Pitman"). Understudy: Ronald Drake (as "David Lord/Stuart Wheeler") [Broadway debut]. Produced by Theatre Guild Productions Inc., Peter Bridge and Don Herbert.
- (1970) Stage Play: Blood Red Roses. Historical drama/musical. Music by Michael Valenti. Lyrics by John Lewin. Book by John Lewin. Musical Director: Milton Setzer. Music orchestrated by Julian Stein and Abba Bogin. Scenic Design by Ed Wittstein. Directed by Alan Schneider. John Golden Theatre: 22 Mar 1970 (1 performance + 20 previews that began on 5 Mar 1970). Cast: Charles Abbott (as "Russian Soldier"), Philip Bruns (as "Private John Smalls"), Jean Carson [credited as Jeanie Carson] (as "Queen Victoria/Bessie Bellwood/Florence Nightingale/Alice Crabbe, a Bawd") [final Broadway role], Keene Curtis (as "Napoleon III"), Ronald Drake (as "Prince Albert"), Bill Gibbens (as "Grenadier Guard"), Jay Gregory (as "W.H. Russell, Correspondent for the London Times"), Lowell Harris (as "Cornet Edwin May, 4th Light Dragoons"), Jess Richards (as "Private William Cockroft"), William Tost (as "Grenadier Guard/Evans"), Sydney Walker (as "Fitzroy Somerset Lord Raglan, Commander-in-Chief of Her Majesty's Forces, the Crimea"). Standby: Frances Sternhagen (as "Alice Crabbe/Bessie Bellwood/Florence Nightingale/Queen Victoria") Understudies: Charles Abbott (as "Private John Smalls"), Bill Gibbens (as "Fitzroy Somerset Lord Raglan/Private William Cockroft"), Jay Gregory (as "Prince Albert"), Lowell Harris (as "Napoleon III/W.H. Russell") and William Tost (as "Cornet Edwin May/Russian Soldier"). Produced by Seymour Vall and Louis S. Goldman. Produced in association with Rick Mandell and Bjorn I. Swanstrom.
- (1973) He acted in William Douglas Home's play, "The Jockey Club Stakes," at the Cape Playhouse in Dennis, Massachusetts with Wilfrid Hyde-White in the cast.
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