- (1906 - 1934) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1906) Stage Play: The Great Divide. Drama. Written by William Vaughn Moody. Directed by Henry Miller. Princess Theatre: 3 Oct 1906- 24 Mar 1907 (238 performances). Cast: Margaret Anglin, William J. Butler, Laura Hope Crews (as "Polly Jordan"), Robert Cummings (as "Lon Anderson") [Broadway debut], Nolan Gagne, Charles Gotthold, Bertram Harrison (as "An Architect"), Henry Miller, Frederick Moore, Leon Roberts, Henry B. Walthall (as "Burt Williams"), Mrs. Thomas Whiffen (as "Mrs. Jordan"), Arnold Wilbur, Charles Wyngate. Replacement actors: Lous Bishop Hall, Edith Wynne Matthison (as "Ruth Jordan"). Produced by Henry Miller. Note: Produced on film as The Great Divide (1929).
- (1906) Stage Play: Pippa Passes. Written by Robert Browning. Directed by Henry Miller. Majestic Theatre: 12 Nov 1906- 7 Dec 1906 (9 performances). Cast: Carroll J. Barry, William Beach, Ray Beveridge, William J. Butler, Robert Cummings, Charles Gotthold, Harrison Hunter, Mrs. Le Moyne (as "Ottima"), Eleanora Leigh, Laura Moore, Pauline Potter, T.H. Roberts, T.A. Shannon, Mabel Taliaferro (as "Pippa"), Henry B. Walthall, Ernst Wilkes, Gavin Young. Produced by Henry Miller.
- (1908) Stage Play: The Winterfeast.
- (1909) Stage Play: Kassa.
- (1909) Stage Play: The Awakening of Helena Richie. Comedy/drama.
- (1909) Stage Play: Cameo Kirby. Written by Booth Tarkington and Harry Leon Wilson. Hackett Theatre: 20 Dec 1909- Jan 1910 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Dustin Farnum (as "Eugene Kirby"), May Buckley, Burr Caruth, Emmett Corrigan, Robert Cummings, John Harrington, Maud Hosford, Gordon Johnstone, Jane Kendrick, Ruth Lloyd, Nora Shelby, Alfred Tansy, Conway Tearle, George Thatcher, Gladys Williams. Produced by Liebler & Co.
- (1912) Stage Play: Stop Thief. Comedy. Written by Carlyle Moore. Directed by Sam Forrest. Gaiety Theatre: 25 Dec 1912- May 1913 (closing date unknown/149 performances). Cast: Percy Ames (as "James Cluney"), Frank Bacon (as "Papa Carr"), Richard Bennett (as "Jack Doogan"), William 'Stage' Boyd, R.C. Bradley, Ruth Chester, Robert Cummings, Thomas Findlay, James T. Ford, William Graham, Elizabeth Lane, James C. Marlowe (as "Joseph Thompson"), Vivian Martin, Edward J. McGuire, Mary Ryan, Louise Woods (as "Madge Carr"). Produced by Cohan & Harris.
- (1917) Stage Play: Broken Threads.
- (1917) Stage Play: The Gipsy Trail.
- (1918) Stage Play: A Trench Fantasy. Incidental music by Roy Webb. Written by Percival Knight. Plymouth Theatre: 24 Jan 1918- Feb 1918 (closing date unknown/19 performances). Cast: Robert Cummings, W.H. Gilmore, Ernest Glendinning, Percival Knight, Roland Young. Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1919) Stage Play: Dark Rosaleen. Written by W.D. Hepenstall and Whitford Kane. Belasco Theatre: 22 Apr 1919- Jul 1919 (closing date unknown/87 performances). Cast: John Carmody, Robert Cummings, Henry Duffey, Walter Edwin, George Fitzgerald, Eileen Huban, P.J. Kelly, Charles F. McCarthy, Beryl Mercer, Dodson Mitchell, Thomas Mitchell, Dan Moyles, John Daly Murphy, Seamus O'Brien, Farrell Pelly. Produced by David Belasco.
- (1919) Stage Play: His Honor: Abe Potash. Comedy. Written by Montague Glass and Jules Eckert Goodman. Bijou Theatre: 14 Oct 1919- Apr 1920 (closing date unknown/215 performances). Cast: George Barnum (as "Henry Gooding"), Barney Bernard (as "Abe Potash"), Mathilde Cottrelly (as "Rosie Potash"), Robert Cummings (as "Robert Stafford"), Lucille English (as "Irma Potash"), Ted W. Gibson (as "Harry Potash"), Stanley Jessup (as "Rothwell"), Frank J. Kirke (as "Evans"), Kalman Matus (as "Riggs"), Bertram Miller (as "Crawford"), Edwin Mordant (as "Henry Block"), James Spottswood (as "George Block"), William Vaughn (as "Detective Baker"), Gayne Whitman [credited as Harold Vosburgh] (as "Mr. Brady"). Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1921) Stage Play: Nemesis. Melodrama. Written by Augustus Thomas. Directed by John Meehan. Hudson Theatre: 4 Apr 1921- May 1921 (closing date unknown/56 performances). Cast: Charles P. Bates, Roland Bottomley (as "Dr. Simpson"), Emmett Corrigan (as "Mr. Kallan"), John Craig, Robert Cummings (as "Officer Conlon"), Pedro de Cordoba (as "Mr. Jovaine"), Jennie Dickerson, Clayton Frye, Marie Goff, Jerry Hart, Howard Nugent, Frank M. Readick, Olive Tell (as "Marcia Kallan"), John M. Thoughton, Ethel Winthrop, Eleanor Woodruff. Produced by George M. Cohan.
- (1922) Stage Play: Frank Fay's Fables. Musical revue.
- (1922) Stage Play: Fools Errant. Drama.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Fool. Melodrama.
- (1923) Stage Play: The Song and Dance Man. Comedy/drama. Written by George M. Cohan. Hudson Theatre: 31 Dec 1923- Mar 1924 (closing date unknown/96 performances). Cast: Alice Beam (as "Anna"), Laura Bennett (as "Mrs. Lane"), Alexander Bushee (as "Freddie"), Louis Calhern (as "Joseph Murdoch"), George M. Cohan (as "John Farrell"), Robert Cummings (as "Jim Craig"), Mary Agnes Martin (as "Miss Davis"), John Meehan (as "Tom Crosby"), Mayo Methot Leola Lane"), Frederick Perry (as "Charles B. Nelson"), William J. Phinney (as "Crowley"), William Walcott Curtis"), Eleanor Woodruff (as "Jane Rosemond"). Produced by George M. Cohan.
- (1924) Stage Play: The Desert Flower.
- (1925) Stage Play: The Piker. Drama. Written by Leon Gordon. Based on a story by Oliver Eastwood. Directed by Priestly Morrison. Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre: 15 Jan 1925- Feb 1925 (closing date unknown/44 performances). Cast: Alan Brooks, Frank Conroy, Robert Cummings (as "Fred Cunningham"), Irene Fenwick, James C. Malaidy, Harry E. McKee, Adrienne Morrison, W.A. Norton, Charles Slattery. Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1925) Stage Play: Something To Brag About.
- (1926) Stage Play: Down Stream.
- (1926) Stage Play: Still Waters.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Woman Disputed.
- (1927) Stage Play: The Trial of Mary Dugan. Melodrama. Written by Bayard Veiller. Directed by A.H. Van Buren. National Theatre: 19 Sep 1927- Oct 1927 (closing date unknown/437 performances). Cast: Michelette Burani [credited as Michelette Baroni] (as "Marie Ducort"), Robert Beggs, Rex Cherryman, Robert Cummings, John P. Dougherty, Charles Edwards, Ann Harding (as "Mary Dugan"), Louis Jean Heydt (as "Harry Jones"), Arthur Hohl (as "District Attorney Galway"), Edwin T. Jones, Cyril Keightley (as "Edward West"), Anna Kostant, Barton MacLane (as "Assistant District Attorney"), Merle Maddern, Jasper Mangione, Leona Maricle (as "Dagmar Lorne") [Broadway debut], Lewis McMichael, Dennie Moore (as "Mary Harris"), Oscar Polk (as "James Madison"), Julia Ralph (as "Mrs. Kate Burton"), John Ravold, Dean Raymond, Marie Santas, Jack Sayer, John Sharkey, Robert Williams. Produced by A.H. Woods. Note: Filmed as The Trial of Mary Dugan (1929), by MGM as The Trial of Mary Dugan (1941), and as The Trial of Mary Dugan (1957).
- (1929) Stage Play: Congratulations. Comedy.
- (1931) Stage Play: She Means Business. Comedy.
- (1931) Stage Play: The Man on Stilts. Comedy. Written by Edwin L. Barker and Albert Wineman Barker. Directed by Arthur Hopkins. Plymouth Theatre: 9 Sep 1931- Sep 1931 (closing date unknown/6 performances). Cast: Raymond Bramley (as "Joe Day"), Kirk Brown Jr. (as "Cleary"), James Bruce (as "Third Porter"), Maud Burns (as "Minnie Schmaltz"), Hobart Cavanaugh (as "McGann"), Owen Coll (as "A Detective"), Elmer Cornell (as "Mr. White Sheet"), Pascal Cowan (as "A Magazine Man"), Robert Cummings (as "Senator Abner Tarbottom"), Jack Daniels (as "Mr. Pink Sheet"), Helen Dodge (as "Georgia Van Allen"), Len Doig (as "An Accordion Player"), Helen Dudley (as "Miss Tabloid"), Bruce Duncan (as "A Bellboy"), Harry Ellerbe (as "Godfrey Block"), Lillian Emerson (as "Homey Callahan"), Harold Enright (as "Fourth Porter"), James T. Ford (as "Policeman Doyle"), Eda Heinemann (as "Miss Tousey"), Harold Kennedy (as "Heine Clabber"), Garland Kerr (as "A Radio Engineer"), Madeline King (as "Phoebe Smith"), Harry Knapp (as "Mark Van Allen"), William Layden (as "Second Porter"), Frank Layton (as "The Human Fly"), James MacDonald (as "A Radio Announcer"), Arthur Marlowe (as "Mr. Yellow Sheet"), Charles F. O'Connor (as "A Song Plugger"), George Pembroke (as "Rufus Blindloss"), Paul Porter (as "Englehouse Verbena Coffypopper"), Samuel Schneider (as "B.J. Goldfoyle"), Mel Taylor (as "A.L. Fishel"), Charles Thompson (as "Ted Sensibull"), Jack Tyler (as "First Porter"), Flora Zabelle (as "Mrs. Van Allen"). Produced by Arthur Hopkins.
- (1933) Stage Play: Murder at the Vanities. Drama/mystery. Book by Earl Carroll and Rufus King. Additional dialogue by Eugene Conrad. Lyrics by Edward Heyman. Additional lyrics by Ned Washington, Paul Francis Webster and Herman Hupfeld. Music by Richard Meyers. Additional music by Victor Young, John J. Loeb, Herman Hupfeld and John W. Green. Musical Direction by Ray Kavanaugh. Music orchestrated by Edward Powell and Hans Spialek. Dialogue staged by Burk Symon. Dances by Chester Hale. Additional dance arrangements by Ned McGurn. Directed by Earl Carroll. New Amsterdam Theatre: (moved to The Majestic Theatre from 10 Mar 1934 to close): 12 Sep 1933- 10 Mar 1934 (207 performances). Cast: James Rennie, Sybil Aarons, Janet Abbott, Ednamay Adair, Jean Adair (as "Madame Tanqueray, Wardrobe Mistress"), Wiley Adams, Ernestine Anderson, Renee Armour, Charles Ashley, Olga Baklanova, William Balfour (as "Noomhouse, Night Watchman"), DeDon Blumier, Mickey Braatz, Eileen Burns, Marion Callahan, Earl Carroll (as Cameo appearance; his only time on stage as an actor), Eunice Coleman, Amby Costello, James Coughlin, Robert Cummings (as "Jack Purdy, Carpenter") [final Broadway role], Sylvia Curry, Dorothy Dawes, Nancy Dolan, Patsy Drew, Lew Eckles (as "Mr. Kerrick, Assistant District Attorney"), Caja Eric, Muriel Evans (as "[one of]The Most Beautiful Girls in the World"), William Fay, Betty French, Paul Gerrish, Dolores Grant, Flo Harris, Patricia Hayward, Ruth Hillard, Billy House (as "Walter Buck, Assistant Stage Manager"), Charles G. Johnson, Joyce Johnson, Constance Jordan, Elise Joyce, Marie Kahrkahn, Evelyn Kelly, Irene Kelly, Alice Kerwin, Frank Kingdon (as "Mr. Martin, the General Manager"), Evalyn Knapp (as "[one of] The Most Beautiful Girls in the World"), Ben Lackland (as "Billy Slade"), Al Lee, Sari Leone, Ben Lewis, Lewis & Van, Bela Lugosi (as "Siebenkase"), Mackie & Lavallie, Helen Madison, Francis X. Mahoney, June Mahr, Ruth Mann, Adeline Martin, Ruth Miller, Woods Miller, Villi Milli, Pauline Moore (as "Liane Ware, a Vanities Girl"), Kay Murphy, Martha Murray, Alice Nelson, Hazel Nevin, Gay Orlova, Anita Patterson, Dorothy Plant, Martha Pryor, Helena Rapport, Naomi Ray, F. Raymond, June Raymond, Lorna Rode, Elsie Rossi, Ann Rothey, Alma Saunders, Leone Sedalle, Marion Semler, Samuel Shaw, Phil Sheridan (as "Winchester"), Laurie Shevlin, Lisa Silbert, Francine Sinclaire, Anya Taranda, Walker Thornton, Edwin Vickery, Una Vilon, Emily Von Hoven, Beryl Wallace (as "Hope Carol, a Vanities Girl"), Ferne Ward, Marie Warren, Al Webster, Joan Webster, Barbara Winchester, Evelyn Witt. Produced by Earl Carroll. Note: Produced by Paramount as Murder at the Vanities (1934).
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