- (1925 - 1939) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1925) Stage Play: The Depths. Drama. Written by Hans Mueller. Broadhurst Theatre: 27 Jan 1925- Feb 1925 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: Charles Brokaw (as "A Passer-By"), Gordon Burby (as "A Lawyer"), Jane Cowl (as "Anna"), Jennie Eustace, Marion Evenson, Vernon Kelso (as "Herbert"), Rollo Peters, Jessie Ralph (as "The Housekeeper"), Edith Van Cleve (as "Gusti"). Produced by Archibald Selwyn [earliest Broadway credit] in association with Adolph Klauber.
- (1925) Stage Play: Charlot Revue. Musical revue. Music for "How D'You Do?," "Let's All Go Raving Mad," "Follow Master Cook" and "Oxford Bags" by Philip Braham. Lyrics for "How D'You Do?" by Eric Blore. Lyrics for "How D'You Do?" and "Gigolette" by Dion Titheradge. Lyrics for "Let's All Go Raving Mad" by Hugh E. Wright. "Buying a Hat" and "Wine -- A Romantic Reverie" written by Douglas Furber. Music for "Mouse! Mouse!" and "Susannah's Squeaking Shoes" by Muriel Lillie. Lyrics for "Mouse! Mouse!" by Hilda Brighton. Music for "The Mender of Broken Dreams" by John W. Bratton. Lyrics for ""The Mender of Broken Dreams" by John W. Bratton. Music for "The Fox Has Left His Lair" by Peggy Connor. Lyrics for "The Fox Has Left His Lair" and "Follow Master Cook" by Douglas Furber. Music for "Fallen Babies" by Ivor Novello. Lyrics for "Fallen Babies" by Ronald Jeans. Music for "Gigolette" by Franz Lehár Lyrics for "Gigolette" and "A Cup of Coffee, a Sandwich and You" by Irving Caesar. Lyrics for "Susannah's Squeaking Shoes" by Arthur Weigall. Music for "Carrie!," "Russian Blues" and "Poor Little Rich Girl" by Noël Coward. Lyrics for "Carrie!," "Russian Blues" and "Poor Little Rich Girl" by Noël Coward. "Fate" and "A Cup of Coffee" written by Ronald Jeans. Music for "Take Them All Away" by Jack Strachey. Lyrics for "Take Them All Away" by Jack Strachey. Music for "A Cup of Coffee, a Sandwich and You" by Joseph Meyer. Lyrics for "A Cup of Coffee, a Sandwich and You" by Al Dubin and Billy Rose [earliest known Broadway credit]. "References" written by Harold Simpson and Morris Harvey. "Methods of Barberism" written by Arthur Wimperis. Music for "Sealed Feet" by Charles Prentice. Lyrics for "Oxford Bags" by Arthur Wimperis. Conducted by Gene Salzer. Dances and ensembles arranged by Jack Buchanan. "Sealed Feet" devised and staged by Quentin Tod. Dances and ensembles arranged by Jack Buchanan. "Sealed Feet" devised and staged by Quentin Tod. Selwyn Theatre: 10 Nov 1925- 6 Mar 1926 (138 performances). Cast: Jack Buchanan (as "How D'You Do?" Performer/"Gigolette" Performer/"The Fox Has Left His Lair" Performer/Aubrey/ Fate/"Wine" Performer/"A Cup of Coffee" Performer/Mr. B./Methods of Barberism"/"Oxford Bags" Performer), Gertrude Lawrence (as "How D'You Do?" Performer/"Let's All Go Raving Mad" Performer/Baby Girl Fallen Babies/"Carrie!" Performer/Fabia/Fate/"A Cup of Coffee" Performer/"Russian Blues" Performer/Daisy/Poor Little Rich Girl"), Beatrice Lillie (as "How D'You Do?" Performer/Baby Boy/Fallen Babies/"Susannah's Squeaking Shoes" Performer/The Maid/References/"Mouse" Performer/Madame Wanda Allova/Sealed Feet"), Herbert Mundin, Effie Atherton, Phyllis Austen, Betty Barbour, Gladys Barclay, Violet Beck, Yvonne Bose, Vera Braund, Constance Carpenter, Wyn Clare, Mollie Crafter, Velma Deane, Billey Edis, Eric Fawsett, Violet Hanbury, Aida Holland, Fenner Irving, Marianne Karelina, Lola Mende, Ida Parkinson, George Pughe, Rhoda Sewell, Hugh Sinclair, Cavenda Stanislaw, Betty Stockfeld, Vivienne Vanetta, Pansy Wilde, Jill Williams, Eve Wynne, Hazel Wynne. Produced by Archibald Selwyn.
- (1925) Stage Play: Easy Virtue. Written by Noël Coward. Directed by Basil Dean. Empire Theatre: 7 Dec 1925- Apr 1926 (closing date unknown/147 performances). Cast: Constance Best, Joyce Carey, Peter Carpenter, Joan Clement Scott, Jane Cowl (as "Larita"), Marion Evenson, Grace Hampton, Robert Harris, C. Bailey Hick, Halliwell Hobbes (as "Colonel Whittaker"), Lionel Hogarth, Vernon Kelso (as "Charles Burleigh"), Mabel Terry Lewis, Nancie B. Marsland, Peter McFarlane, Gypsy O'Brien (as "Nina Vansittart"), William Podmore, Marda Vanne, Wallace Wood. Jane Cowl appears by arrangement with Archibald Selwyn. Produced by Charles Frohman, Inc. Produced in association with Joseph P. Bickerton Jr. and Basil Dean.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Monkey Talks. Written by René Fauchois. Directed by Frank Reicher. Sam H. Harris Theatre: 28 Dec 1925- Mar 1926 (closing date unknown/98 performances). Cast: Luther Adler (as "Zizi"), Martha-Bryan Allen, Frank G. Bond, Tommy Colton, Sadonia Corelli, Arthur Engel, Rose Kean, Wilton Lackaye (as "Lorenzo"), Jacques Lerner, Philip Merivale (as "Sam Wick"), Harry Mestayer, Mike Morris, Nathan Shindell, Mark Smith, Eugene Weber, Gerard Willshire, Ethel Wilson. Produced by Archibald Selwyn.
- (1925) Stage Play: Fakir Rahman Bey. Special concert. Selwyn Theatre: 25 May 1926- Jun 1926 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Fakir Rahman Bey. Produced by Archibald Selwyn and A.H. Woods.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Ghost Train. Drama. Written by Arnold Ridley. Directed by Norman Houston. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 25 Aug 1926-Oct 1926 (61 performances). Cast: Arthur Barry (as "Herbert Price"), Eric Blore (as "Teddie Deakin"), Claudette Colbert (as "Peggy Murdock"), Isobel Elsom (as "Julia Price") [Broadway debut], Gladys Ffolliott (as "Miss Bourne"), Henry Mowbray (as "John Sterling"), Gypsy O'Brien (as "Elsie Winthrop"), Robert Rendel (as "Richard Winthrop"), John Williams (as "Charles Murdock"), Walter Wilson (as "Saul Hodgkin"), Arthur J. Wood (as "Jackson"). Produced by Archibald Selwyn and A.H. Woods.
- (1927) Stage Play: The Garden of Eden. Written by Avery Hopwood [final Broadway credit during lifetime]. Based on the German of Rudolph Bernauer and Rudolf Österreicher. Directed by Edwin H. Knopf. Selwyn Theatre: 27 Sep 1927- Oct 1927 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: A.G. Andrews (as "Baron Laperau"), Gordon Ash (as "Count de Mauban"), Barbara Barondess (as "Adele"), Harlan Briggs, Camilla Dalberg, C. Stafford Dickens (as "Henri Glessing"), Walter Geer (as "Servant of the Prince"), Alfred A. Hesse (as "Maitre d'Hotel"), Miriam Hopkins, Stapleton Kent, June Leslie, Ignacio Martinetti, Douglass Montgomery (as "Richard Lamont"), Thomas Wigney Percyval (as "Count de L'Esterel"), Doris Rankin, Ivan F. Simpson, Alison Skipworth (as "Rosa"), Betsy Jane Southgate (as "Cleo"), Russ Whytal (as "Prince Miguel de Santa Rocca"), Daniel Wolf (as "A Call Boy"). Produced by Archibald Selwyn. Notes: (1) Mr. Hopwood would die on 1 Jul 1928 in Juan-les-Pins, France. (2) Filmed by Feature Productions [distributed by United Artists] as The Garden of Eden (1928).
- (1929) Stage Play: Many Waters. Drama. Written by Monckton Hoffe. Directed by Leon M. Lion. Maxine Elliott's Theatre: 25 Sep 1929- Dec 1929 (closing date unknown/110 performances). Produced by Archibald Selwyn and Charles B. Cochran.
- (1929) Stage Play: The Middle Watch. Comedy/farce. Written by Ian Hay and Stephen King-Hall. Times Square Theatre: 16 Oct 1929- Nov 1929 (closing sate unknown/29 performances). Cast: Ruth Abbott (as "Mary Carlton"), George Carr (as "Ah Fong/Corporal Duckett, Royal Marines"), James Carter (as "A Sailor"), Venetia Dormer (as "Marjorie"), Annie Esmond (as "Lady Hewitt") [final Broadway role], Fred Kerr (as "Admiral Sir Hercules Hewitt, K.C.B."), Robert Mawdesley (as "Captain Randall, Royal Marines"), Enid Menhinick (as "Nancy Hewitt"), John Boyne Rowe (as "Captain Maitland, Royal Navy"), Michael Shepley (as "Commander Baddeley, Royal Navy"), T.W. Sleigh (as "Flag Lieutenant"), Dodo Watts (as "Fay Eaton"), Alfred Wellesley (as "Marine Ogg"), Madge Whiteman (as "Charlotte Hopkinson"). Produced by Archibald Selwyn and Charles B. Cochran.
- (1929) Stage Play: Bitter Sweet. Musical operetta. Based on material by Noel Coward. Music and lyrics by Noël Coward. Musical Direction by Frank Tours. Directed by Noël Coward. Ziegfeld Theatre (moved to The Shubert Theatre from 17 Feb 1930 to close): 5 Nov 1929- 22 Mar 1930 (159 performances). Cast: Reginald Allen (as "Chorus"), Mildred Allen-Letts (as "Chorus"), Bruce Anderson (as "Chorus"), Roy Arcourt (as "Chorus"), Leslie Bannister (as "Chorus/Mr. Vale"), Nancy Barnett Freda"), Isla Bevan (as "Honor/Lady Sorrel"), Peggy Blake (as "Boy"), Gordon Brand (as "Chorus"), Claude Brittin-Eldred (as "Chorus"), Nancy Brown (as "Gloria/Mrs. Proutie"), Kenneth Burston (as "Musician"), James Cameron (as "Chorus"), Vera Caprice (as "Chorus"), Albert Chapman (as "Footman/Chorus/Burley"), Noel Clifford (as "Chorus"), Doris Colston (as "Chorus"), Hugh Cuénod (as "Chorus/Bertram Sellick"), Constance David (as "Chorus"), Mary David (as "Chorus"), Sybil Davidson (as "Chorus/A Prater Girl"), William Dawson (as "Chorus"), Dorothy Debenham (as "Hansi"), Pauline Desmond (as "Chorus"), Peter Donald (as "Piccolo"), Edna Earle (as "Chorus/Boy"), John Evelyn (as "The Marquis of Shayne"), Alfred Fairhurst (as "Chorus"), Joyce Fletcher (as "Chorus"), Edmond Ford Musician"), Herbert Garry (as "Chorus"), Cunningham Glen (as "Chorus/Vernon Craft"), Trevor Glyn (as "Footman/Parker/Chorus"), Donald Gordon (as "Chorus/The Marquis of Steere/The Duke of Tenterton"), Zoe Gordon (as "Lotte"), Douglas Graeme-Brooke (as "Mr. Proutie/Chorus"), Roy Hall (as "Chorus"), Gladys Hay-Dillon (as "Chorus"), William Herbert (as "Chorus"), Leonora Hilton (as "Chorus"), Tracy Holmes (as "The Hon. Hugh Devon/Chorus"), Kathleen Holt (as "Chorus"), Elsie Hulme (as "Chorus"), Iris Hulme (as "Chorus"), Desmond Jeans (as "Captain August Lutte/Herr Schlick"), Myfany Jenkins (as "Chorus"), Max Kirby (as "Vincent Howard"), Kathleen Lambelet (as "Lady Devon/Chorus"), Evelyn Laye (as "Sarah Millick/Sari Linden/The Marchioness of Shayne"), Sylvia Leslie (as "Gussie"), Eddie Lisbona (as "Musician/Accompanist"), Peggy Lovat (as "Chorus"), Patrick Ludlow (as "Chorus/Lord Henry Jekyll"), Vicky Lynn (as "A Prater Girl/Chorus"), Isabel Marden (as "Chorus"), Cecile Maule-Cole (as "Chorus/A Prater Girl/Jackie"), William McGuigan (as "Chorus"), Louis E. Miller (as "Chorus/Lieutenant Tranisch/Mireille Manon/Crevette"), Jane Moore (as "Chorus/Lady Devon"), Charles Mortimer (as "Sir Arthur Fenchurch/Herr Schlick"), Anthony Neville (as "Chorus/Mr. Bethel"), Gerald Nodin (as "Carl Linden"), Isabel Ohmead (as "Mrs. Millick/Chorus"), Mervyn Pearce (as "Chorus"), Sydney Perlstone (as "Musician"), Constance Perrin (as "Helen/Chorus"), Audrey Pointing (as "Lady James/Harriet/Dolly Chamberlain"), Roma Presano (as "Chorus"), James Prescott (as "Chorus"), Leonta Proctor (as "Chorus"), Marjorie Raymond (as "Victoria/The Duchess of Tenterton"), James Reid (as "Chorus"), Vernon Rudolph (as "Musician"), Hooper Russell (as "Lord Sorrel/Chorus"), Leah Russell (as "Chorus"), Eva Scott-Thompson (as "Chorus"), Enid Settle (as "Chorus"), Marjorie Simpson (as "Chorus"), Paul Spender-Clay (as "Chorus/Cedrick Ballantyne"), Joan Stanbrough (as "Nita/Chorus"), Vesta Sylva (as "Effie/Mrs. Bethel"), Winifred Talbot (as "Jane/Mrs. Vale"), John W. Thompson (as "Footman/Chorus"), Richard Thorpe Chorus/Lord Edgar James"), Marcel Turner (as "Chorus"), Gustav Wallenberg (as "Chorus"), Leah Warne (as "Chorus/Boy"), Iris White (as "Chorus"), George Woof (as "Chorus/Lord Henry Jade"), Arthur Woolf (as "Musician"), Graham Yarborough (as "Footman/Chorus"). Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. and Archibald Selwyn. Produced in arrangement with Charles B. Cochran.
- (1929) Stage Play: Wake Up and Dream. Musical revue. Music by Cole Porter. Book by J.H. Turner. Lyrics by Cole Porter. Featuring songs by Leo Delibes. Featuring songs with lyrics by Donovan Parsons. Choreographed by Tilly Losch, Jack Buchanan and Max Rivers. Directed by Frank Collins. Selwyn Theatre: 30 Dec 1929- 26 Apr 1930 (136 performances). Cast: Ann Barberova, Jean Barry, Toni Birkmayer, Marjorie Brooks, Jack Buchanan, Wyn Clare, Dave Fitzgibbon, A.B. Imeson, Lance Lister, Tillie Losch, Jessie Matthews, Tina Meller, Roy Mitchell, Claude Newman, Douglas Phillips, Frances Shelley, William Stephens, Mary Tomlinson, Gomez Trio, Greta Wood. Produced by Archibald Selwyn and Charles B. Cochran.
- (1930) Stage Play. A Kiss of Importance. Comedy. Written by Arthur Hornblow Jr.. From the French of André Picard and H.M. Harwood. Directed by Lionel Atwill. Fulton Theatre: 1 Dec 1930- Dec 1930 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Ann Andrews (as "Isabelle de Corquefon"), Johnnie Brewer (as "Fred"), Alice Burrage (as "Mlle. Thomas"), Frank Henderson (as "Comte de Cerisay"), Marjorie Hollis (as "Albertine"), Frederick Kerr (as "Octave de Corquefon"), Montagu Love (as "Gilbert Laurent Courcel"), Basil Rathbone (as "Christian Saint Obin"), Ivan F. Simpson (as "Arthur Dupin"), George Wright Jr. (as "Gardener"). Produced by Archibald Selwyn. Produced in association with Erlanger Productions, Inc.
- (1932) Stage Play: The Devil Passes. Comedy. Written by Benn W. Levy. Directed by Benn W. Levy. Selwyn Theatre: 4 Jan 1932- Mar 1932 (closing date unknown/96 performances). Cast: Eric Blore, Gwen Day Burroughs, Arthur Byron, Ernest Cossart, Cecilia Loftus, Robert Loraine (as "Red. Herbert Messiter"), Mary Nash, Basil Rathbone (as "Rev. Nicholas Lucy"), Ernest Thesiger, Diana Wynyard. Produced by Archibald Selwyn.
- (1932) Stage Play: A Thousand Summers. Romance. Written by Merrill Rogers. Directed by Shepard Traube. Selwyn Theatre: 24 May 1932- Jul 1932 (closing date unknown/51 performances). Cast: Jane Cowl, Osgood Perkins, Mary Newman Davis, Florence Edney, Marion Evenson, Thomas Findlay, Josephine Hull, Franchot Tone (as "Neil Barton"). Produced by Archibald Selwyn, in arrangement with Shepard Traube.
- (1933) Stage Play: Evensong. Written by Edward Knoblock and Beverley Nichols (adapted from his novel). Directed by Paul Smythe. Selwyn Theatre: 31 Jan 1933- Feb 1933 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Walter Armin (as "Julius Rosenberg"), Jacob Ben-Ami (as "Arthur Kober"), Holland Bennett, Luis Bruno, Brian Buchel, Reginald Carrington, Hugh F.S. Casson, Marjorie Chard, Doris Crandall, Willard Dashiell, Natalie Davis, Owen Davis Jr., Claude Disney-Roebuck, John Dunn, Edith Evans, Jane Evans, Beatrix Fielden-Kaye, Walter Fitzgerald, Freda Gaye, Leyla Georgie, Alice Griswold, Leopoldo Gutierrez, Joan Hamilton, Gladys Hanson, Florence Heller, Natalie Hess, Jean Howard, Frederick Jordan, Helen Judge, Virginia Ann Kaye, Frederick Leister, Christine Lindsay, Fothringham Lysons, Nellie Malcolm, Mary Melhado, Mary Morrison, Florence Selwyn, Hilda Spong (as "Nurse Phillips"), Margot Stevenson (as "Guest"), Ripples Swan, Zolya Talma (as "Señora De Carranza"), William Tannen, Dennis Val-Norton, Harry Warwick, Jane Wyatt (as "Pauline Lacey"), Valerie Ziegler. Produced by Archibald Selwyn and Sir Barry Jackson.
- (1933) Stage Play: Forsaking All Others. Comedy. Written by Edward Barry Roberts and Frank Cavett. Directed by Thomas Mitchell. Times Square Theatre: 1 Mar 1933- Jun 1933 (closing date unknown/110 performances). Cast: Harry Anderson, Tallulah Bankhead (as "Mary Clay"), Harlan Briggs (as "Dent"), Ilka Chase (as "Elinor Branch"), Millicent Hanley, Robert Hudson, Fred Keating, Anderson Lawler (as "Dillon Todd"), George Lessey, Donald MacDonald, Barbara O'Neil, Nancy Ryan (as "Dottie Winters"), Roger Sterns, Cora Witherspoon (as "Mrs. Paula La Salle"). Produced by Archibald Selwyn. Note: Filmed as Forsaking All Others (1934).
- (1934) Stage Play: Lady Jane. Comedy. Written by H.M. Harwood. Directed by H.M. Harwood. Plymouth Theatre: 10 Sep 1934- Oct 1934 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Frances Starr (as "Lady Jane Kingdom"), Frank Elliott (as "Lord Aldingham"), Lowell Gilmore (as "David Remington"), Frieda Inescort (as "Sybil Kingdom") [final Broadway role], Lila Lee (as "Liza Kingdom"), Alan Marshal (as "Steven Rains"), Reginald Mason (as "Professor Charles Kingdom"), Paul McGrath (as "Douglas Allenby"), Florence Selwyn (as "Maid"), Henry Vincent (as "Hume"). Produced by Archibald Selwyn and Harold B. Franklin. Produced in association with Arthur Hopkins.
- (1934) Stage Play: Continental Varieties. Musical revue. "Caprice Viennois" and "La Guitana" by Fritz Kreisler. Mr. Balieff's vocabulary by Irving Caesar. "Valse No. 6" by Frédéric Chopin. "Cordoba" by Isaac Albéniz. Music for "Les Gueuses" by Vincent Scotto. Lyrics for "Les Gueuses" by Vincent Scotto. Music for ""Attends!" and "Parlez-moi d'amour" by Jean Lenoir. Lyrics for "Parlez-moi d'amour" by Jean Lenoir. Music for "Viens danser...," "D'amour en amour," "Je ne savais pas" & "Parlez-moi..." by Jean Delettre. Lyrics for "Viens danser quant-même" by Jamblan. Music for "Moi, j'crache dans l'eau" by Jean Tranchant. Lyrics for "Moi, j'crache dans l'eau" by Jean Tranchant. Lyrics for "D'amour en amour" by Leo Delievre. Lyrics for "Je ne savais pas" by Maurice Aubret. Music for "Si petite" by Gaston Claret. Lyrics for "Si petite" by Pierre Bayle-Silverman. Scenic Design by Angel Carretero. Little Theatre: 3 Oct 1934- 13 Nov 1934 (44 performances). Cast: Lucienne Boyer (as "Performer"), Nikita Balieff (as "Performer"), Carmita (as "Performer"), Lydia Chaliapine (as "Performer"), Georges De Roze (as "Performer"), Vincente Escudero (as "Performer"), Emma Runitch (as "Performer"), Sacre Monte Gypsies (as "Performer"). Produced by Archibald Selwyn and Harold B. Franklin.
- (1934) Stage Play: Conversation Piece. Romantic comedy. Written by Noël Coward. Music by Noël Coward. Lyrics by Noël Coward. Music orchestrated by Charles Prentice. Musical Director: Victor Baravalle. Directed by Noël Coward. 44th Street Theatre: 23 Oct 1934- 8 Dec 1934 (55 performances). Cast: Maysie Anderson (as "Female Ensemble"), Maidie Andrews (as "Rose"), Jill Anthony (as "Hannah"), Penryn Bannerman (as "Lord Kenyon"), Jean Beckwith (as "Female Ensemble"), Joe Benny (as "Child"), Anthony Brian (as "Lord Doyning"), Geoffrey Brighton (as "Male Ensemble"), Irene Browne (as "Lady Julia Charteris"), Richard Brummer (as "Child"), Winifred Campbell (as "Mrs. Hailsham"), Brenda Clether (as "Courtesan"), Eileen Clifton (as "Lady Braceworth"), Peggy Davannah (as "Female Ensemble"), Winifred Davis (as "The Duchess of Beneden"), Dorothy Drover (as "Miss Mention"), Albert Dudley (as "Male Ensemble"), Claude Farrow (as "Butler"), Lucy Feord (as "Female Ensemble"), Pierre Fresnay (as "Paul, Duc de Chaucigny-Varennes"), Leonard Goodman (as "A Tiger"), Grace Gorrod (as "Female Ensemble"), Sidney Grammer (as "Mr. Hailsham"), Joan Grundy (as "Female Ensemble"), Roy Hall (as "Fisherman"), Carl Harbord (as "The Marquis of Sheere"), Phyllis Harding (as "Miss Goslett"), Agnes Heller (as "Child"), Harriet Irwin (as "Child"), Dean Jenks (as "Child"), Evan Jones (as "Fisherman"), Vivienne Lambelet (as "Female Ensemble"), St. John Lauri (as "Hon. Julian Kane"), Donna Leonard (as "Child"), Sylvia Leslie (as "Sophie Otford"), Doris Markey (as "Child"), William McGuigan (as "Fisherman"), Leonard Michel (as "Butler"), Moya Nugent (as "Martha James"), Yvonne O'Dell (as "Female Ensemble"), Shela Pattrick (as "Countess Harringford"), Ronald Pope (as "Male Ensemble"), Yvonne Printemps (as "Mélanie"), Alex Robertson (as "Mr. Amos"), George Sanders (as "The Earl of Harringford/Lord St. Marys"), Enid Settle (as "Female Ensemble"), Betty Shale (as "Mrs. Dragon"), Evelyn Smith (as "Child"), June Spencer-Dyke (as "Female Ensemble"), Athole Stewart (as "The Duke of Beneden"), Winifred Talbot (as "Female Ensemble"), Edwin Underhill (as "Lord Mosscrock"), Esmond Wilding (as "Male Ensemble"), Pat Worsley (as "Lord Braceworth"). Produced by Archibald Selwyn and Harold B. Franklin. Produced in association with Charles B. Cochran.
- (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.
- (1934) Stage Play: Revenge With Music. Musical. Book and lyrics by Howard Dietz. Music by Arthur Schwartz. A variation on the old Spanish folk tale "El Sombrero de Tres Picos" by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón. Music orchestrated by Robert Russell Bennett. Musical Director: Victor Baravalle. Conducted by Max Meth. General Stage Manager: E.B. 'Zeke' Colvan. Dance ensembles by Michael Mordkin. Directed by Theodor Komisarjevsky. New Amsterdam Theatre: 28 Nov 1934-27 Apr 1935 (158 performances). Cast: Libby Holman, Georges Metaxa (as "Carlos, The Miller"), Charles Winninger, Joseph Macauley (as "Alonzo, Doorman at the Official Residence"), Helen Arden, Walter Armin (as "Salvador, A Bailiff"), Beatrice Berens, Gertrude Berggren, Marcus Blechman, Geraldine Bork, Andre Charise, Ilka Chase, Natalia Danesi, Margaret Daum, Frank Davenport, Marguerite De Anguera, Nunez de Polanco, Madeline de Souter, Bertha Donn (as "Juanita, Dona Isabella's Maid"), Tamara Doriva, John Dunbar, William Elliott, Frances Farnsworth, Raoul Fernandez, David Friedkin, Ernestine Henoch, The Hernandez Brothers, Eleanor King, George Kirk, Ada Korvin, Marion Lawrence, Margaret Lee, Tom Long, Earle MacVeigh, Gene Martel, Paul Mathis, Rex O'Malley (as "Pablo"), Rosita Ortega, Harry Pick, Detmar Poppen (as "Miguel Rodriguez, The Mayor"), Frances Reid, Hyla Roberts, Charles Scanlon, Ivy Scott, Sidney Stark, George Thornton, Rowan Tudor, Omero Valencia, Bianca Volland, Eleanor Waldon, Herman Weiner, Cliff Whitcombe, Jay Wilson, Molly Wood, Paula Yasgour, Imogene Coca. Produced by Archibald Selwyn and Harold B. Franklin.
- (1939) Stage Play: Foreigners. Comedy. Written by Frederick Lonsdale. Directed by Reginald Bach. Belasco Theatre: 5 Dec 1939- 9 Dec 1939 (7 performances). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert. Produced in association with Archibald Selwyn [final Broadway credit].
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