- (1930 - 1939) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1930) Stage Play: Roar China.
- (1932) Stage Play: Red Planet. Written by John L. Balderston and J.E. Hoare. Directed by Burk Symon and Chester Erskine. Cort Theatre: 17 Dec 1932- Dec 1932 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Walter Armin (as "The Count de Reinach"), Ethel Ashby, Wallace Banfield, Marshall Brown, Charles Burroughs, Wilbur Cox, Beryl Douglas, Joy Douglas, Bramwell Fletcher (as "Ray Fanshawe"), Harry Green, Louis Hector, Henry Herbert (as "Herbert Calder"), Dorothy Howard, David Hughes, Alistaire Johnson, Walter King, Thomas Louden, Tucker McGuire, Beatrice Miller, Bertram Miller, Percy Moore, E. Norris, Marie Pape, Eugene Powers, Frederick Raymond, William Reinecker, Wilfred Seagram, C.E. Smith, Valerie Taylor, Edward Trevor (as "Speaker"), Madelaine Vaughn, Tod Waller, Richard Walsh, John Wheeler, Richard Whorf (as "The Right Hon. A.D. Randall, P.C."), Wallace Widdecombe, Leonard Willey, Helen Wynn, Oswald Yorke (as "The Prime Minister"). Produced by Laurence Rivers.
- (1933) Stage Play: Mary of Scotland. Historical drama. Written by Maxwell Anderson. Scenic/Costume Design by Robert Edmond Jones. Directed by Theresa Helburn. Alvin Theatre: 27 Nov 1933- Jul 1934 (closing date unknown/248 performances). Cast: Helen Hayes (as "Mary Stuart"), Helen Menken (as "Elizabeth Tudor"), Philip Merivale (as "James Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell"), Quentin Anderson (as "A Warder"), Edgar Barrier (as "Lord Douglas"), Ernest Cossart (as "Lord Throgmorton"), George Coulouris (as "Lord Burghley/Lord Erskine"), Charles Dalton (as "Lord Huntley"), Philip Foster (as "Lord Gordon"), Wilton Graff (as "James Stuart, Earl of Moray"), Cecil Holm (as "Jamie, a Guard"), William Jackson (as "Monk, a Guard"), Anthony Kemble-Cooper (as "Lord Darnley"), Ernest Lawford (as "Maitland of Lethington"), Philip Leigh (as "David Rizzio"), Maurice F. Manson (as "A Page/Graeme, a Sergeant"), Jock McGraw (as "Tammas, a Guard"), Mary Michael (as "Mary Beaton"), Moroni Olsen (as "John Knox"), Stanley Ridges (as "Lord Morton"), Cynthia Rogers (as "Mary Fleming"), Helen Shea (as "Mary Seton"), Edward Trevor (as "Chatelard"), Leonard Willey (as "Duc de Chatelherault/Lord Ruthven"), Deane Willoughby (as "Mary Livingstone"). Produced by The Theatre Guild. Note: Filmed by Radio Pictures [RKO] as Mary of Scotland (1936).
- (1934) Stage Play: Valley Forge. Historical drama. Written by Maxwell Anderson. Minuet staged by Martha Graham. Scenic Design by Kate Drain Lawson. Directed by Herbert J. Biberman and John Houseman. Guild Theatre: 10 Dec 1934- Jan 1935 (closing date unknown/58 performances). Cast: Wallace Acton (as "Third Soldier "), Stephen Appleby (as "Fielding"), Alan Bandler (as "First Soldier"), Hendrik Booraem (as "Neil"), Alan Bunce (as "Spad"), Grover Burgess (as "Teague"), Cora Burlar (as "Lady"), Thaddeus Clancy (as "Andrew"), George Coulouris (as "Lieutenant Cutting"), Charles Drummond (as "Major André"), Eleanor Eckstein (as "Lady"), Harold Elliott (as "General Stirling"), Charles Ellis (as "Mason"), Philip Foster (as "A Captain"), Charles Francis (as "The Washington/Masquerade/General Conway"), Florence Gerald(as "Auntie"), Margalo Gillmore (as "Mary Philipse"), Harold Gould (as "General Varnum"), Hans Hansen (as "Oscar"), Harry Hermsen (as "Minto"), John Hoyt [credited as John Hoysradt] (as "Major André"), Victor Kilian (as "Alcock"), Reginald Mason (as "Sir William Howe"), Jock McGraw (as "Jock"), Philip Merivale (as "General George Washington"), Alexander Mirsky (as "Marty"), Nicolai Pesce (as "Musician"), Stanley Ridges (as "Lieut. Col. Lucifer Tench"), Philip Robinson (as "An Aide/Second Soldier"), Maurice Sackett (as "Musician"), Frances Sage (as "Tavis"), Erskine Sanford (as "Mr. Folsom"), Jean Sennott (as "Lady"), John Sennott (as "Rafe"), Cynthia Sherwood (as "Lady"), George Spaulding (as "A Civilian"), Katherine Standing (as "Lady"), Robert Thomsen (as "Nick"), Edward Trevor (as "Marquis de Lafayette"), Harold Tucker (as "Mr. Harvie"), Max Weiser. Produced by The Theatre Guild. Note: Filmed as "Hallmark Hall of Fame: Valley Forge (#25.2)" (1975).
- (1936) Stage Play: Hedda Gabler. Drama (revival). Written by Henrik Ibsen. Directed by Alla Nazimova. Longacre Theatre: 16 Nov 1936- Dec 1936 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast: Alla Nazimova (as "Hedda Tesman"), Leslie Bingham, Harry Ellerbe, Viola Frayne, Grace Mills, McKay Morris, Edward Trevor (as "Eilert Lovborg"). Produced by Sam Levey.
- (1936) Stage Play: Daughters of Atreus. Written by Robert Turney. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Frederic McConnell. 44th Street Theatre: 14 Oct 1936- Oct 1936 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: Barbara Adams, John Boruff (as "Vortigern"), Sidney Bryson, Richard Burdette, Eileen Burns, Hal Conklin, Thomas Coffin Cooke, Olive Deering (as "Iphegeneia"), Ben Edwards, Ann Freschmann, Vincent Gardner, Leslie Gorall, Gale Gordon (as "Agamemnon"), John Grimshaw, Harry Irvine, James Larmore, Clara Mahr, Eleonora Mendelssohn, Tom Neal (as "Hippolytos"), Gilda Oakleaf, Edmond O'Brien (as "Pylades"), Carla Ogle, Maria Ouspenskaya (as "Polymnia"), Melvin Parks, Gordon Peters, Eleanor Powers, Carl Rodgers, Joanna Roos, Arthur Sachs, Michael Sage, Howard Sherman, Edgar Stehli (as "Cheops"), Robert Stewart, Edward Trevor (as "Achilles"), William Van Gundy, Louis Varca, Helen Walpole, Franklin Webb, Cornel Wilde (as "Phaon"), Eric Wollencott, Elizabeth Young. Produced by Delos Chappell.
- (1938) Stage Play: Oscar Wilde. Drama. Written by Leslie Stokes and Sewell Stokes. Music arranged by Alexander Haas. Directed by Norman Marshall. Fulton Theatre: 10 Oct 1938- May 1939 (closing date unknown/247 performances). Cast: J.W. Austin, John Buckmaster, John Carol, Richard Charlton, Lewis Dayton, Jean Del Val, Mark Dignam, Arthur Gould-Porter, Frederick Graham, Colin Hunter, Wyman Kane, Reginald Malcolm, Robert Morley (as "Oscar Wilde") [Broadway debut], Gordon Richards, Kenneth Treseder (as "A Hotel Waiter"), Edward Trevor (as "Louis Dijon") [final Broadway role], Oswald Yorke (as "Mr. Justice Willis") [final Broadway role], Harold Young. Produced by Norman Marshall. Note: Filmed by Vantage Films [distributed by Four City Distributing (US) and Twentieth Century Fox (UK)] as Oscar Wilde (1960).
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