- (1925) Stage: Appeared (as "Reynaldo, a Sailor"; credited as S. Thomas Gomez; Broadway debut) in "Hamlet" on Broadway. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Directed / produced by Walter Hampden (also appearing as "Hamlet"). Hampden's Theatre (moved to The National Theatre from Nov 1925-close): 10 Oct 1925-Dec 1925 (closing date unknown/68 performances). Cast: Ethel Barrymore (as "Ophelia, daughter to Polonius"), Albert Bruning (as "Polonius, Lord Chamberlain"), Mary Hall (as "Gertrude, Queen of Denmark and mother to Hamlet"), Kenneth Hunter, Ernest Rowan (as "Laertes, son to Polonius"), Edith Barrett, Marcel Dill, Reynolds Evans (as "Bernardo" / "Officer" / "Player King"), Gordon Hart, Hart Jenks, P.J. Kelly, Max Montor (as "Ghost"), Mabel Moore (as "Player Queen"), LeRoi Operti (as "Osric, a Courtier"), Louis Polan (as "Captain"), William Sauter (as "Horatio, friend to Hamlet"), Thomas F. Tracey (as "Rosencrantz" / "Courtier" / "Priest"), J. Plumpton Wilson, Philip Wood, Cecil Yapp (as "First Gravedigger").
- (1926) Stage: Appeared (as "One of the Three Thieves" / "A Beggar") in "The Immortal Thief" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Tom Barry. Hampden's Theatre: 2 Oct 1926-Oct 1926 (closing date unknown/25 performances). Cast: Marie Adels (as "Naomi"), Dallas Anderson (as "Ben Sarken"), Anthony Andre (as "An Old Boatman"), Edith Barrett (as "Merzah's Daughter"), Hope Cary (as "Greek Maiden"), Howard Claney (as "A Young Official"), F.R. Colton (as "An Ethiopian Prince"), Marcel Dill (as "One of the Three Thieves" / "A Camel Driver"), Adelaide Fitz-Allen (as "Marius' Old Nurse"), Howard Galt (as "An Egyptian King"), Robert Paton Gibbs (as "Keeper of the Bordello"), Basil Grant (as "A Peddler Spy"), C. Norman Hammond (as "Septimus Celsus"), Walter Hampden (also producer; as "Marius Rufinus"), Gordon Hart (as "A Phoenician" / "Son of a Widow"), Stanley Howlett (as "James the Less"), Eudora Hunner (as "Bordello Girl"), Suzanne Jackson (as "Merzah"), Hart Jenks (as "Asper"), P.J. Kelly (as "Old Thief of Bagdad" / "A Hasheesh Eater"), Caroline Meade (as "Bordello Girl"), Stuart Miller (as "A Syrian"), Mabel Moore (as "Marius' Mother"), Grace Morton (as "Bordello Girl"), Grania O'Malley (as "Pharaoh's Daughter"), Louis Polan (as "A Sailor Spy"), Ernest Rowan (as "Silenus Geta"), William H. Sams (as "An Old Official of the Law"), Dorothy Scott (as "A Wine Girl"), Ruth Seward (as "Greek Maiden"), J.P. Wilson (as "One of the Three Thieves" / "A False Prophet"), Cecil Yapp (as "Poetar").
- (1928) Stage: Appeared in "King Henry V" on Broadway. Historical drama (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Hampden's Theatre: 15 Mar 1928-Apr 1928 (closing date unknown/44 performances). Produced by Walter Hampden.
- (1928) Stage: Appeared (as "An Old Leper" / "Assaji") in "The Light of Asia" on Broadway. Written by Georgina Jones Walton. Choreographed by Ruth St. Denis. Directed / produced by Walter Hampden (also appearing as "Siddhartha"). Hampden's Theatre: 9 Oct 1928-Oct 1928 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Dallas Anderson (as "Kondanna"), Gage Bennett (as "King of Koli"), Norbert Cameron (as "Noble"), George Cotton (as "Merchant"), M. D'Arcy (as "A Hillman"), Francis Dears (as "Soldiers"), Forrest Gains (as "Noble"), Evelyn Goodrich (as "Radha/Purna"), C. Norman Hammond (as "Shivamangala"), Gordon Hart (as "Another Astrologer" / "Vappa"), Isabel S. Hill (as "Nautch Girl"), Harriet Ingersoll (as "Nautch Girl"), Stephen Irving (as "Water Bearer"), Philip Jones (as "Soldier"), Richard Lawrence (as "Water Bearer"), Omar Le Gant (as "A Page"), Jan Lindermann (as "A Hermit"), Judith Lowry (as "Prajapati"), Anna Lubow (as "Kisogatami"), Beatrice Maude (as "Gunga"), Kate Mayhew (as "An Outcaste Woman"), Caroline Meade (as "Draupadi"), Joseph Milton (as "Merchant" / "A Monk"), Eleanor Mish (as "Chitra"), Anne Mitchell (as "Nautch Girl"), Mabel Moore (as "Queen Maya" / "Sujata"), LeRoi Operti (as "Ormuzd"), Lou Polan (as "Devadatta, Prince of Koli"), Eugene Powers (as "King of the Sakyas"), Charles Quigley (as "Ananda"), Sri Ragini (as "Nautch Girl"), Edwin Ross Jr. (as "A Citizen"), Ernest Rowan (as "Channa"), Franklin Salisbury (as "Bhadya"), William Sauter (as "Asita" / "Mohanna"), Robert C. Schnitzer (as "Merchant"), Freddie Stange (as "Rahula"), William Thornton (as "An Attendant"), Ingeborg Torrup (as "Yashodara"), Cecil Yapp (as "Visvamitra").
- (1928) Stage: Appeared in "An Enemy of the People" on Broadway. Drama (revival). Written by Henrik Ibsen. Directed / produced by Walter Hampden. Hampden's Theatre: 5 Nov 1928- Nov 1928 (closing date unknown/16 performances).
- (1926) Stage: Appeared (as "Innkeeper at Castelnuovo") in "Caponsacchi" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Arthur Goodrich and Rose A. Palmer. Based on the poem "The Ring and the Book" by Robert Browning. Directed / produced by Walter Hampden (also in cast as "Caponsacchi"). Hampden's Theatre: 26 Oct 1926-Jun 1927 (closing date unknown/269 performances). Cast: Marie Adels, Dallas Anderson (as "Gherardi"), Anthony Andre, Edith Barrett (as "Pompilia"), Howard Claney, (as "Salvatore"), Edwin Cushman, Marcel Dill, Robert Paton Gibbs (as "Scalchi"), C. Norman Hammond (as "Governor of Arezzo"), Gordon Hart, Stanley Howlett (as "Pope Innocent XII"), Eudora Hunner, Suzanne Jackson, Hart Jenks, P.J. Kelly, Grania O'Malley, Lou Polan (as "Montini"), Ernest Rowan, William H. Sams, Albert West, J.P. Wilson, Cecil Yapp (as "Canon Conti").
- (1938) Stage: Appeared in "The Seagull" on Broadway. Comedy/drama (revival).
- (1937) Stage: Appeared (as "Rev. Barnabas Harpie") in "Western Waters" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Richard Carlson. Incidental music by Lehman Engel. Directed by Elsa Moses (also producer) and Richard Carlson. Hudson Theatre: 28 Dec 1937-Jan 1938 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Thomas Chalmers (as "Josiah Cutler"), Jackie Grimes, H. Dudley Hawley, Van Heflin (as "Kaintuck"), Jimmy Lydon (as "Danny"), Mabel Paige, Robert Shrewsbury, Morton Stevens (as "Jabe Knuckles"), Maxine Stuart, Robert Thomsen, Joan Wheeler.
- (1937) Stage: Appeared (as "Dr. Titus"; billed as S. Thomas Gomez) in "Robin Landing" on Broadway. Drama. Written by Stanley Young. Scenic Design by Donald Oenslager. Costume Design by Jean Sutherland. Directed by Halsted Welles. 46th Street Theatre: 18 Nov 1937-Nov 1937 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Louis Calhern (as "Kane Eaton"), Leslie Denison (as "Lt. Phelps"), Kathryn Grill (as "Sippi"), Percy Helton (as "Wilson"), Whitford Kane (as "Fink"), Ian Keith (as "Grant Eaton"), Robert Marzano (as "Father Duval"), Harry Sothern (as "Tim"), Richard Paul Spater (as "David Eaton"), Morton Stevens (credited as Morton L. Stevens; as "Lamont"), Fred Stewart (as "Laban"), Ninetta Sunderland (credited as Nan Sunderland; as "Linda Eaton; final Broadway role). Produced by Sidney Harmon and Edward Hambleton.
- (1936) Stage: Appeared in "Idiot's Delight" on Broadway. Comedy. Written by Robert E. Sherwood. Production Supervised by Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne (both also in cast). Dances directed by Morgan Lewis. Assistant Stage Manager: LeRoi Operti (also in cast as "Signor Rossi"). Directed by Bretaigne Windust (also in cast as "Mr. Cherry"). Shubert Theatre: 24 Mar 1936-Dec 1936 (closing date unknown/300 performances). Cast: Margorie Baglin, Edgar Barrier, Gilmore Bush, Francis Compton, Connie Crowell, Ernestine De Becker, Frances Foley, Sydney Greenstreet, Alan Hewitt, Jean MacIntyre, George Meader, Murry O'Neill, Jacqueline Paige, Edward Raquello, Edna Ross, Winston Ross, Stephen Sandes, Barry Thomson, Ruth Timmons, Tomasso Tittoni, Una Val, Richard Whorf. Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1940) Stage: Appeared (as "Ben Gichner") in "There Shall Be No Night" on Broadway. Drama [return engagement]. Written / co-produced by Robert E. Sherwood. Scenic Design by Richard Whorf. Costume Design by Valentina. Stage Manager: Charva Chester (also in cast as "Ilma"). Assistant Stage Mgrs.: Ralph Nelson (also in cast as "Photographer") and Robert Downing. Directed by Alfred Lunt (also in cast as "Dr. Kaarlo Valkonen"). Alvin Theatre: 9 Sep 1940-2 Nov 1940 (66 performances). Cast: Lynn Fontanne (as "Miranda Valkonen"), Charles Ansley (as "Joe Burnett"), ), Montgomery Clift (as "Erik Valkonen"), Maurice Colbourne (as "Dr. Ziemssen"), Donald Fox (as "Photographer"), Elisabeth Fraser (as "Kaatri Alquist"), Sydney Greenstreet (as "Uncle Waldemar"), Claude Horton (as "Sergeant Gosden"), William LeMassena (as "Frank Olmstead"), Edward Raquello (as "Maj. Rutkowski"), Phyllis Thaxter (as "Lempi"), Brooks West (as "Gus Shuman"), 'Richard Whorf (as "Dave Corween"). Produced by The Playwrights' Company (Maxwell Anderson, S.N. Behrman, Elmer Rice, Sidney Howard).
- (12/8/47) Radio: Appeared (as "Pancho") in a "Lux Radio Theater" broadcast of "Ride the Pink Horse".
- (March 15, 1937) He acted in Robert E. Sherwood's play, "Idiot's Delight," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio with Alfred Lunt, Lynn Fontanne, George Meader, Stephen Sandes, Barry Thomson, Edgar Barrier, Edward Raquello, Sydney Greenstreet, Bretaigne Windust, Jean MacIntyre, Jacqueline Paige, Connie Crowell, Frances Foley, Etna Ross, Marjorie Baglin, Ruth Timmons, Charles Ansley, Winston Ross, Gilmore Bush, David Selva, Richard Whorf, LeRoi Operti, Ernestine De Becker, Gordon Nelson, Una Val, and Francis Compton in the cast. Lee Simonson was set designer. Morgan Lewis was choreographer. Bretaine Windust was director.
- (January 7 to 14, 1957) He played Big Daddy in Tennessee Williams' play, "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof," in a Playwrights Company production at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio with Marjorie Steele (Maggie); Alex Nicol (Brick); Maxwell Glanville; Musa Williams; Madeleine Sherwood; John Anderson; Mary Bell; Gerri Hollis; Jeffrey Anderson; Bonny Hollis; Murray Bennett; Will Hussung; Eva Vaughn Smith; Brownie McGhee; and Sonny Terry in the cast. Jo Mielziner was set designer. Lucinda Ballard was costume designer. Elia Kazan was director.
- (October 5, 1959) He acted in Friedrich Durrenmatt's play, "The Visit," in a Producers Theatre production at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio with Alfred Lunt, Lynn Fontanne, Glenn Anders, John Wyse, William Hansen, Myles Eason, David Clarke, Michael Lewis, and William Callan in the cast. Maurice Valency was adapter. Ted Otto was set designer. Castillo was costume designer. Peter Brook was director.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content