- (1923 - 1935) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1923) Stage Play: A Lesson in Love. Comedy.
- (1926) Stage Play: Schweiger. Written by Franz Werfel. Translated by Jack Charash and William A. Drake. Directed by Jacob Ben-Ami. Mansfield Theatre: 23 Mar 1926- Apr 1926 (closing date unknown/30 performances). Cast: Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Franz Schweiger"), Hugh Buckler (as "Travnick"), Minnie Dupree (as "Mrs. Stroschneider"), Edward Forbes, Ann Harding (as "Anna Schweiger"), Philip Leigh, Herbert Ransom (as "Father Rotter"), Samuel Rosen (as "Selcher"), Georgina Tilden, Edward Van Sloan (as "Dr. Burghardt Von Viereck"). Produced by The Fifth Avenue Playhouse.
- (1926) Stage Play: Say It With Flowers. Comedy/farce.
- (1928) Stage Play: Revolt.
- (1928) Stage Play: Wings Over Europe. Written by Robert Nichols and Maurice Brown. Directed by Rouben Mamoulian. Martin Beck Theatre (moved to the Alvin Theatre at unknown date- close): 10 Dec 1928- unknown (90 performances). Cast: Lionel Bevans (as "St. Man"), Thomas Braidon (as "Cossington"), Hugh Buckler (as "Stapp"), Charles Carden (as "Taggert"), Frank Conroy (as "Arthur"), Wheeler Dryden (as "Plimsoll"), John Dunn (as "Sunningdale"), Frank Elliott (as "Dedham"), Charles Francis (as "Faulkiner"), George Graham (as "Pascoe"), Nicholas Joy (as "Haliburton"), A.P. Kaye (as "Rummel"), Joseph Kilgour (as "Grindle"), Alexander Kirkland (as "Lightfoot"), Ernest Lawford (as "Grantby"), Edward Lester (as "Hand"), Robert Rendel (as "Vere"), Gordon Richards (as "Dunn"), Grant Stewart (as "Blount"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1929) Stage Play: Chinese O'Neill. Melodrama. Written by Capt. Cushing Donnell. Forrest Theatre: 22 May 1929- Jun 1929 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: Sigh Alti (as "Coolie in Black"), Frank G. Bond (as "Hsi San"), Al. Boucari (as "Executioner"), Hugh Buckler (as "Gerson St. George"), John Buckler (as "Frenchy"), George Buzante (as "Captain Fowler"), Lenore Chippendale (as "Lady Agatha Beresford"), Gordon Conover (as "Coolie in White"), Frank De Silva (as "Louisiana/Malays"), Douglass Dumbrille (as "Chinese O'Neill"), Josephine Evans (as "Millie"), Wong Foo (as "Chinese"), Howard Hall (as "Soy Yong"), Fah Lo (as "Chinese"), Frederick B. Manatt (as "Captain Clarkson"), Audrey Ridgwell (as "The Hon. Nancy Beresford"), Edward Rigby (as "Lord Gerbert Lenox"), Gustave Rolland (as "Fong Li"), Arthur Rossman (as "Mississippi/Malays"), Sang Ti (as "Chinese"), Fuen Wah (as "Chinese"). Produced by Capt. Cushing Donnell.
- (1930) Stage Play: Royal Virgin. Drama.
- (1930) Stage Play: Lost Sheep. Comedy.
- (1930) Stage Play: The Merchant of Venice. Comedy (revival)
- (1931) Stage Play: Heat Wave. Drama. Written by Roland Pertwee. Directed by Stanley Bell. Fulton Theatre: 17 Feb 1931- Mar 1931 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Hugh Buckler (as "James Weysmith"), Fred K. Chandrasakara (as "Club Servant"), William Cooray (as "Dawltry's Boy"), Henry Daniell (as "George March"), K.A. Fernando (as "Club Servant"), Frank Henderson (as "Everard"), Betty Lawford (as "Irene March"), Lionel Pape (as "Dr. Muir"), Hilda Plowright (as "Mrs. Weysmith"), Enid Raphael (as "Mameena"), Basil Rathbone (as "Hugh Dawltry"), Selena Royle (as "Philippa March"), W. Wana Singh (as "Bahadur"), Arthur Stenning (as "Duckworth"), Mackenzie Ward (as "Nicholas Fayne"). Produced by Stratford Productions Ltd.
- (1931) Stage Play: If Love Were All. Comedy.
- (1933) Stage Play: Money in the Air.
- (1933) Stage Play: Before Morning. Melodrama.
- (1933) Stage Play: Conquest.
- (1934) Stage Play: Richard of Bordeaux. Tragedy.
- (1934) Stage Play: L'Aiglon. Drama/tragedy (revival). Written by Edmond Rostand. Book adapted by Clemence Dane. Directed by Eva Le Gallienne. Broadhurst Theatre: 3 Nov 1934- Dec 1934 (closing date unknown/58 performances). Cast: Ethel Barrymore (as "Marie-Louise, Duchess of Parma"), Eva Le Gallienne (as "L'Aiglon"/"Franz, Duke of Reichstadt, Napoleon's son"), Walter Beck (as "Count Sedlinsky, Chief of Police"), Stiano Broggiotti (as "Count Bombelles, in attendance on Marie-Louise") [Broadway debut], John H. Brewer (as "Gentz, a spy"), Hugh Buckler (as "Flambeau, a Grenadier"), Donald Cameron (as "A French Attache"), Bennett Challis (as "A Man/Marmont, a French Field Marshal"), Margaret Cloninger (as "A Lady-in-Waiting/Third Lilac Domino"), Barbara Cochrane (as "Ensemble"), Ethel Colt (as "Fanny Elssler, a dancer"), Samuel Colt (as "A Young Countryman/Fifth Conspirator"), Sayre Crawley (as "Franz, Emperor of Austria"), Martha Crego (as "Fourth Lilac Domino"), Marion Evenson (as "Countess Camerata, Napoleon's niece"), Betty Fouche (as "Ensemble"), Eugene Francis (as "Acolyte"), Helena Glenn (as "Second Lady/A Shepherdess"), Richard Heath (as "Ensemble"), Lionel Hogarth (as "Count Dietrichstein, the Duke's tutor/Second Conspirator/A Prelate"), Lawrence Hutt (as "Fourth Conspirator"), Dorothy Johnson (as "Singer"), Jane Kim (as "Ensemble"), Joseph A. Kramm (as "Foresti/a Captain/First Conspirator"), Paul Leyssac (as "Metternich, Chancellor of Austria"), Benedict MacQuarrie (as "General Hartmann, in attendance on the Duke"), Ysobel Martin (as "A Maid/Sixth Lilac Domino"), Edward McHugh (as "An Usher"), Georgie Drew Mendum (as "An Old Woman/A Princess"), Gabrielle Morgan (as "Ensemble"), Sam Pearce (as "A Harlequin/A Doctor"), Martin Pollock (as "A Tailor/Third Conspirator"), Stella Reynolds (as "First Lady/Fifth Lilac Domino"), Leona Roberts (as "The Archduchess, Marie-Louise's sister-in-law"), Douglas Rowland (as "First Servant"), John Salzman (as "First Swiss Guard"), Larry Schwimmer (as "Second Swiss Guard"), Charles Sedgwick (as "Third Servant/A Jester/Acolyte"), Alice Swanson (as "Singer"), Theodore Tenley (as "An Old Peasant/A Fop"), David Turk (as "A Farmer"), Helen Walpole (as "Therese de Lorget"), William Walsh (as "Second Servant"), Mary Ward (as "A Woman/Second Lilac Domino"), Richard Waring (as "Tiburce de Lorget, an exile in the Austrian pay"), Nelson Welch (as "Baron D'Obenaus, the Duke's history tutor/A Folly/Sixth Conspirator"), William Whitehead (as "Prokesch, the Duke's personal friend"), Ruth Wilton (as "Third Lady/Fifth Lilac Domino/Singer"). Produced by Archibald Selwyn and Harold B. Franklin.
- (1935) Stage Play: Rosmersholm. (Revival).
- (1935) Stage Play: Camille. Drama (revival).
- (1935) Stage Play: The Women Have Their Way. Comedy (revival).
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