- (1916 - 1965) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1916) Stage Play: Fast and Grow Fat. Written by George Broadhurst. From the story "Five Fridays" by Frank R. Adams. Directed by T. Daniel Frawley and George Broadhurst. Globe Theatre: 1 Sep 1916- Sep 1916 (closing date unknown/11 performances). Cast: Roy Atwell, Frank Deshon, Nellie Fillmore, Myles McCarthy, Frank McIntyre, Aileen Poe [Broadway debut], Vivian Rushmore, Zelda Sears, Howard Sinclair, Marion Vantine, John Wessell. Produced by Charles B. Dillingham and George Broadhurst.
- (1916) Stage Play: Backfire. Written by Stuart Fox. Directed by L.B. Parker and Walter N. Lawrence. 39th Street Theatre (moved to the Lyceum Theatre on 30 Oct 1916- close): 2 Oct 1916- Nov 1916 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: Mary Boland, William Bonelli, Adrienne Bonnell, Roy Briant, Harry Brukhardt, Caroline Campe, Martin Cheesman, Ogden Crane, Henry Gsell, Fred W. Peters, Frederick Truesdell. Produced by Walter N. Lawrence.
- (1919) Stage Play: Pretty Soft. Written by Paul M. Potter. From the French of Anthony Mars. From the work of Leon Xanrof. Morosco Theatre: 5 May 1919- May 1919 (closing date unknown/28 performances). Cast: Joseph Allenton, Claude Beerbohm, Mona Bruns, Rowland Buckstone, Roy Cochrane, Rose Coghlan, Edouard Durand, Florence Eldridge, Joseph Herbert, Harry Manners, Edwin Nicander, Margaret Nybloc, Aileen Poe, Nacy Stewart, Jean Stuart, Dallas Welford. Produced by Empire Producing Corporation.
- (1919) Stage Play: The Magic Melody. Musical romance.
- (1920) Stage Play: Little Ritz Girl. Musical comedy. Music by Richard Rodgers and Sigmund Romberg. Lyrics by Lorenz Hart and Alex Gerber. Book by Lew Fields and George Campbell. Musical Director: Pierce de Reeder. Conducted by Charles Previn. Lighting Design by Ned Wayburn. Scenic Design by H. Robert Law. Costume Design by Cora MacGeachy, Anna Spencer and Marie Cook. Choreographed by David Bennett. Directed by Ned Wayburn. Central Theatre: 28 Jul 1920- 16 Oct 1920 (93 performances). Cast: Julie Anderson, Bobbie Beckwith, Eugenie Blair (as "Jane DePuyster"), Elsie Bonwit, Ardele Cleaves, Dolly Clements, DeSacia Crandell, Michael Cunningham, Frisco Devere, Eleanor Griffith, Ruth Hale, Mabel Hastings, Donald Kerr, Dore Leighton, Muriel Manners, Lulu McConnell, Mabel Pearson, Mary Phillips, Nan Phillips, 'Aileen Poe' (as "Lillian Lawrence"), Charles Purcell (as "William Pembroke"), Josephine Rolfe, Grant Simpson, Lee Smith, Madeline Smith, Andrew Tombes (as "Dr. Russell Stevens"), Peggy Walsh, Betty Warlow, Florence Webber, Vivian White. Produced by Lew M. Fields.
- (1922) Stage Play: Broken Branches. Comedy/drama. Written by Emil Nyitray and Herbert Hall Winslow. Directed by Henry B. Stillman. 39th Street Theatre: 6 Mar 1922- Mar 1922 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Hyman Adler, Beatrice Allen (as "Emilie Martens"), Wallace Ford (as "Arthur Weldon"), Raymond Hackett (as "Larry Martens"), H.R. Irving, Russell Johnstone, J.M. Kerrigan (as "Mr. McCann"), Amy Ongley, Aileen Poe (as "Elsie McCann"). Produced by Arthur G. Delamater.
- (1923) Stage Play: A Royal Fandango. Comedy. Written by Zoe Akins. Directed by Arthur Hopkins. Plymouth Theatre: 12 Nov 1923- Dec 1923 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Jose Alessandro, Frank Antiseri, Ethel Barrymore (as "H.R.H. Princess Amelia"), Virginia Chauvenet, Denise Corday, Drake De Kay, Charles Eaton, Walter Howe, Teddy Jones, Cyril Keightley (as "H.R.H. Prince Peter"), Aileen Poe, Edward G. Robinson (as "Pascual"), Beverly Sitgreaves, Spencer Tracy (as "Holt"), Lorna Volare (as "Princess Titania") [final Broadway role], Harold Webster. Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1927) Stage Play: The Seventh Heart. Musical comedy.
- (1930) Stage Play: The Vanderbilt Revue. Musical revue. Music by Dorothy Fields, Jimmy McHugh, Jacques Fray, Mario Braggiotti and E.Y. Harburg. Book by Lew Fields, Kenyon Nicholson, Ellis O. Jones, Sig Herzig [earliest Broadway credit] and E. North. Lyrics by Dorothy Fields, Jimmy McHugh, Jacques Fray, Mario Braggiotti and E.Y. Harburg. Directed by John E. Lonergan, Jack Haskell and Theodore J. Hammerstein. Vanderbilt Theatre: 5 Nov 1930- Nov 1930 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: Charlotte Ayres, Charles Barnes, Jean Carpenter, Dalsky's Russian Choir, Rene De Bouche, Dorothy Dixon, Harry Dixon, Paul Everton, Evelyn Hoey, Dorothy Humphreys, Tonia Ingre, "Juliana," Richard Lane, Joe Lennon, Francesca Braggiotti Lodge, Francetta Malloy, Lulu McConnell, Joe Penner [Broadway debut], Aileen Poe, Jimmy Ray, Stella Royal, Richard Ryan, Gus Schilling, Adeline Seaman, Billy Stephens, Wallace Sisters, Teddy Walters, Franker Woods.
- (1931) Stage Play: Berlin. Drama. Written by Valentine Williams and Alice Crawford. Directed by Fritz Feld. George M. Cohan's Theatre: 30 Dec 1931- Jan 1932 (closing date unknown/26 performances). Cast: Jacob Bleifer, E.J. DeVarney, John Feistel, William Franklyn (as "Johann"), Charlotte Granville (as "Frau Hulda"), Sydney Greenstreet (as "Dr. Grundt"), Walter Harris, Albert Hayes, Peggy Hovenden, William Howard, G.P. Huntley (as "Abbott" and "Nigel Druce"), Moffat Johnston (as "Prince Karl"), Curtis Karpe (as "Bauer"), Arthur Kaskal, Sue Moore, David Morris, Mary Orr, Aileen Poe (as "Hedwig"), Helena Rapport, Charles Richman, Ethel Strickland, Helen Vinson (as "Olivia Dunbar"), Katherine Wilson, Walter Wilson. Produced by Raymond Moore and Carl Reed.
- (1933) Stage Play: They All Come to Moscow. Comedy. Written by John Washburne and Ruth Kennell. Directed by William J. O'Neill. Lyceum Theatre: 11 May 1933- May 1933 (closing date unknown/20 performances). Cast: Natasha Boleslavsky (as "Dunya Sulich"), Cecil Clovelly (as "Victor Markov"), Michael Dalsky (as "Kolenko"), Marjorie Dalton (as "Laura"), Jack Davis (as "John McNair"), Rani Jovanowitsch (as "Dr. Sergey Strogov"), Olga Krolow (as "Diana Richardson"), Maurice Manson (as "Jim Hardy"), Boris Marshalov (as "Joseph Lebetz"), Roger G. Moore (as "An O.G.P.U. Officer"), Marie Nevills (as "Mary Collins"), Clifford Odets (as "Andrey Brikin"), Thomas Paradine (as "Earl Collins"), Aileen Poe (as "Molly Mintz"), George Spelvinsky (as "An O.G.P.U. Officer"), Tamara (as "Natalya Brikin"), Lillian Walters (as "Betty Granfield"), Cornel Wilde (as "Dimitri Nekrasov") [Broadway debut]. Produced by The Players Theatre.
- (1936) Stage Play: Bright Honor. Comedy. Written by Henry Misrock. Scenic Design by W. Oden Waller. Directed by Anthony Brown. 48th Street Theatre: 27 Sep 1936- Oct 1936 (closing date unknown/17 performances). Cast: Leon Ames (as "Gordon Reese"), Junior Bealin (as "Cadet Michael Fenner"), Marshall L. Buchwald (as "Cadet Henry Metchik"), Neal Vernon Buhler (as "Cadet Morris "Moe" Greenblatt"), John D. Coons (as "Cadet Tom Horn"), John Cort (as "Cadet Raymond Fleming"), John Drew Devereaux (as "Cadet Steve Berkhofer"), Charles R. Duncan (as "Cadet George "Red" Johnson"), John T. Dwyer (as "General Dayton M. Warren"), John Foster (as "Cadet Juan Bustillo"), Ruth Gilbert (as "Mildred Shotwell"), Jewel Hart (as "Guest at Dance"), Claire Harvey (as "Guest at Dance"), Frank Harvey (as "Mr. Thomas Briggs"), Patricia Howell (as "Guest at Dance"), Roy Le May (as "Cadet Roger "Peanuts" Bendix"), Jack Maher (as "Cadet Alfred "Fatso" Symonds"), George Makinson (as "Cadet James T. Kingston"), Claire Maynard (as "Guest at Dance"), Perry Meyer (as "Cadet Anthony Mazetti"), Edwin Mills (as "Cadet Jack MacLean"), Bram Nossen (as "Chaplain Arthur Manning"), Helen Peabody (as "Mrs. Dorothy MacLean"), Aileen Poe (as "Mrs. Herbet Selton"), Charles Powers (as "Thomas Briggs Jr."), Elinor Queen (as "Agnes Fenner"), Arthur C. Scanlon (as "Cadet Bruce "Smoothy" Barclay"), Robert Scott (as "Cadet Bob "Dixie" Tyler"), Otis Sheridan (as "Mr. Herbert Selton"), Ann Sherry (as "Guest at Dance"), James Spottswood (as "Captain John J. Stocker"), Frederic Stange (as "Cadet Elmer Gardeuer"), Florence Sundstrom (as "Vivian Caldwell") [Broadway debut], Renee Terry (as "Mary Manning"), Dorothy Tree (as "Joan Clark"), Kathleen Wallace (as "Mrs. Thompson"), Walter Ward (as "Cadet Herbert Selton"), Ralph Welliver (as "Cadet Walter Willard"), Foster J. Williams (as "Peter Thompson"), Ed Wragge (as "Cadet Joe Allen"). Produced by Jack Kirkland and Sam H. Grisman.
- (1937) Stage Play: Babes in Arms. Musical comedy. Material by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart. Music by Richard Rodgers. Lyrics by Lorenz Hart. Music orchestrated by Hans Spialek. Musical Director: Gene Salzer. Choreographed by George Balanchine. Directed by Robert B. Sinclair. Shubert Theatre (moved to The Majestic Theatre from 25 Oct 1937- close): 14 Apr 1937- 18 Dec 1937 (289 performances). Cast: Roy Adler, Buddy Allen, Micky Alvarez, Jay Bee, Libby Bennett, Verna Ceders, Stella Clauson, Tania Clell, Alex Courtney, Mitzie Dahl, Dan Dailey (as "The Gang"), Clifton Darling, Aljan de Loville, Jere Delaney, 'Alfred Drake (I)', Bronson Dudley, Eleanor Fiata, Bob Fishelson, Gloria Franklin, Ted Gary, James Gillis, Mitzi Green, Dana Hardwick, Claire Harvey, Ray Heatherton, Mickey Herson, Georgia Hiden, Ethel Intropidi (as "Mazie LaMar"), LeRoy James, Marjorie Jane, Alvin Kerr, Bobby Lane, Betty Lee, Connie Leslie, Don Liberto, George E. MacKay, Grace McDonald (as "Dolores Reynolds"), Ray McDonald, Duke McHale, Wynn Murray (as "Baby Rose, The Singer"), Fayard Nicholas (as "Irving DeQuincy"), Harold Nicholas (as "Ivor DeQuincy"; both credited as the Nicholas Brothers), Jean Owens, Audrey Palmer, Douglas Perry, Gedda Petry, Rolly Pickert, Aileen Poe (as "Emma Blackstone"), Robert Rounseville, Ursula Seiler, Jack Stanton, Eleanor Tennis, Davenie Watson, George Watts, Kenneth Wilkins. Production supervised and Produced by Dwight Wiman. Note: Filmed by MGM as Babes in Arms (1939).
- (1939) Stage Play: Aries Is Rising. Comedy. Written by Caroline North and Earl Blackwell [only Broadway credit]. Scenic Design by Nicholas Yellenti. Directed by Robert Ross. John Golden Theatre: 21 Nov 1939- 25 Nov 1939 (7 performances). Cast: Ariane Allen (as "Denise"), Evelyn Barrows (as "Maxine"), Carmina Cansino (as "Shirley Baxter"), George M. Carleton (as "Bruce Prince") [final Broadway role], Constance Collier (as "Madame Bernardi") [final Broadway role], John Craven (as "Roland Harris"), Edmund Dorsay (as "Sammy"), Clifford Dunstan (as "Jake"), Sam Elberton (as "A Waiter"), Bernadine Hayes (as "Gladys Gay"), Ruth Holden (as "Jerry Walker"), Victoria Horne (as "Miss Pritchard"), Frederick Howard (as "Bill Cask"), Charles La Torre (as "Nick Mikalos"), Edmond Le Comte (as "Charlie"), Mary Mason (as "Mattie Kate Baugh"), Lathrop Mitchell (as "Gus"), Aileen Poe (as "Mrs. Baxter"), Cledge Roberts (as "Ted"), Frances Smith (as "Aunt Lou"), Morton Stevens (as "The Hon. Emery Howlett"), Blanche Sweet (as "Martha Wood Baugh"), Arthur West (as "Delivery Man"). Produced by Harry R. Irving and Michael Dolan.
- (1943) Stage Play: Feathers in a Gale. Comedy. Written by Pauline Jamerson and Reginald Lawrence. Directed by Arthur Hopkins. Music Box Theatre: 21 Dec 1943- 25 Dec 1943 (7 performances). Cast: Stuart Brody (as "Felipe"), Alexander Campbell (as "Captain Ebenezer"), Peggy Conklin (as "Annabella Hallock"), Zamah Cunningham (as "Lucy Abner"), Edwin Cushman (as "Mr. Carey"), Harry Ellerbe (as "Reverend David Thatcher"), Richard Garrick (as "Josiah Abner"), John Hamilton (as "Zeb Hibbitt"), Louise Lorimer (as "Matilda Phinney"), Norman MacKay (as "Captain Seth Barnabas"), Aileen Poe (as "Abigail"), John Robb (as "Town Clerk"), Cyrus H. Staehle (as "Mr. Otis"), Paula Trueman (as "Phoebe Fuller"). Produced by Arthur Hopkins and Martin Burton.
- (1955) Stage Play: Six Characters in Search of an Author (Revival). Written by Luigi Pirandello. New adaptation by Tyrone Guthrie and Michael Wager. Based on a translation by Frank Tauritz. Scenic Design by Klaus Holm. Directed by Tyrone Guthrie. Phoenix Theatre: 11 Dec 1955- 5 Feb 1956 (65 performances). Cast: Dario Barri (as "Supporting Cast"), Francis Bethencourt (as "The Leading Man"), Mildred Chandler (as "The Wardrobe Mistress"), Whitfield Connor (as "The Father"), William Cottrell (as "The Second Man"), Hale Gabrielson (as "The Ingenue"), John Glennon (as "The Character Juvenile"), Shirley Grayson (as "The Second Woman"), Betty Lou Holland (as "The Stepdaughter"), Kurt Kasznar (as "The Director"), James Lacirignola (as "The Boy"), Russell Morrison (as "The Stagehand"), Aileen Poe (as "The Character Woman"), Natalie Schafer (as "The Leading Lady") [final Broadway role], Maud Scheerer (as "Mme. Pace"), Katherine Squire (as "The Mother"), Marilyn Stevens (as "Supporting Cast"), Karen Sue Trent (as "The Little Girl"), Michael Wager (as "The Son"), Frederic Warriner (as "The Stage Manager"), William Whitman (as "The Juvenile"), Mervin Williams (as "Supporting Cast"). Produced by The Phoenix Theatre (Edward Hambleton: Co-Founder and Managing Director. Norris Houghton: Co-Founder). Produced in association with Clinton Wilder.
- (1964) Stage Play: Fade Out - Fade In. Musical comedy. Music by Jule Styne. Lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolph Green. Material by Betty Comden and Adolph Green. Musical Direction by Colin Romoff. Music orchestrated by Ralph Burns and Ray Ellis. Vocal arrangements by Buster Davis. Dance arrangements by Richard De Benidictis. Musical Staging by Ernie Flatt. Directed by George Abbott. Mark Hellinger Theatre: 26 May 1964- 17 Apr 1965 (271 performances + 6 previews). Cast: Carol Burnett (as "Hope Springfield"), Jack Cassidy, Tiger Haynes, Lou Jacobi (as "Lionel Z. Governor"), Tina Louise (as "Gloria Curie"), Sean Allen, Virginia Allen, Jackie Alloway, Diane Arnold, Darrell J. Askey, Judy Cassmore, Fred Cline, Don Crichton, John Dorrin, Trish Dwelley, Diana Ede, Penny Egelston, Stephen Elmore, Richard Frisch, Ernie Horvath, Mitchell Jason, Howard Kahl, Gene Kelton, Carolyn Kemp, Betty Kent, Glenn Kezer, William Louther, Charlene Mehl, Mari Nettum, Bob Neukum, Judy Newman, Dick Patterson, Virginia Payne, Jody Perselle, Eddie Pfeiffer, Aileen Poe (as "Dora Dailey") [final Broadway role], Roger Allan Raby, Dan Resin, Carolsue Shaer, Patricia Sigris, Reuben Singer, Smaxie, Roy Smith, Bill Stanton, Wendy Taylor, Jo Tract, Frank Tweddell (as "Pops"), Gene Varrone, (as "Gangster Extra/Harold Governor/Singer"), James Von Weiss. Produced by Lester Osterman, Jr. and Jule Styne.
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