- (1921 - 1934) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1921) Stage Play: Ziegfeld Follies of 1921. Musical revue. Dialogue by Channing Pollock, Willard Mack and Ralph Spence. Lyrics by Gene Buck and Buddy G. DeSylva. Music by Victor Herbert, Rudolf Friml and Dave Stamper. Musical Direction by Frank Tours. Music orchestrated by Maurice De Packh and Stephen Jones. Featuring songs with lyrics by Henry Creamer, J. Turner Layton, Grant Clarke, James F. Hanley, Channing Pollock, Blanche Merrill, Leo Edwards, Ballard MacDonald, Harry Carroll, Albert Willemetz, Jacques Charles, Buddy G. DeSylva, Gus Mueller, Buster Johnson, Andrew Sterling, Harry von Tilzer and Edward P Moran. Featuring songs by Elsie White and Henry Busse. Directed by Edward Royce. Globe Theatre: 21 Jun 1921- 1 Oct 1921 (119 performances). Cast: Marie Astrova, Miss Barnett, Emma Beresbach, Ethel Blaire, Eva Brady, Fanny Brice (as "Principal"), Evelyn Campbell, Betty Carsdale, Margery Chapin, Hazel Chappel, Miss Chase, John Clarke, Darling Twins, Peggy Davis, Ray Dooley, Phil Dwyer, Charles Eaton, Mary Eaton (as "Principal"), Marguerite Falconer, W.C. Fields (as "Principal" and "M. Le Duc de Chateau Briand"), Consuelo Flowerton [Broadway debut], Edna French, Pearl Germonde, Diana Gordon, Raymond Hitchcock, Herbert Hoey, Miss Hughes, Helen Hunt, Albert Innis, Frank Innis, Keene Twins, Miss Leigh, Mary Lewis, Doris Lloyd, Gladys Loftus, Madelyn Lombard, Miss Lomp, Mandal Brothers, Irene Marcellus, Albertine Marlowe, Vera Michelena, Mary Milburn, Beatrice Milner, Geneva Mitchell, Mlle. Mitti, Madilyn Morrissey, Florence O'Denishawn, Charles O'Donnell, Jessie Reed, Anastasia Reilly, Frances Reveaux, Miss Rolph, Gertrude Seldon, Peggy Stohl, Janet Stone, Avonne Taylor, M. Tillio, Van and Schenck, Edna Wheaton, Helen Lee Worthing. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr..
- (1921) Stage Play: Good Morning Dearie. Musical comedy.
- (1922) Stage Play: Queen O' Hearts. Musical comedy.
- (1929) Stage Play: Remote Control. Drama. Directed and co-written by Clyde North. Co-written by Albert C. Fuller and Jack T. Nelson. 48th Street Theatre: 10 Sep 1929- Nov 1929 (closing date unknown/79 performances). Cast: Dave Abrams, Patricia Barclay, Louise Barrett, Frank Beaston, Audrey Berry, Hobart Cavanaugh, Polly Clarke, Alice Davenport, Consuelo Flowerton, William Foran, William Honohan, Raleigh Kennedy, Donald Kirke, George Leach, Mimi Lehman, Lawrence Leslie, George Lessey (as "W.L. Oakwood"), Michael Markham, James V. Nolan, Claire Nolte, Al Ochs (as "Professor Murrey"), Arthur Pierson, Edward Van Sloan (as "Doctor A.P. Workman"), Harold Woolf. Produced by A.L. Jones and Morris Green. Note: Produced as a William Haines vehicle by MGM as Remote Control (1930) (released 15 Nov 1930). The characters' names were altered completely for the film and re-written as a comedy.
- (1930) Stage Play: Lysistrata. Comedy (revival).
- (1931) Stage Play: An American Tragedy, Drama (revival). Written by Patrick Kearney. Based on the novel by Theodore Dreiser. Directed by George Greenberg. Waldorf Theatre: 20 Feb 1931- Jun 1931 (closing date unknown/137 performances). Cast: William Balfour (as "Judge Oberwaltzer/Reverend MacMillan"), Raymond Barrett (as "Samuel Griffiths"), Richard Barrow (as "Asa Griffiths/Dr. Glenn"), Marjorie Brown (as "Hester Griffiths"), Marie Burke (as "Mrs. Samuel Griffiths"), Walter Cartwright (as "Orville Mason"), Joseph Eggenton (as "Alvin Belknap"), Bert Emmors (as "Clerk of the Court"), Robert Emory (as "Bailiff/Second Guard"), Consuelo Flowerton (as "A Girl/Jill Trumbull"), Dorothy Garnier (as "Bella Griffiths"), Roy Hargrave (as "Clyde Griffiths"), Lora Hays (as "A Girl/Bertine Cranston"), Hilton Josephs (as "A Young Tramp/A Guard"), Joseph Lighthill (as "Foreman of the Jury/A Deputy Sheriff"), Irvin Norvig (as "Harley Baggott"), Ruth Nugent (as "Roberta Alden"), Anthony Pawley (as "Gilbert Griffiths"), Gertrude Ritchie (as "Elvira Griffiths/Mrs. Peyton/Mrs. Asa Griffiths"), Tom Rutherfurd (as "A Young Man/Stuart Finchley"), Juliana Taberna (as "Another Girl"), Philip Van Zant (as "Ruben Jephson"), Dorothy Watson (as "Sondra Finchley"), Harry Watts (as "Third Guard"), Bert Wilcox (as "Whiggam/An Innkeeper/Burton Burleigh"). Produced by Jules J. Leventhal. Note: Filmed by Paramount Pictures as An American Tragedy (1931).
- (1931) Stage Play: Six Characters in Search of an Author. Comedy (revival). Written by Luigi Pirandello. Translated by Edward Storer. Directed by William Schorr [earliest Broadway credit]. Bijou Theatre: 15 Apr 1931- Apr 1931 (closing date unknown/13 performances). Cast: John Brown (as "The Stage Manager"), Kate Byron (as "The Ingenue"), Conrad Cantzen [credited as Conrad Catsen] (as "The Second Man"), Walter Connolly (as "The Manager"), Clinton Corwin (as "The Property Man"), Fanny Davenport (as "The Third Actress"), Consuelo Flowerton (as "The Second Woman"), May Gerald (as "The Character Woman"), Bebe Gilbert (as "The Little Girl"), Paul Guilfoyle (as "The Son"), Kirke Lucas (as "The Juvenile"), Louis Lytten (as "The Character Actor"), William Millman [credited as L'Estrange Millman] (as "The Leading Man"), Eleanor Phelps (as "The Stepdaughter"), Eugene Powers (as "The Father"), Buddy Proctor (as "The Boy"), Doris Rankin (as "The Mother"), Ina Rorke (as "Mme. Pace"), Gladys Wilson (as "The Leading Lady") [final Broadway role]. Produced by Tom Van Dycke.
- (1931) Stage Play: The Sex Fable. Comedy. Written by 'Edouard Bourdet'. English text by Jane Hinton. Directed by Gilbert Miller. Henry Miller's Theatre: 20 Oct 1931- Nov 1931 (closing date unknown/33 performances). Cast: Wylie Adams (as "An American Man"), Lora Baxter (as "Dorothy Freeman") [Broadway debut], Mrs. Patrick Campbell (as "Countess Polaki"), Mary Chippendale (as "Louise"), Rafael Corio (as "Carlos Pinto"), Margaret Dale (as "Clarisse Leroy-Gomez"), Helena D'Algy (as "Christina Leroy-Gomez"), Audrey Davis (as "A Spanish Lady"), E.J. DeVarny (as "Jules"), Consuelo Flowerton (as "2nd American Girl"), Ernesto Guiterrez (as "A Spaniard"), Helen Haye (as "Isabelle Leroy-Gomez"), John Henry (as "2nd Maharajah"), William Horne (as "A Waiter"), Anthony Ireland (as "Philippe Leroy-Gomez"), Jack Kilfeather (as "A Page"), Lita Lopez (as "Inez"), Leona Maricle (as "Lili Leroy-Gomez"), Morris Morrison (as "Another Waiter"), W. Wana Singh (as "1st Maharajah"), Ronald Squire (as "Antoine"), Anne Teeman (as "Nicole Martin"), Allen Tower (as "Manuel Leroy-Gomez"), Constance Trevor (as "1st American Girl"), Joseph Walton (as "A Porter"), Derek Williams (as "Jimmy Leroy-Gomez"). Produced by Gilbert Miller. Note: Filmed as Weaker Sex (1933) [French production] and as Le sexe faible (1984) [French production].
- (1933) Stage Play: Let 'Em Eat Cake. Musical comedy. Book by George S. Kaufman and Morrie Ryskind. Lyrics by Ira Gershwin. Music by George Gershwin. Music orchestrated by Edward Powell. Musical Director: William Daly. Dances and ensembles by Eugene Van Grona and Ned McGurn. Scenic Design by Albert R. Johnson. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Imperial Theatre: 21 Oct 1933- 6 Jan 1934 (90 performances). Cast: Kay Adams, Ruth Adams, Florenz Ames (as "Gen. Adam Snookfield, U.S.A."), Kathleen Ayres, Peggy Bancroft, Bruce Barclay, Vivian Barry, Paul Brachard, Alice Burrage (as "Mrs. Gilhooley"), Robert Burton, Gordon Clark, Ray Clarke, Dudley Clements (as "Matthew Arnold Fulton"), Charles Conklin (as "Secretary/Men's Ensemble"), Tom Curley, Nonie Dale, Gail Darling, Bryan Davis, Alyce Downey, Leon Dunar, Enes Early, Vance Elliott (as "Prison Guard/Men's Ensemble"), Louise Estes, Charles Flower, Consuelo Flowerton, Michael Forbes, Olgene Foster, Charles Fowler, Frank Gagen, William Gaxton (as "John P. Wintergreen"), Dorothy Graves, Yvonne Gray, Peggy Green, David Gross, Ethel Hampton, Evelyn Hannons, Tom Harris, Pat Hastings, Don Hudson, Viola Hunter, Amalie Ideal, Phil King, George Kirk (as "Lieutenant"), Terry Lawlor (as "Customer/Lady's Ensemble"), David Lawrence, Kay Lazell, Al LeFebevre, Betty Lee, Martin Leroy, Robert Lewis (as "Dignitary/Men's Ensemble"), Philip Loeb (as "Kruger"), Ed Loud, George E. Mack (as "Sen. Robert E. Lyons"), Mary Jo Matthews (as "Mrs. Fulton"), Harold Moffet (as "Francis X. Gilhooley"), Victor Moore (as "Alexander Throttlebottom"), Lois Moran (as "Mary Wintergreen"), Fred Nay, Richard Neely, Hazzard Newberry, Ruth Porter, Victor Pullman (as "Men's Ensemble"), Abe Reynolds (as "Louis Lippman"), Ralph Riggs (as "Chief Justice of the Supreme Court/President of the Union League Club"), W. Francis Robertson, Edward H. Robins, Martin Sheppard, Grenna Sloane, Steward Steppler, Harold Sternberg, Baun Sturtz, Richard Temple, Morris Tepper, Martha Tibbetts, Norman Van Emburgh, John Walsh, Elinor Witte, Wanda Wood, Grace Worth, Jessica Worth. Produced by Sam Harris.
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