- (1899 - 1928) Active on Broadway [sometimes credited as Robert Peyton Gibbs or Paton Gibbs] in the following productions:
- (1899) Stage Play: The Ghetto. Drama. Written by C.B. Fernald, from the Dutch by Herman Heijermans [credited as Hermann Heijermans]. Revised for America by Eugene Wiley Presbrey. Directed by Eugene W. Presbrey. Broadway Theatre: 15 Sep 1899- Oct 1899 (closing date unknown/43 performances). Cast: Richard Buhler, Henry Burton, Emmett Corrigan, Samuel Edwards, Bijou Fernandez, Grace Filkins, Robert Paton Gibbs, Joseph Haworth, George Heath, Sidney Herbert, Harry Holliday, William H. Pascoe, Mrs. McKee Rankin. Produced by Jacob Litt.
- (1900) Stage Play: Monte Cristo (Revival). Adapted from the story by Alexandre Dumas. Academy of Music: 23 Oct 1900- Jan 1901 (closing date unknown/80 performances). Cast: Thurlow Bergen (as "Albert de Morcerf"), Benjamin Bradbury, Edmund Breese (as "Danglars") [Broadway debut], Warren Conlan, Augustus Cook, Frederic De Belleville, W.J. Dixon, Mark Ellsworth, Robert Paton Gibbs (as "Fernande"), Claude Gilbert, John Green, James Hall, Selene Johnson, Edward Lally, Robert Lauer, Alfred Long, Frank Luce, Vicencia Martinez, Edith Miller, James O'Neill (as "Edmond Dantes, Comte de Monte Cristo"), John Parks, Edward Short, Edward Smith, Frank Strong, Edward Thomas, Annie Ward Tiffany.
- (1903) Stage Play: The Bold Sojer Boy. Comedy/drama. Written by Theodore Burt Sayre. Directed by Edward E. Rose. Haverly's 14th Street Theatre: 9 Feb 1903- Feb 1903 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Edward Aiken, Mildred Beverly, Hugh Cameron [Broadway debut], Master Frankie Cooke, Master John Cooke, Richard J. Dillon, Maggie Fielding, Robert Paton Gibbs, Eddie Heron, Thomas E. Jackson, Andrew Mack, Vivian Martin, Frances Ring, Giles Shine, Harry P. Stone, Master Gus Wilkes. Produced by Rich & Harris.
- (1904) Stage Play: The Pit. Drama. Written by Channing Pollock [earliest Broadway credit]. From the novel by Frank Norris. Lyric Theatre: 10 Feb 1904- Apr 1904 (closing date unknown/77 performances). Cast: Howard Boulden, Edgar Bowman, Clay Boyd, Wilson Burke, Bert Burrell, Harold Byrne, Marian A. Chapman, Harry Converse, Kenneth Davenport, Adeline Dunlap, James Emerson, Agnes Evans, Edmund Evans, Douglas Fairbanks, Agnes Findlay, Mabel Findlay, John J. Fogarty, Robert Paton Gibbs [credited as Robert Peyton Gibbs], Doris Goodwin, Mrs. Powhattan Gordon, George Grey, Henry Gunson, Hale Hamilton, Margaret Kenmare, Charles Kenyon [Broadway debut], Wilton Lackaye (as "Curtis Jadwin"), Amber Lawlord, Richard Manuel, J. Cleneay Mathews, Thomas McCabe, Tilden Mercer, Charles Merritt, Walter Moran, Owen Murphey, Jane Oaker, Bowman Ralston, Ed Ralston, Franklyn Roberts, Rudy Saxe, Willard Saxon, Avon Stern, William Stern, A.H. Stuart, Eddie Stuart, Frank Tillman, William Titus, Richard Webster, White Whittlesey, Joseph A. Wilkes, Maude Wilson, Cecil Worth, Robert Wright, Vera Zalene. Produced by William A. Brady.
- (1904) Stage Play: Business Is Business. Comedy/drama. Written by Octave Mirbeau. Translation by Robert Hichens. Criterion Theatre: 19 Sep 1904- Nov 1904 (closing date unknown/57 performances). Cast: George Backus, Sheridan Block, William H. Crane, George F. De Vere, Harriet Otis Dellenbaugh, W.H. Dupont, Emma Field, R.S. Fife, Isabel Garrison, Robert Paton Gibbs, Katherine Grey, Harry Gwynette, Walter Hale, Josephine Mack, Harry Saint Maur, Frederick Maynard, Guy Nichols, Gabriel Ravenelle, Madeline Rives, Joseph Wheelock Jr. Produced by Charles Frohman.
- (1905) Stage Play: The Duke of Duluth. Musical/farce/opera. Music by Max S. Witte. Book by George Broadhurst [credited as George H. Broadhurst]. Lyrics by George H. Broadhurst. Musical Director: Max S. Witte. Featuring songs by Gertrude Hoffman. Featuring songs with lyrics by Vincent Bryan. Choreographed by Sam Marion and Jack Mason. Directed by George H. Broadhurst. Majestic Theatre (moved to Haverly's 14th Street Theatre from 9 Oct 1905- 14 Oct 1905, then moved to The American Theatre from 4 Dec 1905- circa Dec 1905, then moved to The West End Theatre from 1 Jan 1906- close): 11 Sep 1905- 8 Jan 1906 (48 performances). Cast: Jeannette Allen (as "Chorus"), Josephine Arden (as "Chorus"), Hattie Arnold (as "Princess Flirtino"), Florence Bain (as "Chorus"), Carrie Baird (as "Chorus"), Edward Beck (as "Chorus"), May Blake (as "Chorus"), Eleanor Brooks (as "Terpsio/Chorus"), Georgia Brooks (as "Ballera/Chorus"), Catherine Call (as "Jhansi"), J.E. Campbell (as "Chorus"), Etta Carlton (as "Chorus"), Grace Cooke (as "Chorus"), Violet Curtis (as "Chorus"), Verna Dalton (as "Chorus"), C. Danielson (as "Chorus"), Edmond Danton (as "Chorus"), Vinnie Danvers (as "Chorus"), Danill Day (as "Chorus"), Goldie Daymon (as "Chorus"), Frank Dearduff (as "The High Priest"), Edith Decker (as "Ameera"), Edith Duryea (as "Chorus"), Elizabeth Elliott (as "Chorus"), Maude Elliott (as "Chorus"), Adolph Ethel (as "Chorus"), Margaret Fealy (as "Chorus"), A.G. Franklin (as "Messenger"), Robert Paton Gibbs [credited as Robert Peyton Gibbs] (as "Guiseppi Barratta"), Carolyn Green (as "Chorus"), Nick Grist (as "Chorus"), Blanche Grosjean (as "Chorus"), May Harrison (as "Assistant to the High Priest"), Stanley Hawkins (as "Dennis O'Hara"), Edgar F. Hill (as "Chorus"), W.S. Horton (as "Chorus"), Georgie Irving (as "Chorus"), Inez Jones (as "Chorus"), Edward Lawrence (as "Chorus"), Beatrice Lindsey (as "Chorus"), Margaret Love (as "Chorus"), Ada Mack (as "Chorus"), Ida Manierre (as "Chorus"), Diva Marolda (as "Bianca"), Glora Mason (as "Chorus"), George McIntosh (as "Chorus"), Madge Melbourne (as "Chorus"), Gertrude Merrill (as "Lieutenant/Chorus"), M.M. Moore (as "Chorus"), Blanche Morrell (as "Chorus"), Marjorie Nevin (as "Chorus"), Lillian Nicholson (as "Chorus"), Annabel Nivens (as "Chorus"), Henry Norman (as "Kiakka IV"), John O'Donnell (as "Chorus"), Elphie Phillips (as "Chorus"), Anne Raymond (as "Chorus"), J. Richard (as "Chorus"), Carl Schell (as "Chorus"), Lillian Singleton (as "Chorus"), Bessie Stillman (as "Chorus"), Carl Taxwood (as "Chorus"), Charlotte Tillman (as "Chorus"), Lottie Wesner (as "Chorus"), Frank White Jasper (as "Washtington Green"), Muriel Wilbur (as "Chorus"), Nat M. Wills (as "Darling Doolittle"), Sadie Wyman (as "Chorus"). Produced by Broadhurst & Currie.
- (1906) Stage Play: The Genius. Comedy/Farce [played in repertory with When We Were Twenty-one]. Written by 'William C. De Mille' and Cecil B. DeMille. Bijou Theatre: 3 Oct 1906- Nov 1906 (closing date unknown/35 performances). Cast: John Ahlburg, Edith Berwyn, Leslie Bingham, Minon Chester, Eleanor Elkins, Robert Paton Gibbs, Edna Goodrich, Nat C. Goodwin (as "Jack Spencer"), Fanny Hickey, Gordon Johnston, Laurence C. Knapp, Carey Livingston, H.G. Lonsdale, Martha Norton, Neil O'Brien, Louise Randolph (as "Josephine Van Dusen"), Mabel Reed, M.B. Snyder, Whitlock Tucker, Edith Varney, Evelyn Walls. Produced by Nat C. Goodwin.
- (1908) Stage Play: Nearly a Hero. Musical/farce. Book by Harry B. Smith. Lyrics by Edward B. Claypoole and Will Heelan. Music by Seymour Furth. Orchestra under the direction of Oscar Radin. Featuring "I Don't Want to Marry You" and "My Sahara Girl" by Edward B. Claypoole. Lyrics for "My Sahara Girl" by Harry B. Smith. Featuring "I'm So Particular" by Matt Woodward and Louis A. Hirsch. Featuring "I Was a Hero (Too)" by Egbert Van Alstyne and Harry Williams. Featuring "Mary! My Heather Belle" by John B. Lowitz. Featuring songs by Herman Avery Wade. Scenic Design by Arthur Voegtlin and Edward G. Unitt. Costume Design by Castel-Bert and Miss Finch. Men's costumes by Ritchie Harnden and Charles Swarns. Dances arranged by William Rock. Directed by George F. Marion and James C. Huffman. Casino Theatre: 24 Feb 1908- 6 Jun 1908 (116 performances). Cast: Neva Aymar, Burrell Barbaretto, Sam Bernard, Elizabeth Brice, Sam Edwards, Ethel Levey, Edgar Norton (as "Harold Percy Montague"), Zelda Sears (as "Mrs. Doolittle"), Marian Alexander, Louis Austin, Jane Brown, Doris Cameron, Miss Carr, Cyril Chadwick (as "Singer/dancer"), William Davis, Alice Eis, W.F. Fair, R. Franklyn, Edith Gervan, Robert Paton Gibbs, Fred Gray, Daisy Greene, Lillian Harris, Louis Helie, W.A. Hungerford, Josephine Kernell, Richard J. Kirkwood, Alice Knowlton, Dorothy Lancaster, Rita Lancaster, Ethel Lawrence, Victor Le Roy (as "Singer/dancer"), Adelaide Lehr, Adah Baker Lewis (as "Gwendolyn Doolittle, a matinée girl of romantic dispositions"), Samuel Lindsay, Virginia Marshall, Violet Moore, Susan Pitt, Nancy Poole, Maxine Revillion, Franklyn Roberts, Katherine Robertson, Albertine Sargent, Vaughn Sargent, W. Slick, Edith Warner, Dorothy Watson, Ethel Wheeler. Produced by Sam S. and Lee Shubert Inc.
- (1908) Stage Play: Miss Innocence. Musical extravaganza. Music by Ludwig Englander. Book by Harry B. Smith. Lyrics by Harry B. Smith. Featuring songs by Egbert Van Alstyne. Featuring songs with lyrics by Harry Williams. Featuring "My Post Card Girl" by Louis A. Hirsch and Addison Burkhard. Featuring "I'm Learning Something Every Day" by Nora Bayes and Jack Norworth. Featuring "I Have Lost My Little Brown Bear" by J. Rosamond Johnson and Bob Cole. Featuring "I'm Crazy When the Band Begins to Play" by Jean Schwartz and William Jerome. Featuring "What Kind of a Wife to Choose" by Gus Edwards. Musical Director: Frank Darling. Produced under the direction of Julian Mitchell. Note: Production revived at The New York Theatre: 30 Nov 1908- 1 May 1909 (176 performances). Cast: Charles A. Bigelow, Edith Decker, Lawrence D'Orsay (as "Captain, The Hon. Roland Fitzmaurice Montjoy of the First Life Guards"), Eva Francis, Anna Held (as "Anna/Miss Innocence"), Emma Janvier, Shirley Kellogg, Lillian Lorraine, Edith St. Clair, Florence Walton, Gladys Zell, Charles Barry, James Barry, Edna Birch, Bertha Blake, Martha Bright, John S. Brush, Miss Burns, Daisy Carson, Edna Chase, Daisy Clark, James Clyde, Miss Davies, Edna Dodsworth, Ethel Donaldson, Faico, Alfred Fairbrother, Miss Fennell, Dorothy Follies, William Gammage, Robert Paton Gibbs (as "The Duke of Pomerania"), Mayble Gilmore, Elise Hamilton, Josephine Harriman, F. Stanton Heck, Maurice Hegeman, May Hopkins, Vonnie Hoyt, Violet Jewell, La Flamencia, Beatrice Learwood, Ruby Lewis, Lionel Lozier, Miss MacDonald, Selma Mantell, Leo Mars, Virginia Marshall, Dudley Oatman, Mae Paul, Grace Rankin, Alfred Rinehart, Pierre Roudil, Daisy Rudd, Mabel Snyder, Madlyn Summers, Peter Swift, Reina Swift, Lottie Vernon, Grace Washburn, John Wentzel, Blanche West, Vida Whitmore, Marion Whitney, Lillian Wiggins, May Willard, Anna C. Wilson, Ernest Wood, John A. Young. Replacement actors during run: Millie Baker (as "Ella Lee"), Lillian Devere (as "Carita"), Beatrice Gladstone (as "Zolo"), Camille Langhorne (as "Zarza"), Eunice Mackey (as "Marie"), Myrtle Marsh (as "Gabrielle"), Marie Merwin (as "Eugenie"), Max Scheck (as "An American"). Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1910) Stage Play: Madame X. Melodrama. Written by Alexandre Bisson. Book adapted by John Raphael, from "Americanized" by William Henry Wright. New Amsterdam Theatre: 2 Jan 1910- Apr 1910 (closing date unknown/125 performances). Cast: Christine Blessing (as "Rose"), Harry C. Bradley (as "Victor"), Charles Brandt (as "President of the Court"), Floyd K. Brown (as "Foreman of the Jury"), W.H. Denny (as "Parissard"), Dorothy Donnelly (as "Jacqueline"), Deirdre Doyle (as "Marie"), Robert Drouet (as "Louis Floriot"), William Elliott (as "Raymond Floriot"), Robert Paton Gibbs [credited as Robert Peyton Gibbs] (as "Noel"), B.S. Higgins (as "Fontaine"), Cecil Kern (as "Helene") [Broadway debut], L. Rogers Lytton (as "Dr. Chesnel"), Walter F. Tuley (as "Usher of the Court"), Charles E. Verner (as "Merivel"), Malcolm Williams (as "Laroque"). Produced by Henry W. Savage. Note: Filmed by MGM as Madame X (1929), by MGM as Madame X (1937), and by Universal Pictures/Ross Hunter Productions as Madame X (1966).
- (1913) Stage Play: The Gentleman from Number 19. Written by Mark Swan, from the French of Henri Keroul and 'Albert Barre'. Directed by Maurice Elvey. Comedy Theatre: 1 May 1913- May 1913 (closing date unknown/4 performances). Cast: Florine Arnold, Henry Bergman, Charles Brown, E.D. Coe, Nannette Comstock, Millicent Evans, Robert Paton Gibbs, Stephen Gillis, Tom Graves, Walter Jones, Richie Ling, Kevitt Manton, Dorothea Sadlier, Raymond Smith, Jay Wilson. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1913) Stage Play: We Are Seven. Written by Eleanor Gates. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 24 Dec 1913- Jan 1914 (closing date unknown/21 performances). Cast: Richard Barbee [Broadway debut], Bessie Barriscale (as "Diantha Kerr"), Emmet Bradley, William W. Crimans, Effie Ellsler, Harrison Fowler, Florence Gerald, Robert Paton Gibbs, W.H. Gilmore, Joseph Henley, William Morran, Jane Peyton, Fred Powers, William Raymond, Norman Roberts, Russ Whytal. Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1914) Stage Play: The Dragon's Claw. Written by Austin Strong. New Amsterdam Theatre: 14 Sep 1914- Sep 1914 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Frank Andrews, Marshall Birmingham, Lilian Bond, Robert Conville, Paul Everton, Robert Paton Gibbs, Suzanne Halpren, Gladys Hanson, Frank Herbert, Robert Hudson, Charles T. Lewis, T.H. McNally, Harry Power, Lowell Sherman, Charles Waldron, Ida Waterman. Produced by Klaw & Erlanger.
- (1916) Stage Play: The Flame. Written by Richard Walton Tully. Lyric Theatre (moved to The 44th Street Theatre 9 Oct 1916- close): 4 Sep 1916- Nov 1916 (closing date unknown/96 performances). Cast: Sibylla Banhan, Leonore Carel, Clavelito, William Courtleigh, Marie Culver, Helena Garden, Robert Paton Gibbs [credited as Robert Peyton Gibbs], Peggy O'Neil, Fred Pena, Leah Rachel, June Ramsey, Gustav Rudger, Harriet Sterling, Albert Tavernier, Van Renseler Townsend [credited as Van Rensselaer Townsend], Carlos Villa. Produced by Richard Walton Tully.
- (1920) Stage Play: The Bonehead. Comedy/satire. Written by Frederic Arnold Kummer. Directed by Frank McCormack. Fulton Theatre: 12 Apr 1920- May 1920 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Claude Beerbohm, David M. Callis, Leonard Doyle, Robert Paton Gibbs [credited as Paton Gibbs], Beatrice Moreland, John Daly Murphy, Nita Naldi (as "Mrs. Violet Bacon-Boyle"), Edwin Nicander, Vivienne Osborne (as "Jean Brent"), William St. James, Myrtle Tannehill. Produced by Claude Beerbohm.
- (1921) Stage Play: Blossom Time. Musical comedy/operetta. Book by Dorothy Donnelly. Music by Franz Schubert and Sigmund Romberg. Lyrics by Dorothy Donnelly. Based on the Viennese original by Dr. A.M. Willner and Heinz Reichert. Based on the novel by Rudolf H. Bartsch. Music arranged by Heinrich Berte. Musical Director: Oscar Radin. Choreographed by Frank M. Gillespie. Production Supervised by J.J. Shubert. Scenic Design by Watson Barratt. Costume Design by Mode Costume Company. Directed by J.C. Huffman. Ambassador Theatre (29 Sep 1921- Oct 1922 [on hiatus from 2 July 1922- 6 Aug 1922], then moved to Jolson's 59th Street Theatre from 2 Oct 1922- circa mid-Oct 1922, then moved to The Century Theatre from 23 Oct 1922- close): 29 Sep 1921- 27 Jan 1923 (516 performances). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1926) Stage Play: Ashes of Love. Written by The Countess of Cathcart. National Theatre: 22 Mar 1926- Mar 1926 (closing date unknown/8 performances). Cast: Barbara Allen, The Countess of Cathcart (as "Estelle"), Austin Fairman (as "Lord Victor Anton"), Robert Paton Gibbs, Ruby Gordon, Lumsden Hare (as "Lord Douglas Rayhaven"), Wilfred Jessop, Harry Joyner, Margot Lester, Iseth Gordon Munro, Alison Skipworth (as "Mrs. Headfort Blythe"), George Thorpe. Produced by The Countess of Cathcart and Earl Carroll.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Immortal Thief. Drama. Written by 'Tom Barry (I). Hampden's Theatre: 2 Oct 1926- Oct 1926 (closing date unknown/25 performances). Cast: Marie Adels (as "Naomi"), Dallas Anderson (as "Ben Sarken"), Anthony Andre (as "An Old Boatman"), Edith Barrett (as "Merzah's Daughter"), Hope Cary (as "Greek Maiden"), Howard Claney (as "A Young Official"), F.R. Colton (as "An Ethiopian Prince"), Marcel Dill (as "One of the Three Thieves/A Camel Driver"), Adelaide Fitz-Allen (as "Marius' Old Nurse"), Howard Galt (as "An Egyptian King"), Robert Paton Gibbs (as "Keeper of the Bordello"), Thomas Gomez (as "One of the Three Thieves/A Beggar"), Basil Grant (as "A Peddler Spy"), C. Norman Hammond (as "Septimus Celsus"), Walter Hampden (as "Marius Rufinus"), Gordon Hart (as "A Phoenician/Son of a Widow"), Stanley Howlett (as "James the Less"), Eudora Hunner (as "Bordello Girl"), Suzanne Jackson (as "Merzah"), Hart Jenks (as "Asper"), P.J. Kelly (as "Old Thief of Bagdad/A Hasheesh Eater"), Caroline Meade (as "Bordello Girl"), Stuart Miller (as "A Syrian"), Mabel Moore (as "Marius' Mother"), Grace Morton (as "Bordello Girl"), Grania O'Malley (as "Pharaoh's Daughter"), Louis Polan (as "A Sailor Spy"), Ernest Rowan (as "Silenus Geta"), William H. Sams (as "An Old Official of the Law"), Dorothy Scott (as "A Wine Girl"), Ruth Seward (as "Greek Maiden"), J.P. Wilson (as "One of the Three Thieves/A False Prophet"), Cecil Yapp (as "Poetar"). Produced by Walter Hampden.
- (1926) Stage Play: Caponsacchi. Drama. Written by Arthur Goodrich and Rose A. Palmer. Based on the poem "The Ring and the Book" by Robert Browning. Hampden's Theatre: 26 Oct 1926- Jun 1927 (closing date unknown/269 performances). Cast: Marie Adels, Dallas Anderson (as "Gherardi"), Anthony Andre, Edith Barrett (as "Pompilia"), Howard Claney, Edwin Cushman, Marcel Dill, Robert Paton Gibbs (as "Scalchi"), Tom Gomez, C. Norman Hammond (as "Governor of Arezzo"), Walter Hampden (as "Caponsacchi"), Gordon Hart, Stanley Howlett (as "Pope Innocent XII"), Eudora Hunner, Suzanne Jackson, Hart Jenks, P.J. Kelly, Grania O'Malley, Lou Polan (as "Montini"), Ernest Rowan, William H. Sams, Albert West, J.P. Wilson, Cecil Yapp (as "Canon Conti"). Produced by Walter Hampden.
- (1927) Stage Play: Golden Dawn. Musical/drama. Music by 'Emmerich Kalman' and Herbert P. Stothart. Book by Otto A. Harbach and Oscar Hammerstein II. Lyrics by Otto A. Harbach and Oscar Hammerstein II. Musical Director: Herbert Stothart. Associate Musical Director: Mario Agnolucci. Choreographed by Dave Bennett. Scenic Design by Joseph Urban. Directed by Reginald Hammerstein. Hammerstein's Theatre: 30 Nov 1927- 5 May 1928 (184 performances). Cast: F.J. Accoll, Alexander U. Fine's Russian Art Choir, Ann Anderson, Vsevolad Andrenoff, Emilia Andrievska, Irving Andrievsky, Paula Ayers, Louise Baer, Saloma Bartolm, Arnold Basil, Service Bell, W. Messenger Bellis, Carlo Benetti, Norine Bogen, George Brant, Henry Brown, Leola Buelow, Alice Bussee, Maude Carleton, Barbara Carrington, Jacques Cartier, Tom Chadwick, Helene Chaudaroff, Vladimir Chavdaroff, Robert Chisholm, Inez Clough, Helene Cunihan, Michael Dalsky, Xenia Dalsky, Vladimir Danieloff, Nydia D'Arnell, Christine David, Joseph Davidenko, Frances Denny, Harold Des Verney, Frank Dobert, Hazel Drury, Frances Dumas, James Earl, H. Webster Elkins, La Vergne Evans, Marie Foster, Norma France, Robert Paton Gibbs (as "An Old Man of Africa"), Geraldine Gooding, Leonard Gorlenko, Kumar Goshal, Geneva Grant, Dora Grebenetsky, Paul Gregory, James Grey, Klara Grosheva, Maria Grushko, Amos Guerrant, Janet Hale, Adolph Henderson, Jean Hitch, Elizabeth Holloway, Olin Howland, Louise Hunter, Zina Ivanova, Robert Jackson, Mimi Jordan, Karol Kayne, All Kisselava, Toni Klimovitch, Kohana, Peter Kosloff, Grace La Rue, Lucy Lawlor, Cary Grant (as "Anzac") [credited as Archie Leach], Mary Mason, Ruthena Matson, William McFarland, Alva McGill, Len Mence, Peggy Messinger, Julia F. Mitchell, Sorena Mumma, Barbara Newberry, Mabel Olsen, Lidia Ordinsky, Peter Ordunsky, Raymond Otto, Alexander Ouzoroff, Anna Ouzoroff, Reginald Pasch, Henry Pemberton, Milton Rae, McKinley Reeves, Alma Reynolds, Tom Rider, Leona Riggs, Wilma Roeloff, Viviene Russell, Bunny Schum, Konstantine Smith, Gil Squires, Marguerita Sylva, Magda Trauber, Louise Turner, Valla Valentinova, Joseph Vitale [Broadway debut], William Walker, Benveneta Washington, Edward Watkins, Rosena Weston, Maud White, Earl Wilson. Produced by Arthur Hammerstein.
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