- (1896 - 1946) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1896) Stage Play: Two Little Vagrants. Drama. Book adapted by Charles Klein. From "Les Deux Gosses" by Pierre Decourcelle. Academy of Music: 23 Nov 1896- unknown (unknown performances). Cast [as known]: Minnie Dupree [Broadway debut].
- (1899) Stage Play: The Cowboy and the Lady. Melodrama. Written by Clyde Fitch. Knickerbocker Theatre: 25 Dec 1899- Feb 1899 (unknown closing date/44 performances). Cast included: Lillian Adams Minnie Dupree (as "Midge"), Maxine Elliott, John Flood. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1900) Stage Play: Women and Wine. Melodrama. Written by Arthur Shirley and Benjamin Landeck. Manhattan Theatre (moved to the Academy of Music on 14 May 1900 to close): 11 Apr 1900- Jun 1900 (closing date unknown/69 performances). Cast: Eleanora Allen, Julien Barton, J.G. Brammall, George Courtney, Adele De Sai, Francesca Di Maria, Minnie Dupree, Mabel Eaton, Roland G. Edwards, Marshall Farnum, Rose Garland, Alexis Gisiko, Daniel Halifax, Frank Hatch, Florence Hayes, Grace Howard, Alice Kingdon, Howard Kyle, Virginia Marshall, Lucille Monroe, Lottie Mortimer, George Murray, George Osbourne, Elita Proctor Otis, Lulu Porter, Ethel Rellew, William Selwyn, Nellie Simmons, Bernard Thornton, David Torrence, A.L. Traherne, Irene Vera, Marion Winchester.
- (1901) Stage Play: The Climbers. Drama. Written and directed by Clyde Fitch. Bijou Theatre: 21 Jan 1901- Jun 1901 (closing date unknown/163 performances). Cast: Amelia Bingham, Clara Bloodgood, George C. Bonicase, Madge Carr Cook, Minnie Dupree (as "Clara Hunter"), Robert Edeson, Lillian Eldredge, John Flood, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Ysobel Haskins, Annie Irish, Mr. Kinard, Florence Lloyd, Maude Monroe, Edward Moreland, Henry Stokes, James Bennett Sturgis, Frederick Wallace, Henry Warwick, Frank Worthing, Harry Wright. Produced by Amelia Bingham.
- (1902) Stage Play: Lady Margaret. Adapted from the French by Edward Rose. Bijou Theatre: 27 Jan 1902- Feb 1902 (closing date unknown/32 performances). Cast included: Amelia Bingham, Minnie Dupree, Ferdinand Gottschalk. Produced by Amelia Bingham.
- (1902) Stage Play: Life. Drama. Written by Anson Pond. Garden Theatre: 31 Mar 1902- Apr 1902 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Max Aronson, Edith Blair, George Boniface, Sydney Booth, Will H. Bray, 'Charles Cherry (I)', Thornton Cole, Reginald Cottew, Charles Courtney, Tom Doyle, Minnie Dupree, Harris L. Forbes, Maud Granger, T. Hefferen, Emma Brennan Ince, Annie Irish, Stanley Jessup, Charles Kirk, Georgie Lawrence, Kate Lester, Virginia Loring, Charles Mason, Jeanette Northern, Arthur Rutledge, M.F. Walsh. Produced by Rich & Harris.
- (1902) Stage Play: A Rose o'Plymouth-Town. Written by Beulah Marie Dix and Evelyn Greenleaf Sutherland. Manhattan Theatre: 29 Sep 1902- Oct 1902 (closing date unknown/21 performances). Cast: Cornelia Bedford, Augustus Cook, Minnie Dupree, Douglas Fairbanks, Guy Bates Post, Mrs. Sol Smith, Bennett Sturgis, Edith Wright. Produced by W.G. Smith.
- (1902) Stage Play: Heidelberg. Drama. Written by Aubrey Boucicault. Based on "Alt Heidelberg" by Wilhelm Meyer-Foerster. Princess Theatre: 15 Dec 1902- Jan 1903 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Karl Bergner, Aubrey Boucicault, Heinrich Branton, Myra C. Brooke, John Burrell, Charles Clear, Norman Conniers, Augustus Cook, Edward Dresser, Minnie Dupree, Wilhelm Engelhoff, August Franko, Max Freeman, Henry Glass, Emil Himmelreich, Erne Houmann, F. Hurleigh, Robert Loraine, Bernhard Niemeyer, Charles Parr, Theodore Roberts, Ludwig Schultz, Morton Selten, Mollie Sherwood, William Sissons, John Stearns, Franz Steindorff, W.N. Stephens, Walter Travers. Produced by Sam Shubert and Lee Shubert.
- (1903) Stage Play: The Frisky Mrs. Johnson. Drama. Written by Clyde Fitch (based on Mme. Flirt by Paul Gavault and Georges Berr). Directed by Clyde Fitch. Princess Theatre: 9 Feb 1903- Apr 1903 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: William L. Abingdon [Broadway debut], F. Owen Baxter, Amelia Bingham, Madge Carr Cook, Minnie Dupree, Alfred Fisher, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Wilton Lackaye (as "Jim Morley"), Richard Lambart, Ernest Lawford, George S. Probert, Alison Skipworth, Charles H. Wentz, Lillian Wright. Produced by Amelia Bingham.
- (1904) Stage Play: An African Millionaire. Comedy. Written by Frederick W. Sidney. Based on the stories by Grant Allen. Princess Theatre: 4 Apr 1904- Apr 1904 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: J. Palmer Collins, J.M. Colville, Minnie Dupree, Bertram Godfrey, John E. Gray, Rapley Holmes, Maude Knowlton, Henry J. Lillford, Tully Marshall, Grace Merritt, Sherman Ramsay, Marie Rawson, H. Reeves-Smith, Henry Rich, Harry St. Maur, George Henry Trader, Beresford Webb, Cyril Young.
- (1904) Stage Play: The Music Master. Comedy/drama. Written by Charles Klein. Directed by David Belasco. Belasco Theatre (moved to the Bijou Theatre on 9 Jan 1905- close): 26 Sep 1904- Sep 1906 (closing date unknown/627 performances). Cast: Marie Bates (as "Miss Houston"), Tony Bevan (as "Mr. Ryan"), William Boag (as "Andrew Cruger"), H.G. Carleton (as "Ditson"), Downing Clarke (as "A Collector"), Jane Cowl (as "Octavie'), Minnie Dupree' (as "Helen Stanton"), Campbell Gollan (as "Henry A. Stanton"), Louis Hendricks (as "Al. Costello"), Alfred Hudson (as "Mr. Schwartz"), Master Richard Kessler (as "Danny"), Sybil Klein (as "Charlotte"), Leon Kohlmar (as "August Poons"), Harold Mead (as "Joles"), William Ricciardi (as "Signor Tagliafico"), Louis P. Verande (as "Louis Pinac"), Isabel Waldron (as "Mrs. Andrew Cruger"), Antoinette Walker (as "Jennie"), David Warfield (as "Anton Von Barwig"), J. Carrington Yates (as "Beverly Cruger"). Produced by David Belasco. Note: One of the biggest hits of the era.
- (1906) Stage Play: The District Leader. Musical comedy. Music by Joseph E. Howard. Lyrics by Joseph E. Howard. Book by Joseph E. Howard. Scenic Design by Meixner and Frank Platzer. Costume Design by M. Simowitch and Mme. Osborne. Directed by Joseph E. Howard [earliest Broadway credit]. Wallack's Theatre: 30 Apr 1906- 5 May 1906 (8 performances). Cast: Joseph Allen (as "Dan Lowton"), Miss Barnes (as "Chinese Maiden"), Fred J. Barnes (as "Mr. Partridge"), Allen Bennett (as "Clinton Goddard"), William S. Davis (as "Willie Carter"), Diamond Donner (as "Florrie Fenshaw"), Minnie Dupree [credited as Miss Dupree] (as "Chinese Maiden"), Ida Emerson (as "Valeska Granger"), Marie Fanchonetti (as "Chinese Maiden"), Miss. Gordon (as "Chinese Maiden"), Mark Hart (as "Sam Grady"), Joseph E. Howard (as "Jack Dunning"), Leonard B. Hoyt (as "Hop Lee"), Gertrude Jenkins (as "Chinese Maiden"), Dave Lewis (as "Tom Cole"), Charles M. McDonald (as "Ezra Whittle"), Miss O'Neill (as "Chinese Maiden"), Leona Pam (as "The Belle of Chinatown"), Miss Porter (as "Chinese Maiden"), Florence Sinnott (as "Grace Lowton"), Miss Stockwell (as "Chinese Maiden"), E.G. Stockwell (as "Dutch"), Harry Stone (as "Tim Halloran/Jim Halloran"), Mark Sullivan (as "The Man Who Wants to Bet"), Miss Urmazy (as "Chinese Maiden"), Miss West (as "Chinese Maiden"). Produced by Walter C. Lindsay and Frank J. Sardam.
- (1906) Stage Play: The Road to Yesterday. Comedy-fantasy. Music by Melville Ellis. Written by Beulah Marie Dix and Evelyn Greenleaf Sutherland. Directed by J.C. Huffman. Herald Square Theatre (moved to the Lyric Theatre on 15 Apr 1907- close): 31 Dec 1906- Aug 1907 (closing date unknown/216 performances). Cast: F. Owen Baxter, Julia Blanc, F.K. Brown, Robert Dempster (as "Jack Greatorex"), Minnie Dupree (as "Elspeth Tyrell, Lady Elizabeth"), Agnes Everett, Alice Gale (as "Aunt Harriet, Goody Phelps") [Broadway debut] Wright Kramer (as "Will Leveson'), Charles Martin, W.S. Martin, Miriam Nesbitt, Selmar Romaine, Helen Ware' (as "Malena Leveson"), White Whittlesey.
- (1911) Stage Play: The Real Thing. Written by Catherine Chisholm Cushing [earliest Broadway credit]. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 10 Aug 1911- Oct 1911 (closing date unknown/60 performances). Cast: Albert Brown, Henrietta Crosman, Minnie Dupree, Marion Kerby, Mac Macomber, Frank Mills, Alliene Morrison. Produced by Maurice Campbell.
- (1920) Stage Play: The Charm School. Comedy. Written by Alice Duer Miller and Robert Milton. Bijou Theatre: 1 Aug 1920- Oct 1920 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Carolyn Arnold (as "Ethel Splevin"), Marie Carroll (as "Elise Benedotti"), Margaret Dale (as "Miss Hays"), Blythe Daly (as "Sally Boyd"), Minnie Dupree (as "Miss Curtis"), Morgan Farley (as "Tim Simpkins"), James Gleason, Sam Hardy, Rapley Holmes (as "Homer Johns"), Theodora Larocque (as "Alix Mercier"), Camilla Lyon (as "Charlotte Gray"), Nell Martin (as "Jim Simpkins"), Florence McGuire (as "Muriel Doughty"), Constance McLaughlin (as "Dotsie"), Frances McLaughlin (as "Lillian Stafford"), Mary Mead (as "Madge Kent"), Ivan F. Simpson (as "David MacKenzie"). Produced by Robert Milton.
- (1921) Stage Play: Everyday. Comedy. Written by Rachel Crothers. Directed by Rachel Crothers. Bijou Theatre: 16 Nov 1921- Jan 1922 (closing date unknown/30 performances). Cast: Tallulah Bankhead (as "Phyllis Nolan"), Don Burroughs (as "T.D. Raymond"), Mary Donnelly (as "May Raymond'), Minnie Dupree (as "Fannie Nolan"), Henry Hull (as "John McFarlane"), Frank Sheridan (as "Judge Nolan"), Lucile Watson (as "Mrs. Raymond"). Produced by Mary Kirkpatrick.
- (1922) Stage Play: Your Woman and Mine. Drama. Written by Cleves Kinkead. Directed by Daniel Pennell. Klaw Theatre: 27 Feb 1922- Apr 1922 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Reginald Barlow, Byron Beasley, George Stuart Christie, Malcolm Duncan, Minnie Dupree (as "Abby Prewitt"), Fred Eckhard, Louis Fierce, Helen Gill, James L. Kearney, Bertram Marburgh, Henry Mortimer, Dan Pennell, Royal C. Stout, Regina Wallace. Produced by Lee Kugel.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Old Soak. Comedy/drama. Written by Don Marquis. Directed by Arthur Hopkins. Plymouth Theatre: 22 Aug 1922- Aug 1923 (closing date unknown/423 performances). Cast: Harry Beresford, Minnie Dupree (as "Matilda"), George Le Guere, Robert McWade (as "Cousin Webster Parsons"), Grant Mills, Robert Emmett O'Connor (as "Al"), Mary Philips, Helene Sinnott, Eva Williams. Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1923) Stage Play: The Shame Woman. Drama. Written by Lula Vollmer. Greenwich Village Theatre: 16 Oct 1923- 15 Jun 1924 (278 performances). Cast: Claude Cooper (as "Ezra Case"), Minnie Dupree (as "Mrs. Burns"), Florence Gerald (as "Martha Case"), Jessie Graham (as "Matron"), Allen W. Nagle (as "Jailer"), Thelma Paige (as "Lily"), Edward Pawley (as "Craig Anson"), Florence Rittenhouse (as "Lize Burns"), G.O. Taylor (as "Minister"), John J. Ward (as "John Crombie"). Produced by The Independent Theatre Inc.
- (1924) Stage Play: Catskill Dutch. Drama. Written by Roscoe Brink. Belmont Theatre: 6 May 1924- May 1924 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Ada Barbour (as "Mait Meyers"), Frederic Burt (as "Brammy Wolleben"), Evelyn Carrington (as "Viney Fronce"), Ann Davis (as "Neelia-Anne"), Minnie Dupree (as "Sait Wolleben"), William Hasson (as "Deacon Mauny Tenneych"), David Landau (as "Elder Shauny Fronce"), Willard Mac Hargue (as "Jacob Onderdonk"), Kenneth MacKenna (as "Peetcha"), Frank McGlynn (as "Case Steenkoop"), William R. Randall (as "Deacon Ikey Meyers"), Helen Reimer (as "Irey's-Anne"), Dorothy Sands (as "Nautcha Tenneych"), Adele Schuyler (as "Charity Logendyke"), Helen Tower (as "Naomi Van Kill"), Louis Wolheim (as "Cobby"). Produced by Richard Herndon.
- (1925) Stage Play: Big Boy. Musical comedy. Music by James F. Hanley and Joseph Meyer. Book by Harold Atteridge. Lyrics by Buddy G. DeSylva. Mr. Jolson's Orchestrations by Alfred Goodman. Music orchestrated by Emil Gerstenberger. Dances and Ensembles Arranged by Seymour Felix and Larry Ceballos. Directed by J.C. Huffman. Dialogue Directed by Alexander Leftwich. Winter Garden Theatre: 7 Jan 1925- 14 Mar 1925 (56 performances). Cast: Al Jolson (as "Gus"), George Andre (as "Dancer"), Marion Andre (as "Show Girls"), Wyn Ayres (as "Show Girls"), Edythe Baker (as "Phyllis Carter"), Hugh Banks (as "Joe Warren"), Franklyn Batie (as "Jim Redding/Tucker"), Frank Beaston (as "Jack Bedford"), Adolphe Beck (as "Men"), Peggy Bernier (as "Dancer"), May Birt (as "Show Girls"), Freddie Bond (as "Show Girls"), William Bonelli (as "Legrande"), Bobbie Brandeis (as "Men"), Colin Campbell (as "Steve Leslie"), Elsie Carroll (as "Dancer") [Broadway debut], Nancy Carroll (as "Show Girls"), Terry Carroll (as "Show Girls") [Broadway debut], Irving Carter (as "Danny/Men"), Al Clair (as "Men"), Lee Cutler (as "Dancer"), Jewel Dalores (as "Dancer"), Clifford Daly (as "Men"), Leo Donnelly (as "Doc Wilbur"), Helen Doyle (as "Dancer"), Minnie Dupree (as "Dancer"), William C. Elkins (as "Jubilee Singer"), Flo Evers (as "Show Girls"), Albert Ford (as "Men"), Ethel Fuller (as "Dancer"), Rose Gallagher (as "Show Girls"), George Gilday (as "Judkins"), Peggy Gillespie (as "Dancer"), Janice Glenn (as "Dancer"), Maude Turner Gordon (as "Mrs. Bedford"), Walter A. Gray (as "Jubilee Singer"), Mabel Grete (as "Dancer"), Patti Harrold (as "Annabelle Bedford"), Louise Hersey (as "Show Girls"), Alma Hookey (as "Dancer"), Wilbert B. Howard (as "Jubilee Singer"), George E. Jackson (as "Jubilee Singer"), Frankie James (as "Dolly Graham"), Naoe Kondo (as "Dancer"), Harry Lake (as "Men"), Lewis Laub (as "Men"), Flo Lewis (as "Tessie Forbes"), Madge Lorraine (as "Show Girls"), Walter Lowery (as "Men"), Dotty Mae (as "Dancer"), Charles Moran (as "Mr. Gray/Tout"), Dinky Ozmont (as "Dancer"), Arthur H. Payne (as "Jubilee Singer"), Mary Phillips (as "Show Girls"), Jack Ray (as "Men"), Ralph Reader (as "Men"), Thelma Robinson (as "Dancer"), Mose R. Ross (as "Jubilee Singer"), Dorothy Rudac (as "Dancer"), Ruth Savoy (as "Dancer"), Edith Scott (as "Caroline Purdy"), Arthur S. Shaw (as "Jubilee Singer"), L.C. Sherman (as "Manager"), Madeline Smith (as "Show Girls"), George Spelvin [actor who wished to remain anonymous] (as "Silent Ransom"), Rose Stone (as "Dancer"), Esther Tanney (as "Dancer"), Kelly Thompson (as "Jubilee Singer"), William L. Thorne (as "Bully John Bagby/Wainwright"), Helen Wallace (as "Dancer"), Walter Wandell (as "Men"), Dorothy Wegman (as "Show Girls"), Carl D. White (as "Jubilee Singer"), Minnie White (as "Dancer"), Ralph Whitehead (as "Coley Reid"), Casco Williams (as "Jubilee Singer"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert. Note: Filmed as Big Boy (1930).
- (1925) Stage Play: His Queen. Written by John Hastings Turner. Directed by Oliver Morosco. Hudson Theatre: 11 May 1925- May 1925 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: Charles Brown (as "James Gaut"), Minnie Dupree (as "Jane Roper"), Edward Emery (as "Adeimon"), Lumsden Hare (as "Athrike Takarpoulos"), Frank Hubert (as "Rev. Walter Prendergast"), Francine Larrimore (as "Maria Avilon"), Margot Lester (as "Stockie"), Francis X. Malloy (as "A Young Man"), Betty Nye (as "Teenie Clawson"), Marion Vantine (as "Countess Phryne Eumaros"), Robert Warwick (as "Thales"), Harold West (as "Dick Coleby"). Produced by Oliver Morosco.
- (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 (as "Topas"), Ann Harding (as "Anna Schweiger"), Philip Leigh (as "Dr. Ottokar Grund"), Herbert Ransom (as "Father Rotter"), Samuel Rosen (as "Selcher"), Georgina Tilden (as "Linelle"), Edward Van Sloan (as "Dr. Burghardt Von Viereck"). Produced by The Fifth Avenue Playhouse.
- (1926) Stage Play: Kept. Comedy. Written by Pierre Gendron. Directed by Ira Hards. Comedy Theatre: 17 Sep 1926- Sep 1926 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: Jack Bennett, Marie Curtis, Minnie Dupree (as "Netty Estel"), Edmund Elton, Dorothy Estabrook, Philip Heege, Edgar Henning, Lenita Lane, Zolya Talma, Valerie Valaire, Robert Williams, Emma Wise.
- (1927) Stage Play: Paradise. Written by William J. Hurlbut. Directed by Robert Milton. 48th Street Theatre: 26 Dec 1927- Jan 1928 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Arling Alcine, Tom Brown, Minnie Dupree (as "Cassie Thesinger"), Helen Flint, Lillian Foster, Elizabeth Patterson, Edward Poland, Edward H. Robins, Selena Royle, Eloise Stream, Warren William. Produced by Robert Milton.
- (1928) Stage Play: The Clutching Claw. Written by Ralph Thomas Kettering. Directed by Rollo Lloyd. Forrest Theatre: 14 Feb 1928- Mar 1928 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: Dulcie Cooper (as "Agnes Hayden"), Minnie Dupree (as "Mrs. Midgely"), Georgia Lee Hall (as "Patricia Thornton"), Percy Hilton, Bruce Leon, Alex McLeod, Robert Middlemass (as "Captain Connelly"), Ralph Morgan (as "Gordon"), Duncan Penwarden (as "Johannis Berlau"), Charles Slattery. Produced by Barbour and Bryant.
- (1933) Stage Play: Uncle Tom's Cabin. Melodrama. Written by G. L. Aiken. Musical program directed by Harry Gilbert. Revised by A.E. Thomas. Based on the novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe. Musical program prepared by Edward T. Emery. Directed by Earle Boothe. Alvin Theatre: 29 May 1933- Jun 1933 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Fay Bainter (as "Topsy"), Thomas Chalmers (as "Simon Legree"), Lyster Chambers (as "Haley"), Joseph Cummings Chase, George Christie (as "Mr. Wilson"), Russel Crouse (as "Ensemble"), Owen Culbertson, Francis H. Day, Pedro de Cordoba (as "George Harris"), Elizabeth Dewing, Malcolm Duncan, Mrs. Edward D. Dunn, Edward Delaney Dunn, Minnie Dupree (as "Aunt Ophelia"), Edwin T. Emery (as "Second Bidder"), Essie Emery, Sylvia Field (as "Marie"), William Fisher, Harry Gilbert, Ernest Glendinning (as "St. Clare"), Eleanor Goodrich, Harold W. Gould (as "Skeggs, the Auctioneer"), Harry Gresham (as "Quimbo"), Amy Groesbeck, Burford Hampden, Oswald Hering, Richard Hoffmann, Frederick Jagel, John C. King, John Knight, John Kramer, Wright Kramer, Ben Lackland (as "Sambo"), Roy Le May, Nancy Levering, Gene Lockhart (as "Gumption Cute"), Kathleen Lockhart (as "Ensemble"), Cecilia Loftus (as "Aunt Chloe"), Alice MacKenzie, Edward McNamara (as "Phineas Fletcher"), Oswald Marshall, Kate Mayhew (as "Aunt Hagar"), Harold McGee, Samuel Merwin, Earl Mitchell, T.H. Montgomery, John Daly Murphy (as "Marks"), Patricia O'Connell, Janice O'Connell, Patricia O'Connell, Paul Parks, George Riddell, Elisabeth Risdon (as "Eliza"), Lois Shore, Florence Short, Otis Skinner (as "Uncle Tom"), James Stanley, Harold Staton, W.B. Taylor, Raymond Thayer, Grenville Vernon, John Barnes Wells, Frank Wilcox (as "George Fisk"). Produced by The Players Club.
- (1933) Stage Play: The Sellout. Comedy. Written by Albert G. Miller. Directed by Ashley Miller. Cort Theatre: 6 Sep 1933- Sep 1933 (closing date unknown/5 performances). Cast: Harry Bellaver (as "Abe Frogface Matz"), Robert Conness, Frank Dae (as "Charles Maguire"), Herbert Dobbins, Minnie Dupree (as "Mrs. Wilfred Robbins"), Robert H. Gordon, John Grattan, A.M. Griffith, Charles Harrison, Warren Parker, Jack Rigo, Jane Seymour, Ruth Thomas, George Weston. Produced by Drama Craftsmen.
- (1935) Stage Play: The Eldest. Written by Eugenie Courtright. Directed by Anthony Brown. Ritz Theatre: 11 Feb 1935- Mar 1935 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Helen Claire, Paul Clair, Minnie Dupree (as (as "Mrs. Trent"), Lillian Foster, Joseph Greenwald, Richard Jack, Suzanne Jackson, Charles Lawrence, Damian O'Flynn, William Post, Nancy Sheridan, James Spottswood. Produced by Sam H. Grisman.
- (1941) Stage Play: Arsenic and Old Lace. Comedy. Written by Joseph Kesselring. Directed by Bretaigne Windust. Fulton Theatre (moved to the Hudson Theatre on 25 Sep 1943- close): 10 Jan 1941- 17 Jun 1944 (1444 performances). Cast included: Jean Adair, Minnie Dupree (as "Martha Brewster") [replacement actress for Ms. Adair], Josephine Hull, Allyn Joslyn [as "Mortimer Brewster"], Boris Karloff [as "Jonathan Brewster"]. Produced by Howard Lindsey and Russel Crouse.
- (1942) Stage Play: Lily of the Valley. Written by Ben Hecht. Directed by Ben Hecht. Windsor Theatre: 26 Jan 1942- 31 Jan 1942 (8 performances). Cast: Katharine Bard (as "Frances"), Clay Clement (as "Lieutenant Balboa"), Edmund Dorsey (as "Smaley"), Minnie Dupree (as "Emma Jolonick"), David Hoffman (as "Willie"), Eugene Keith (as "Mr. Whittleson"), David Kerman (as "Butch"), Will Lee (as "Joe"), Paul R. Lipson (as "Man"), Myron McCormick, Charles Mendick (as "Beitler"), Grania O'Malley (as "Annie"), Joseph Pevney, John Philliber (as "Bum"), Sig Ruman, John Shellie (as "Mike"), Alison Skipworth (as "Mag") [final Broadway role], Richard Taber (as "Blakie Gagin"). Produced by Gilbert Miller.
- (1943) Stage Play: Dark Eyes. Written by Elena Miramova in collaboration with Eugenie Leontovich. Directed. Belasco Theatre: 14 Jan 1943- 31 Jul 1943 (230 performances). As "Grandmother Field." Cast included: Jane Burr, Carl Gose, Eugenie Leontovich, Elena Miramova, Oscar Polk. Produced by Jed Harris.
- (1944) Stage Play: Last Stop. Written by Irving Kaye Davis. Directed by Irwin Piscator. Ethel Barrymore Theatre: 5 Sep 1944- 23 Sep 1944 (23 performances). Cast: Effie Afton, Seth Arnold, Raymond Bailey, Daisy Belmore, Alan Brock, Catherine Doucet, Minnie Dupree, Mavis Freeman, Augusta French, Mary Gildea, Frederica Going, Nell Harrison, Eda Heinemann, William Hughes, Enid Markey, Laurie McVicker, Mary Perry, Clark Poth, Gregory Robins, Robert Stewart, Grace Valentine. Produced by Victor Hugo-Vidal.
- (1946) Stage Play: Land's End. Drama. Written by Thomas Job. Directed by Robert Lewis. Playhouse Theatre: 11 Dec 1946- 14 Dec 1946 (5 performances). Cast: Mabel Acker, Frieda Altman, Xenia Bank, Jay Barney, Shirley Booth, Sydney Booth, Clement Brace, Ross Chetwynd, Horace Cooper, Walter Coy, Helen Craig, Diane De Brett, Minnie Dupree (as "Mrs. Tregonny"), Michael Feigay, Joseph Foley, Merle Maddern, Theodore Newton, Amelia Romano, Fred Stewart. Produced by Michael Feigay.
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