- (1922 - 1947) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1922) Stage Play: Rose Briar. Comedy. Written by Booth Tarkington. Empire Theatre: 25 Dec 1922- Mar 1923 (closing date unknown/88 performances). Cast: Billie Burke (as "Rose Briar"), Frank Conroy, Louis Darclee, Alan Dinehart (as "Paradee"), Paul Doucet, Mark Haight, Julia Hoyt, Richie Ling (as "Little"), Frank McCoy, Florence O'Denishawn, Ethel Remey (as "Miss Sheppard") [Broadway debut]. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1923) Stage Play: Connie Goes Home. Comedy. Written by Edward Childs Carpenter. Based on a story by Fanny Kilbourne [credited as Fannie Kilbourn]. Directed by Frederick Stanhope. 49th Street Theatre: 6 Sep 1923- Sep 1923 (closing date unknown/20 performances). Cast: Berton Churchill (as "George M. Barclay"), Florence Earle (as "Mrs. Gibbs"), Lorna Elliott (as "Mrs. Merrick"), Sylvia Field (as "Connie"), Donald Foster (as "Jim"), Audrey Hart (as "Josephine Pierce"), Fred Irving Lewis (as "Chester Barclay"), Martha Madison (as "Hilda"), Harry E. McKee (as "Albert"), Arlina McMahon (as "Molly Latimer"), Ethel Remey (as "Isobel Wayne"), Valerie Valaire (as "Edna St. Cloud"). Produced by Kilbourn Gordon.
- (1927) Stage Play: Such Is Life.
- (1930) Stage Play: Virtue's Bed. Comedy/drama.
- (1932) Stage Play: Take My Tip. Comedy.
- (1936) Stage Play: The Women. Comedy. Written by Clare Boothe Luce. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Directed by Robert B. Sinclair. Ethel Barrymore Theare: 26 Dec 1936- Jul 1938 (closing date unknown/675 performances). Cast: Charita Bauer (as "Little Mary"), Eloise Bennett (as "Euphie"), Eileen Burns (as "Miss Fordyce")), Jessie Busley (as "Mrs. Morehead"), Mary Cecil (as "Maggie") [final Broadway role], Ilka Chase, Virgilia Chew (as "Miss Watts"), Audrey Christie (as "Miriam Aarons"), Beatrice Cole (as "Second Model"), Doris Day [not the Doris Day of later movie fame] (as "First Saleswoman"), Margaret Douglass (as "Countess de Lage"), Lucille Fenton (as "Head Saleswoman/A Nurse"), Arlene Francis, Margalo Gillmore (as "Mary, Mrs. Stephen Haines"), Ruth Hammond (as "Olga"), Joy Hathaway (as "A Fitter"), Anne Hunter (as "Exercise Instructress"), Ethel Jackson (as "Mrs. Wagstaff"), Betty Lawford (as "Crystal Allen"), Marjorie Main (as "Lucy"), Adrienne Marden (as "Peggy, Mrs. John Day"), Jane Moore (as "Second Hairdresser"), Mary Murray (as "Miss Trimmerback"), Lillian Norton (as "Cigarette Girl"), Phyllis Povah, Jean Rodney (as "Second Saleswoman"), Jane Seymour (as "Nancy Blake"), Mary Stuart (as "First Hairdresser"), Ann Teeman (as "Jane"), Martina Thomas (as "Third Saleswoman"), Beryl Wallace, Ann Watson (as "Pedicurist"), Marjorie Wood (as "Sadie"). Replacement actors: Claire Carleton (as "Crystal Allen"), Jeanne Cooley (as "Second Saleswoman"), Marjorie Dalton (as "Third Saleswoman"), Edith Gresham (as "Countess de Lage"), Gladys Griswold (as "Miriam Aarons"), Enid Markey (as "Olga"), Lillian Norton (as "Second Hairdresser"), Ethel Remey (as "Lucy"), Tanya Sanina (as "Helene/Princess Tamara"), Jacqueline Susann (as "First Model") [Broadway debut]. Produced by Max Gordon. Note: Filmed as The Women (1939), The Women (1955).
- (1938) Stage Play: Sing Out the News. Musical revue. Music orchestrated by Hans Spialek. Written by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart [uncredited script doctoring]. Music and lyrics by Harold Rome. Sketches by Charles Friedman. Ballet music by Will Irwin. Musical Director: Max Meth. Scenic Design by Jo Mielziner. Choreographed by Ned McGurn, Dave Gould and Charles Walters. "Peace and the Diplomat" staged by Charles Walters. Directed by Charles Friedman. Music Box Theatre: 24 Sep 1938- 7 Jan 1939 (105 performances). Cast: June Allyson (as "Time-The Present" Performer/Class of 1938/Minstrels) [Broadway debut], Bruce Barclay, John Barry, Add Bates, John Benton, Daisy Bernier, The Boys of Today, Ethel Brown, Lillyn Brown, Sibol Cain, Warren Coleman, Traverse Crawford, Fred Deming, Elizabeth Dozier, R. Dupler, Eleanor Eberle, Sally Ellis, Joey Faye, The Floradora Girls, Dorothy Fox, Miriam Franklin, Jane Fraser, Joel Friend, Chick Gagnon, Ortho Gaines, Ed Galloway, Will Geer, Rosalind Gordon, Ray Harrison, Ben Holmes, Richard Huey, Rex Ingram, Cecil Jackson, Georgia Jarvis, George Jones Jr., Gus Jones, Charles Lawrence, Kathryn Lazell, Thelma Lee, Carrington Lewis, Harry Lewis, Lewis and Van, James Lillard, Christina Lind, Leslie Litomy, Philip Loeb, Michael Loring, Henrietta Lovelace, Jimmy Lydon, Shirley Macy, Wanda Macy, Ginger Manners, Elizabeth McDowell, Estelle McDowell, Sadie McGill, Elmaurice Miller, Tomas Mitchell, Michael Moore, Fred Nay, B. Norris, Bernard Pearce, 'Jean Peters (I)', Jackie Petty, Burton Pierce, Ethel Remey, Bruce Rogers, Ben Ross, Hazel Scott, Hiram Sherman, Maude Simmons, Edwin Smith, Herbert Sumpter, Grant Thomas, Sonny Timmons, Allen Tinney, William Tinney, The Virginians, Ben Walles, Mary Jane Walsh, Howard Warriner, Clarence Wheeler, Madelyn White, Louie Williams, Lucille Williams, Musa Williams (as "Another Neighbor: One of These Fine Days/Guest: Man of the Year"), Mae Williamson, Maud Williamson, Lucille Wilson, Howard Woodford. Produced by Max Gordon, in association with George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart.
- (1943) Stage Play: I'll Take the High Road. Written by Lucille S. Prumbs. Scenic Design by Paul Morrison. Costume Design by Rose Bogdanoff. Directed by Sanford Meisner. Ritz Theatre: 9 Nov 1943- 13 Nov 1943 (7 performances). Cast: Jeanne Cagney, Len Doyle, Wanda Lyon, John McGovern, Ethel Remey, Allan Rich, Angela Willard. Produced by Milton Berle and Clifford Hayman.
- (1944) Stage Play: Our Town. Drama (revival). Book by Thornton Wilder. Directed by Wesley McKee and Jed Harris. City Center: 10 Jan 1944- 29 Jan 1944 (24 performances). Cast: Arthur Allen (as "Professor Willard"), Montgomery Clift (as "George Gibbs"), Owen Coll (as "Constable Warren"), Marc Connelly (as "Stage Manager"), Curtis Cooksey (as "Dr. Gibbs"), Richard Dalton (as "Joe Crowell"), Parker Fennelly (as "Mr. Webb"), Frederica Going (as "Lady in the Box"), Alice Hill (as "Woman in the Balcony"), Walter O. Hill (as "Mr. Carter"), Carolyn Hummel (as "Rebecca Gibbs"), Donald Keyes (as "Howie Newsome"), Doro Merande (as "Mrs. Soames"), John Paul (as "Man in The Auditorium"), John Ravold (as "Joe Stoddard"), Ethel Remey (as "Mr. Webb"), Roy Robson (as "Si Crowell"), Teddy Rose (as "Wally Webb"), Martha Scott (as "Emily Webb"), William Swetland (as "Simon Stimson"), Evelyn Varden (as "Mrs. Gibbs"), Jay Velie (as "Sam Craig"). Produced by Jed Harris.
- (1944) Stage Play: Chicken Every Sunday.
- (1946) Stage Play: Loco. Comedy.
- (1947) Stage Play: Tenting Tonight. Comedy.
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