- (1920 - 1950) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1920) Stage Play: Enter Madame. Comedy. Written by Gilda Varesi Archibald and Dorothea Donn-Byrne. Directed by Brock Pemberton [earliest Broadway credit]. Garrick Theatre: 16 Aug 1920- Apr 1922 (closing date unknown/350 performances). Cast: Ross Alexander, [Broadway debut], 'Michelette Burani [credited as Michelette Baroni] (as "Bice"), William Hallman, Sheila Hayes, Jane Meredith, Minnie Milne, George Moto, Gavin Muir (as "John Fitzgerald"), Norman Trevor (as "Gerald Fitzgerald"), Gilda Varesi (as "Madame Lisa Della Robia"), Francis M. Verdi, Blanche Yurka. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1920) Stage Play: The Tavern. Burlesque. Written by Cora Dick Gantt. Directed by John Meehan. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 27 Sep 1920- May 1921 (closing date unknown/252 performances). Cast: Arnold Daly, Alberta Burton, Wanda Carlyle, Spencer Charters (as "The Hired Man"), William Gaunt, Joseph Guthrie, Joseph M. Holicky, William Jeffrey, Dodson Mitchell, Lucia Moore (as "The Governor's Wife"), Elsie Rizer (as "The Woman"), Lee Sterret (as "The Sheriff"), Phillips Tead (as "The Tavern Keeper's Son"), Morgan Wallace (as "The Governor"). Produced by George M. Cohan. Produced by arrangement with Brock Pemberton.
- (1920) Stage Play: Miss Lulu Bett. Comedy. Written by Zona Gale. Directed by Brock Pemberton. Belmont Theatre: 27 Dec 1920- Jun 1921 (closing date unknown/198 performances). Cast: Jack Bohn, Louise Closser Hale (as "Mrs. Bett"), Catherine Doucet (as "Ina"), William E. Holden, Carroll McComas (as "Lulu Bett"), Willard Robertson, Brigham Royce, Lois Shore, Beth Varden. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1921) Stage Play: Swords. Drama. Written by Sidney Howard [earliest Broadway credit]. Directed by Brock Pemberton. National Theatre: 1 Sep 1921- Sep 1921 (closing date unknown/36 performances). Cast: Raymond Bloomer (as "Damiano") [final Broadway role], Jane Darwell (as "Maria"), Lillian Dix (as "Giovanna"), Clare Eames (as "Fiamma"), Helen Forrest (as "Madelina"), Edward MacKay (as "Captain of the Garrison"), Catherine Roberts (as "Fiorenzo"), José Ruben (as "Cannetto"), John Saunders (as "Jacopone"), Charles Waldron (as "Ugolino"), Sophie Wilds (as "Amina"). Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Plot Thickens. Written by Luigi Barzini and Arnaldo Fraccaroli with book adaptation by Thomas Beer. Directed by Brock Pemberton. Booth Theatre: 5 Sep 1922- Sep 1922 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast included: Dwight Frye. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1922) Stage Play: Six Characters in Search of an Author. Comedy. Written by Luigi Pirandello. Directed by Brock Pemberton. Princess Theatre: 30 Oct 1922- Feb 1923 (closing date unknown/136 performances). Cast: Jack Amory, Katherine Atkinson, Ashley Buck, Elliot Cabot, Ernest Cossart (as "The Manager"), Florence Eldridge, Ida Fitzhugh (as "Mme. Pace"), Dwight Frye (as "The Son"), Blanche Gervais, Kathleen Graham, William T. Hays, Fred House, Moffat Johnston (as "The Father"), Leona Keefer, Constance Lusby, Russell Morrison, John Saunders, Maud Sinclair, Eleanor Woodruff (as "The Leading Lady"), Margaret Wycherly. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1923) Stage Play: Rita Coventry. Comedy. Written by Hubert Osborne. from the novel by Julian Street. Directed by Brock Pemberton. Bijou Theatre: 19 Feb 1923- Mar 1923 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Luis Alberni (as "Busini"), Auguste Aramini (as "Louis"), Leopoldine Damrosch (as "Eleanor"), Jay Fassett (as "Johnson"), Grace Filkins, Charles Francis, Dorothy Francis (as "Rita Coventry"), Harriette Frazier, Dwight Frye, Hans Herbert (as "Pierre"), Curtis Karpe (as "Wolff"), Corbet Morris (as "Wetherell"), Eugene Powers (as "Herman Krauss"), G. Albert Smith (as "Paldowski"), Clare Weldon, Edward H. Weaver. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1923) Stage Play: The Love Habit. Farce. Adapted by Gladys Unger, from the work, "Pour Avoir Adrienne" by Louis Verneuil. Bijou Theatre: 14 Mar 1923- May 1923 (closing date unknown/69 performances). Cast included: Dwight Frye, Florence Eldridge. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1923) Stage Play: White Desert. Drama. Written by Maxwell Anderson [earliest Broadway credit]. Directed by Brock Pemberton. Princess Theatre: 18 Oct 1923- Oct 1923 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: George Abbott (as "Sverre Peterson"), John Friend (as "Dugan"), Beth Merrill (as "Mary Kane"), Frank Shannon (as "Michael Kane"), Ethel Wright. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1924) Stage Play: The Living Mask. Comedy/satire. Written by Luigi Pirandello. 44th Street Theatre: 44th Street Theatre: 21 Jan 1924- Feb 1924 (closing date unknown/28 performances). Cast: Stuart Bailey, Rex K. Benware, Arthur Bowyer, Thomas Chalmers, Warburton Gamble, Gerald Hamer, Ernita Lascelles, Thomas Louden, Ralph MacBane, Kay Strozzi. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1924) Stage Play: Mr. Pitt. Written by Zona Gale. 39th Street Theatre: 22 Jan 1924- Apr 1924 (closing date unknown/87 performances). Cast: Marion Allen, Florence Barrie, Parker Fennelly (as "Buck Carbury"), Adelaide FitzAllen, Minna Gombell (as "Barbara Ellsworth"), C. Henry Gordon (as "Max Bayard"), Borden Harriman, Marie Haynes, Walter Huston, Emily Lorraine, Mildred Miller, Minnie Milne, Antoinette Perry, Florence Peterson, Catherine Sayre, Helen Sheridan, Laura Sherry, Frederick Webber, Ethel Wright. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1924) Stage Play: Six Characters in Search of an Author. Comedy (revival). Written by Luigi Pirandello. Directed by Brock Pemberton. 44th Street Theatre: 6 Feb 1924- Feb 1924 (closing date unknown/17 performances). Cast included: Dwight Frye, Ida Fitzhugh. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1924) Stage Play: The Mask and the Face. Comedy. Written by C.B. Fernald, adapted from a story by Luigi Chiarelli. Bijou Theatre: 10 Sep 1924- Sep 1924 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast included: Robert Montgomery. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1924) Stage Play: The Little Angel. Comedy. Written by Ernest Vajda. Frazee Theatre: 27 Sep 1924- Nov 1924 (closing date unknown/49 performances). Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1924) Stage Play: Puppets. Melodrama. Written by Frances Lightner. Directed by Brock Pemberton. Selwyn Theatre: 9 Mar 1925- Mar 1925 (closing date unknown/54 performances). Cast included: Dwight Frye, C. Henry Gordon, Miriam Hopkins, Fredric March. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Masque of Venice. Comedy. Written by George Dunning Gribble. Directed by Brock Pemberton. Mansfield Theatre: 2 Mar 1926- Mar 1926 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Nera Badalin (as "Annunziata"), Arnold Daly (as "Jonathan Mumford"), Kenneth MacKenna (as "Jack Cazeneuve"), Osgood Perkins, Antoinette Perry, Selena Royle (as "Egeria"), William Seagram (as "Don Pedro"), Elizabeth Taylor (as "Madge Cox"). Produced by Brock Pemberton, William A. Brady and Dwight Wiman.
- (1926) Stage Play: Loose Ankles. Written by Sam Janney. Directed by Brock Pemberton. Biltmore Theare: 16 Aug 1926- Jan 1927 (closing date unknown/168 performances). Cast: George W. Barnier, Charles D. Brown, Moon Carroll, Kathleen Comegys, Robert Lucius Cook, Jeanne De Me, Barbara Gray, Fred House, Carlotta Irwin, Kenneth Lawton, Frank Lyon, Ethel Martin, Osgood Perkins, Lavinia Shannon, Leonore Sorsby, Harold Vermilyea. Produced by Brock Pemberton. Note: Filmed by First National Pictures twice as Ladies at Play (1926), and as Loose Ankles (1930).
- (1926) Stage Play: The Ladder. Drama. Written by J. Frank Davis. Directed by Brock Pemberton. Mansfield Theatre: 22 Oct 1926- May 1926 (closing date unknown/640 performances). Cast: Ross Alexander, Carl Anthony, Hugh Buckler, Leonard Carey, George Carmichael, Anita Damrosch, Edward J. McNamara, Julius McVicker, Minnie Milne, Antoinette Perry, Irene Purcell, Montague Rutherford, Sallie Sanford, Vernon Steele, Edgar Stehli. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1928) Stage Play: Goin' Home. Drama. Written by Ransom Rideout. Directed by Antoinette Perry and Brock Pemberton. Hudson Theatre: 23 Aug 1928- Oct 1928 (closing date unknown/76 performances). Cast: Ferdinand J. Accooe, Leo Bailey, Charles Benjamin, Charles H. Brown, Barbara Bulgakova, Brevard Burnett, Ralph Cullinan (as "Bill, U.S. Military Police"), Ray Giles, Richard Hale (as "Israel Du Bois"), Russell Hicks (as "Major Edward Powell of the A.E.F."), John Irwin, Fred H. Jennings, Snippy Mason, J. William Maxwell, Frederick D. McCoy, Thomas Mosely, Arvid Paulson, Seifert C. Pyle, Clarence Redd, Georges Renavent, F. Barclay Trigg, Alexander Zaroubine. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1928) Stage Play: Hotbed. Comedy/drama. Written by Paul Osborn. Directed by Brock Pemberton and Antoinette Perry. Klaw Theatre: 8 Nov 1928- Nov 1928 (closing date unknown/19 performances). Cast: Charles S. Abbe (as "Professor Stanton"), Carl Anthony (as "Professor Clark"), Alison Bradshaw (as "Lila"), William Faversham (as "Louis Willard"), Paul Gilmore (as "Dean Slawson"), Walter Greenough (as "George Courtenay"), Josephine Hull (as "Hattie"), William Ingersoll (as "Reverend David Rushbrook"), Leigh Lovel, Richard Spencer, Preston Sturges (as "Lawrence Binnings") [Broadway debut]. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1929) Stage Play: Strictly Dishonorable. Comedy. Written by Preston Sturges. Directed by 'Broack Pemberton' and (w/Antoinette Perry. Avon Theatre: 18 Sep 1929- 1931 (closing date unknown/557 performances). Cast: John Altieri (as "Giovanni"), Carl Anthony (as "Judge Dempsey"), Tullio Carminati (as "Count Di Ruvo"), Louis Jean Heydt (as "Henry Greene"), Muriel Kirkland (as "Isabelle Parry"), Edward J. McNamara (as "Patrolman Mulligan"), William Ricciardi (as "Tomaso Antiovi"), Marius Rogati (as "Mario"). Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1931) Stage Play: Three Times the Hour. Melodrama. Written by Valentine Davies. Directed by Brock Pemberton and Antoinette Perry. Avon Theatre: 25 Aug 1931- Sep 1931 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Harry Blythe (as "Postal Messenger"), Jack Lionel Bohn (as ("Henri"), Hamilton Brooks (as "Albert"), Linda Carlon (as "Sylvia Jordan"), Del Cleveland (as "Jack Reed"), Hal K. Dawson (as "Dey"), Gertrude Flynn (as "Hildah Lovering"), Aleta Freel (as "Linda Reed"), Harold Heaton (as "John"), Ben Lackland (as "Robert Philips"), Sam Levene (as "Cooper"), Francesca Braggiotti Lodge (as "Anna D'Asti"), Pierre Mario (as "Ramon Delgado"), Horace Pollock (as "Dr. Elliott"), Allen Ramsay (as "Roger Hurlburt"), Anne Reynolds (as "Joan Porter"), Vira Rial (as "Mrs. Roger Hurlburt"), Byron Russell (as "Haskins"), James Shelburne (as "Tom Crane"), Francis Stewart (as "Colonel Beauchamp"), Robert Strange (as "Lawrence M. Blake"), Elvira Trabert (as "Jeanne"), Philip Van Tassel (as "Smith"), Katherine Warren (as "Mrs. Lawrence M. Blake"), Charles C. Wilson (as "Angus McKee"), Jack Winne (as "Davis"). Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1932) Stage Play: Christopher Comes Across. Comedy/farce. Written by Hawthorne Hurst. Directed by Antoinette Perry and Brock Pemberton. Royale Theatre: 31 May 1932- Jun 1932 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Hamilton Brooks (as "Don Sebastian De Corazilla"), Charles Brown (as "The Marquis of Moya"), Patricia Calvert (as "Queen Isabella of Spain"), Tullio Carminati (as "Captain Christopher Columbus"), Gilbert Douglas (as "Hernando De Talavero"), Gregory Gaye (as "Prince Otar of Homamb"), John Gilchrist (as "A Sentry"), Patrick Glasgow (as "Isadoro"), J. Kirby Hawks (as "Duke of Medinia Sedonia"), Irene Homer (as "Lady in Waiting"), Walter Kingsford (as "King Ferdinand of Spain"), Betty Laurence (as "Dolores De Arana"), Ernest Lawford (as "Don Alfonso"), Fania Marinoff (as "Beatriz, The Marchioness of Moya"), Gilda Oakleaf (as "Zita"), Clarence Redd (as "A Porter"). Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1934) Stage Play: Personal Appearance. Comedy. Written by Lawrence Riley. Directed by Antoinette Perry and Brock Pemberton. Henry Miller's Theatre: 17 Oct 1934- Dec 1935 (closing date unknown/501 performances). Cast: Gladys George (as "Cecily Carewe, played by Carole Arden in the film "Drifting Lady" Appeared in film sequence only/Carole Arden"), Eula Guy, Otto Hulett (as "Gene Tuttle"), Dorrit Kelton (as "Jessie"), Philip Ober (as "Chester Norton/Bud"), Merna Pace, Leonard Penn, Minna Phillips (as "Mrs. Struthers/Addie"), John Robb, Florence Robinson (as "Gladys Kelcey"), Don Shelton. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1935) Stage Play: Ceiling Zero. Written by Frank Wead. Scenic Design by John Root. Directed by Antoinette Perry. Music Box Theatre: 10 Apr 1935- Jul 1935 (closing date unknown/104 performances). Cast: John Bohn (as "Les Bogan"), John Boruff, Geoffrey Bryant (as "Bob Wilkins"), Chester Clute (as "Baldy Wright"), John Drew Colt (as "Dick Peterson"), Joseph Downing, Walter Greaza (as "Al Stone"), Gladys Griswold (as "Dodo Harvey"), Alan Hale Jr. (as "Tay Lawson"), John F. Hamilton (as Mike Owens"), Nedda Harrigan (as "Mary Lee"), John Huntington (as "Joe Allen"), Hope Lawder, John Litel, Osgood Perkins (as "Jake Lee"), Margaret Perry (as "Tommy Thomas"), Philip Remar (as "Jerry Stevens"), Grandon Rhodes (as "Fred Adams"), G. Albert Smith (as "Texas Clark"), Ben Starkie (as "Eddie Payson"), James Todd (as "Smiley Johnson"). Produced by Brock Pemberton. Note: Filmed by Cosmopolitan Productions [distributed by Warner Bros.] as Ceiling Zero (1936) and by Warner Bros. as International Squadron (1941).
- (1937) Stage Play: Now You've Done It. Comedy. Written by Mary Chase. Directed by Antoinette Perry. Henry Miller's Theatre: 5 Mar 1937- Apr 1937 (closing date unknown/43 performances). Cast; Jane Bancroft, Junior Eric Burtis, Richard Carlson [Broadway debut] (as "Lawrence Ainsworth"), Ralph W. Chambers (as "Sam Helburn"), Radley E. Collins, Ruth Gates, Walter Greaza (as "Harlan L. Hazlett, Junior"), Mary Howes, George Lessey, Margaret Perry (as "Grace Dosher"), Barbara Robbins, George L. Taylor, Jack Tyler, Evelyn Varden. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1937) Stage Play: Chalked Out. Melodrama. Written by Warden Lewis E. Lawes and Jonathan Finn. Directed by Antoinette Perry. Morosco Theatre: 25 Mar 1937- Unknown (12 performances). Cast: Harry Bellaver (as "Smoky"), Ronald Brogan (as "Chuck"), Maurice Burke (as "Scappa"), Roger Combs (as "Tower Guard"), James Coots (as "Warden"), Blair Davies (as "Keeper Burns"), Philip Faversham (as "Slim"), Price Holmes (as "Keeper"), David Hughes (as "Patsy"), Otto Hulett (as "Carey"), John M. James (as "Andy"), Frank Jaquet (as "Pop"), Charles Jordan (as "Frank Wilson"), Frederick Kaufman (as "Jake"), Leo A. Kennedy (as "Principal Keeper (P.K.)"), Frank Lindsay (as "Officer Black"), Lex Lindsay (as "Smitty"), Frank Lovejoy (as "Fred Burke"), Stephen Maley (as "Zip"), John Marriott (as "Sam"), Katherine Meskill [credited as Katherine Meskil] (as "Madge Stone") [Broadway debut], Mabel Montgomery (as "Mrs. Stone") [final Broadway role], Robert J. Mulligan (as "Sergeant Monahan"), Marlin Poindexter (as "Johnson"), John Raby (as "Johnny Stone"), Ed Smith (as "District Attorney"), Sandy Strouse (as "Blimp"), John Taylor (as "Doctor"), Tom Tully (as "Officer Carter"), Charles Walton (as "Tom"), Harry Wilson (as "George"). Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1937) Stage Play: Red Harvest. Drama. Written by Walter Charles Roberts. Directed by Antoinette Perry. National Theatre: 30 Mar 1937- Apr 1937 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast included: Alan Hale, Walter Burke, Leona Powers (as "Zinna Meek"). Produced by Brock Pemberton. Produced in association with The Theatre Foundation of America.
- (1938) Stage Play: Kiss the Boys Good-Bye. Comedy. Written by Clare Boothe Luce [credited as Clare Boothe]. Scenic Design by John Root. Directed by Antoinette Perry. Henry Miller's Theatre: 28 Sep 1938- Jun 1939 (closing date unknown/286 performances). Cast: John Alexander (as "Madison Breed"), Ollie Burgoyne (as "Maimie"), Helen Claire (as "Cindy Lou Bethany"), Wyman Holmes (as "Conductor"), Sheldon Leonard (as "Herbert Z. Harner"), Lex Lindsay (as "Oscar"), Hugh Marlowe (as "Top Rumson"), Millard Mitchell (as "Lloyd Lloyd"), Philip Ober (as "Horace Rand"), Benay Venuta (as "Myra Stanhope"), Carmel White (as "Leslie Rand"), Frank Wilson (as "George"). Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1940) Stage Play: Lady in Waiting. Comedy. Written by Margery Sharp. Directed by Antoinette Perry. Martin Beck Theatre: 27 Mar 1940- 8 Jun 1949 (87 performances). Cast: Albert Allen, Stephen Ker Appleby, Anita Bolster, Michelette Burani, Lenore Chippendale, Carol Curtis-Brown, James Decker, Paul Foley, Gladys George, Mary Heberden, Walter Moore, Ethel Morrison, Alan Napier (as "Sir William Warring"), Leonard Penn (as "Fred Genocchio"), Guy Spaull. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1940) Stage Play: Out from Under. Written by John Walter Kelly. Directed by Antoinette Perry. Biltmore Theatre: 4 May 1940- 11 May 1940 (9 performances). Cast included: Philip Ober, Vivian Vance. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1940) Stage Play: Glamour Preferred. Written by Florence Ryerson and Colin Clements. Scenic Design by John Root. Directed by Antoinette Perry. Booth Theatre: 15 Nov 1940- 23 Nov 1940 (11 performances). Cast: Thomas Babcock (as "Silver-Fish Exterminator"), Flora Campbell (as "Lynn Eldridge "), Haskell Coffin (as "Henry"), Irene Corlett (as "Angela Vaughn"), Robert Craven (as "Sir Hubert Towyn"), Elsie Mae Gordon (as "Loula"), James Gregory (as "Officer Hanan"), Loring Smith (as "Max Musick"), Louis Sorin (as "Bernard C. Goldwater"), Maidel Turner (as "Mrs. Florinda Mott Pengilly"), Henry Vincent (as "Webster"). Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1941) Stage Play: Cuckoos on the Hearth. Comedy.
- (1942) Stage Play: Janie. Written by Hershel Williams and Josephine Bentham. Scenic Design by John Root. Directed by Antoinette Perry. Henry Miller's Theatre (moved to Biltmore Theatre from 21 Dec 1942- 31 Jan 1943 then returned to Henry Miller's Theatre until 21 Feb 1943, moved to Playhouse Theatre from 23 Feb 1943 to 26 Nov 1943, then moved to The Mansfield Theatre from 28 Nov 1943 to close): 10 Sep 1942- 16 Jan 1944 (642 performances). Cast: Frank Amy (as "Scooper Nolan"), Gwen Anderson (as "Janie Colburn"), Gertrude Beach (as "Hortense Bennington"), Betty Breckenridge (as "Bernadine Dodd"), Nancy Cushman (as "Lucille Colburn"), Herbert Evers (as "Dick Lawrence"), Blaine Fillmore (as "Dead-Pan Hackett"), Clare Foley (as "Elsbeth Colburn"), J. Franklin Jones (as "Carl Loomis"), Franklin Kline (as "Frank"), Maurice Manson (as "Charles Colburn"), John Marriott (as "Rodney"), Artie Belle McGinty [credited as Artiebell McGinty] (as "Tina") [final Broadway role], W.O. McWatters (as "Uncle Poodgie"), D. Nick Raymond (as "Joe Jerome/Carl Loomis/Joe Jerome"), Michael St. Angel (as "Andy"), Howard St. John (as "John Van Brunt"), Kenneth Tobey (as "Mickey Malone"), Margaret Wallace (as "Paula Rainey"), Linda Watkins (as "Thelma Lawrence"), Paul Wilson (as "Oscar"). Replacement cast during Playhouse Theatre run: Tom Drake [credited as Alfred Alderdice] (as "Dick Lawrence"), Frank Baxter (as "Oscar"), Michael Everett (as "Mickey Malone"), Paul Foley (as "Andy"), Ann Hermann (as "Elsbeth Colburn") [Alternate], Grant Mills (as "Charles Colburn"), Donald Murphy (as "Frank"), Melba Rae (as "Paula Rainey") [Broadway debut], Hugh Thomas (as "Scooper Nolan"), Lionel Wilson (as "Dead-Pan Hackett"). Replacement cast during Mansfield Theatre run: Barbara Barton (as "Hortense Bennington"), Gertrude Beach (as "Janie Colburn"), Phyllis De Bus (as "Elsbeth Colburn") [Alternate], Bill Thompson (as "Dick Lawrence"). Produced by Brock Pemberton. Note: William A. Brady owned the Playhouse Theatre but had no involvement in the production.
- (1943) Stage Play: Pillar to Post. Written by Rose Simon Kohn. Playhouse Theatre: 10 Dec 1943- 1 Jan 1944 (31 performances). Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1944) Stage Play: Harvey. Comedy. Written by Mary Chase. Scenic Design by John Root. Directed by Antoinette Perry. 48th Street Theatre: 1 Nov 1944- 15 Jan 1949 (1775 performances). Cast: Frank Fay (as "Elwood P. Dowd"), Josephine Hull, Dora Clement (as "Betty Chumley"), Robert Gist (as "E.J. Lofgren"), Frederica Going (as "Mrs. Ethel Chauvenet"), Lawrence Hayes (as "Mr. Peeples"), John Kirk (as "Judge Omar Gaffney"), Fred Irving Lewis (as "William R. Chumley, M.D."), Tom Seidel (as "Lyman Sanderson, M.D."), Eloise Sheldon (as "Miss Johnson"), Janet Tyler (as "Ruth Kelly, R.N"), Jane Van Duser (as "Myrtle Mae Simmons"), Jesse White (as "Duane Wilson"). Replacement actors: Wyrley Birch (as "Judge Omar Gaffney"), Ethel Britton (as "Betty Chumley"), Joe E. Brown (as "Elwood P. Dowd"), Jack Buchanan (as "Elwood P. Dowd"), Philip Carlyle (as "Lyman Sanderson, M.D."), Thomas Coley (as "Lyman Sanderson, M.D."), Mary Cooper (as "Ruth Kelly, R.N."), Mary Dallas (as "Myrtle Mae Simmons"), Russell Gold (as "E.J. Lofgren"), Lawrence Hayes (as "William R. Chumley, M.D."), Robert P. Lieb (as "Duane Wilson"), Marion Lorne (as "Veta Louise Simmons"), Helen Randall (as "Miss Johnson"), James Stewart (as "Elwood P. Dowd") [from 12 Jul 1947- ?], Allan Tower (as "William R. Chumley, M.D."), Anita Webb (as "Miss Johnson"). Produced by Brock Pemberton. Note: Filmed as Harvey (1950), Harvey (1972) (TV).
- (1949) Stage Play: Love Me Long. Comedy. Written by Doris Frankel. Directed by Brock Pemberton and Margaret Perry. 48th Street Theatre: 7 Nov 1949- 19 Nov 1949 (16 performances). Cast: Harry Bannister (as "Mr. Sharp"), Shirley Booth (as "Abby Quinn"), Heywood Hale Broun (as "Phone Man"), Russell Hardie (as "Jim Kennedy"), Jennifer Howard (as "Louise Ulmer"), Anne Jackson (as "Margaret Anderson"), George Keane (as "The Skinner"), Carl Low (as "Moving Man") [Broadway debut], Daniel Reed (as "Cleotus P. Anderson"). Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (1950) Stage Play: Mr. Barry's Etchings. Comedy. Written by Walter Bullock and Daniel Archer. Directed by Brock Pemberton [final Broadway credit] and Margaret Perry. 48th Street Theatre: 31 Jan 1950- 25 Feb 1950 (31 performances). Cast: Gene Blakely, Richard Carlyle, Dort Clark (as "Grover Dayton"), Vicki Cummings, Amy Douglass, Michael Foley, William Gibberson, Ruth Hammond, George Ives, Gaye Jordan, Scott McKay, Thomas Reynolds, William Sharon, Lee Tracy (as "Judson Barry"), Frank Tweddell (as "Adolph Grisswold"), Howard Whitfield. Produced by Brock Pemberton.
- (December 23, 1940) He produced Margery Sharp's play, "Lady in Waiting," at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio with Gladys George, Alan Napier, Michelette Burnai, Carol Curtis-Brown, Richard Fraser, Lenore Chippendale, Anita Bolster, Paul A. Foley, John Parrish, Audrey Ridgwell, Robert Breen, Leonard Penn, Ethel Morrison, Richard Gould, and George Spelvin in the cast. John Root was set designer. Antoinette Perry was director.
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