- (1921 - 1960) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1921) Stage Play: The Squaw Man. Drama (revival). Written by Edwin Milton Royle. Astor Theatre: 26 Dec 1921- Feb 1922 (closing date unknown/50 performances). Cast: Herbert Ashton (as "Grouchy, Cowboy on Carston's Ranch"), Elizabeth Bellairs (as "Lady Mabel Wynnegate, Sister of Henry Wynnegate"), Chauncey Causland (as "McSorley, Engineer of the Overland Limited"), H. Cooper Cliffe (as "Malcolm Petrie, Solicitor of Henry Wynnegate"), Murray Darcy (as "Parker, Conductor of the Overland Limited"), J. Malcolm Dunn (as "Henry Wynnegate, Earl of Kerhill"), Bernard Durkin (as "Little Hal, Nat-U-Ritch's Son"), Herbert Farjeon (as "Baco White"), William Faversham (as "Capt. James Wynnegate, Cousin of Henry Wynnegate, Afterwards Known as Jim Carson"), William Frederic (as "Bud Hardy, County Sheriff"), Harry Hanlon (as "Pete, A Cowboy"), Winifred Harris (as "Lady Elizabeth Wynnegate, Mother of Henry Wynnegate"), Riley Hatch (as "Tab-Y-Wana, Peach Chief of the Utes"), William T. Hays (as "Mr. Hiram Doolittle"), Frank Hollins (as "Sir John Applegate, Diana's Cousin"), Julia Hoyt (as "Diana Wynnegate, Countess of Kerhill"), Curley Judge (as "Punk, A Chinaman"), Emily Lorraine (as "Mrs. Hiram Doolittle"), Frank Lyon (as "Parson"), Bertram A. Marburgh (as "Andy, Cowboy on Carston's Ranch"), Burr McIntosh (as "Big Bill, Foreman of Carston's Ranch"), Willard Robertson (as "Cash Hawkins"), Gerald Rogers (as "Rev. Belachazar Chiswick"), Josephine Royle (as "Nat-U-Ritch, Daughter of Tab-Y-Wana"), George Schaeffer (as "Bates, Butler of Henry Wynnegate"), Emmett Shackelford (as "Shorty, Cowboy on Carston's Ranch"), Edmund Soraghan (as "Nick, Barkeeper of "The Long Horn Saloon"), Ralph Sumpter (as "Lieut. Crosby") [Broadway debut], Raymond Van Rensselaer (as "Lieut. Markwell"). Produced by Lee Shubert.
- (1928) Stage Play: Major Barbara. Comedy (revival). Written by George Bernard Shaw. Directed by Philip Moeller. Guild Theatre: 19 Nov 1928- Jan 1929 (closing date unknown/84 performances). Produced by The Theatre Guild Inc.
- (1933) Stage Play: Young Sinners. Comedy (revival).
- (1934) Stage Play: Within the Gates. Drama. Incidental music by Milton Lusk and Lehman Engel [earliest Broadway credit]. Written by Sean O'Casey. Choreographed by Elsa Findlay. Directed by Melvyn Douglas. National Theatre: 22 Oct 1934- Feb 1935 (closing date unknown/141 performances). Cast: Mildred Albert, Charles Angelo (as "The Man in the Trilbey Hat"), Morris Ankrum (as "The Atheist"), George Augustin, Tony Barone, Mordecai Bauman, Phil Bishop, Suzanne Black, Kenneth Bostock, Mary Brandt, Edward Broadley (as "1st Evangelist"), Victor Bryant, Tomes Chapman, Kathryn Collier (as "The Bishop's Sister"), Ralph Cullinan (as "The Foreman"), Kathryn Curl, Martha Eaton, Bramwell Fletcher (as "The Dreamer"), Frank Gabrielson, Lillian Gish (as "The Young Whore"), Betty Gladstone, Anne Goddard, Miriam Goldina, Gordon Gould (as "1st Platform Speaker"), Serge Gradoff, Dorothy Higgins, Marjorie Hyder, Serge Inga, Moffat Johnston (as "The Bishop"), James Jolley, Charles Keane (as "The Man in the Burberry "), Barry Kelley (as "The Gardener"), Robert Kerr, Stanley Klein, Karl Kohrs, Ellen Larned (as "The Woman Who Feeds the Birds"), Alexander Lewis, Ellen Love, Byron McGrath (as "A Young Salvation Army Officer"), Barry Macollum (as "1st Chair Attendant"), Vera Fuller Mellish (as "1st Nursemaid"), Ram Meyer, Dodson Mitchell (as "2nd Platform Speaker"), Esther Mitchell (as "2nd Nursemaid"), Elizabeth Morgan, Mary Morris, Margaret Mower (as "Symbol of the Seasons"), John Daly Murphy (as "2nd Chair Attendant"), Gifford Nash, Jessamine Newcombe, Arthur Porter, Evangeline Raleigh, Ursula Seiler, Edith Shayne, Virginia Spottswood, Pauline Stokes, Peggy Strickland, Ralph Sumpter (as "The Young Man in Plus-Fours"), William Triest, Arthur Villars, Clyde Walters, Teddy Williams, William Williams, Rodifer Wilson, Stanley G. Wood (as "The Man in the Bowler Hat"). Produced by George Bushar and John Tuerk.
- (1935) Stage Play: Jubilee. Musical comedy.
- (1937) Stage Play: The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse. Melodrama.
- (1937) Stage Play: Between the Devil. Musical comedy.
- (1939) Stage Play: Journey's End.
- (1939) Stage Play: The Woman Brown.
- (1940) Stage Play: At The Stroke of Eight. Drama.
- (1946) Stage Play: Second Best Bed. Comedy.
- (1950) Stage Play: The Day After Tomorrow. Comedy.
- (1956) Stage Play: Too Late the Phalarope.
- (1959) Stage Play: Redhead. Musical comedy. Written by Herbert Fields, Dorothy Fields, Sidney Sheldon, David Shaw. Music by Albert Hague. Lyrics by Dorothy Fields. Music orchestrated by Philip J. Lang and Robert Russell Bennett. Musical Direction and Vocal Arrangements by Jay Blackton. Dance arrangements by Roger Adams. Directed / Choreographed by Bob Fosse. 46th Street Theatre: 5 Feb 1959- 19 Mar 1960 (452 performances). Cast: Gwen Verdon (as "Essie Whimple"), Richard Kiley (as "Tom Baxter"), John Aristedes (as "Dancer"), Margery Beddow, Kevin Carlisle, Shirley de Burgh, Mame Dennis, Bob Dixon, Joan Fagan, Clifford Fearl, Pat Ferrier, Lydia Fredericks, David Gold, Bette Graham, Dee Harless, Harvey Evans (credited as Harvey Hohnecker), Patrick Horgan, Reby Howells, Janie Janvier, Patti Karr, Elizabeth Kerr, Elaine King, Kasimir Kokich, Lee Krieger, John Lankston, Cynthia Latham, William LeMassena, Buzz Miller, Larry Mitchell, Dale Moreda, Joy Nichols, Stan Page, Noel Parenti, Liane Plane, Doris Rich, Shev Rodgers, Alton Ruff, Kelley Stephens, Leonard Stone (as "George Poppett"), Ralph Sumpter (as "Inspector White") [final Broadway role], Dean Taliaferro (as "Dancer"). Produced by Robert Fryer and Lawrence Carr. Associate Producer: Theatrical Interests Plan Inc. Note: Fields (along with two others) won a Tony Award as Best Authors (Musical) and another as co-writer for Best Book in a Musical.
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