- (1974) Stage Play: Of Mice and Men. Drama (revival).
- (1965) Stage Play: The Devils. Drama. Written by John Whiting [posthumous credit]. Based upon "The Devils of Loudun" by Aldous Huxley. Scenic Design by Rouben Ter-Arutunian. Costume Design by Motley. Directed by Michael Cacoyannis. Broadway Theatre: 16 Nov 1965- 8 Jan 1966 (63 performances + 12 previews that began on 3 Nov 1965). Produced by Alexander H. Cohen. Note: Filmed by Russo Productions [distributed by Warner Bros] as The Devils (1971) (directed by Ken Russell
- (1952 - 1975) Active on Broadway in the following productions.
- (1952) Stage Play: Desire Under the Elms. Drama (revival). Written by Eugene O'Neill. Scenic Design by Mordecai Gorelik. Directed by Harold Clurman. ANTA Playhouse: 16 Jun 1952- 23 Feb 1952 (46 performances). Cast: Charles Aidman (as "Man") [Broadway debut], Minnette Barrett (as "Woman"), Jocelyn Brando (as "Young Girl"), Elwyn Dearborn (as "Neighbor"), Colleen Dewhurst (as "Neighbor"), Donald Elson (as "Neighbor"), Howard H. Fischer (as "Old Farmer"), Russell Gaige (as "Sheriff"), Mark Gordon (as "Fiddler") [Broadway debut], Norma Hayes (as "Neighbor"), George Hoxie (as "Neighbor"), Karl Malden (as "Ephraim Cabot"), John McLiam (as "Another Man"), George Mitchell (as "Peter Cabot"), Lou Polan (as "Simeon Cabot"), Barbara Schultz (as "Neighbor"), Carol Stone (as "Abbie Putnam"), Douglas Watson (as "Eben Cabot"), Jutta Wolfe (as "Neighbor"). Produced by The American National Theatre and Academy. Note: Filmed by Don Hartman Productions [distributed by Paramount Pictures] as Desire Under the Elms (1958).
- (1957) Stage Play: Compulsion. Drama. Dramatization (Producer's Version) by Meyer Levin. Original Music by Cy Coleman. Musical Director: Cy Coleman. Scenic Design by Peter Larkin. Costume Design by John Boxer. Lighting Design by Charles Elson. Directed by Alex Segal. Ambassador Theatre: 24 Oct 1957- 22 Feb 1958 (140 performances). Cast: Roddy McDowall (as "Artie Straus"), Dean Stockwell (as "Judd Steiner [1924]"), Howard Da Silva (as "Horn, The Prosecuting Attorney"), Ben Astar (as "Charles Kessler/Dr. Allman"), Ina Balin (as "Ruth Goldenberg"), Helen Baron (as "Sandra Mannheimer"), Julian Barry (as "Willie Weiss"), James Bender (as "Tom Daly, A Reporter"), Joseph Beruh (as "A Prison Guard/A Drugstore Clerk/A Waiter/Danny Mines, A Reporter"), Michael Constantine (as "Al, Owner of a Speakeasy/Jonathan Wilk, The Defense Attorney"), Joan Croydon (as "Mrs. Straus"), Edward Cullen (as "Judge Matthewson"), Roger De Koven (as "Ferdinand Feldscher"), Reynolds Evans (as "Dr. Stauffer"), Chris Gampel (as "Judd Steiner [today]/Emil, The Steiners' Chauffeur"), Stefan Gierasch (as "Max Steiner"), Gerald Gordon (as "Sid Silver [today]/Sid Silver [1924]), Mark Gordon (as "A Bartender/Prison Guard"), Lloyd Gough (as "Dr. McNarry"), Michael Gough (as "Dr. Ball"), James Greene (as "Mr. Farmer/Dr. Vincenti"), Ted Gunther (as "Swasey, A Detective"), Earl Hammond (as "James Straus"), Muriel Higgins (as "First Girl"), Bernard Lenrow (as "Judah Steiner Jr."), Barbara Loden (as "Myra Seligman"), John Marley (as "Mike Prager/Another Reporter"), Barbara Miners (as "Third Girl"), Gina Petrushka (as "Elsie Kessler"), Suzanne Pleshette (as "Fourth Girl"), James Ray (as "Lyman/A Third Reporter/Raphael Goetz"), Dorothy Raymond (as "A Medium/Aunt Bertha"), Patricia Roe (as "A Girl on the Telephone/Second Girl"), Luchino Solito de Solis (as "Billy Straus"), Paul Stevens (as "Padua, Assistant to the Prosecutor"), D.J. Sullivan (as "Milt Lewis"), Elliot Sullivan (as "McNamara, A Detective"), Maybelle Wright (as "Peg Sweet/A Newspaper Woman"), Ben Yaffee Oliver Steger"). Replacement actors: Joseph Beruh (as "Al, Owner of a Speakeasy"), Frank Conroy (as "Jonathan Wilk, The Defense Attorney"), Elizabeth Hubbard (as "Sandra Mannheimer/Third Girl"), Suzanne Pleshette (as "Ruth Goldenberg"). Produced by Michael Myerberg. Produced in association with Len S. Gruenberg. Note: This was a thinly veiled dramatization of the infamous Leopold-Leob murder. Filmed as Compulsion (1959).
- (1962) Stage Play: The Moon Besieged. Drama.
- (1972) Stage Play: The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window (Revival). Written by Lorraine Hansberry. Book adapted by Robert Nemiroff and Charlotte Zaltzberg. Featuring songs with lyrics by Ray Errol Fox. Featuring songs by Gary William Friedman. Musical Director: Mack Schlefer. Music orchestrated by Gary William Friedman. Music arranged by Gary William Friedman. Choreographed by Rhoda Levine. Directed by Alan Schneider. Longacre Theatre: 26 Jan 1972- 29 Jan 1972 (5 performances + 9 previews that began on 17 Jan 1972). Cast: Mason Adams (as "Wally O'Hara"), William Atherton (as "David Ragin"), Pendleton Brown (as "Singer"), Richard Cox (as "Singer"), John Danielle (as "Alton Scales"), Zohra Lampert (as "Iris Parodus Brustein"), John Lansing (as "Singer"), Hal Linden (as "Sidney Brustein"), Frances Sternhagen (as "Mavis Parodus Bryson"), Dolph Sweet (as "Max"), Arnetia Walker (as "Singer"), Kelly Wood (as "Gloria Parodus"). Standbys: Gus Fleming (as "Alton Scales/David Ragin"), Mark Gordon (as "Sidney Brustein"), Kay Tornborgh (as "Gloria Parodus/Iris Parodus Brustein"), Walt Wanderman (as "Max/Wally O'Hara"). Produced by Robert Renfield, Associate Producer: Robert Nemiroff.
- (1968) He directed Mary Chase's play, "Harvey," at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, New Jersey with Paul Ford and Ruth McDevitt in the cast.
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