- (1899 - 1935) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1899) Stage Play: Cyrano de Bergerac. Comedy (revival).
- (1899) Stage Play: Beau Brummell (Revival). Written by Clyde Fitch. Garden Theatre: 20 Nov 1899- 13 Jan 1900 (unknown performances).
- (1900) Stage Play: Ben Hur. Drama. Based on the novel by Lew Wallace, as adapted by William Young. Directed by Ben Teal. Broadway Theatre: 3 Sep 1900- Oct 1900 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast included: William Farnum, Frank Kingdon (as "Balthasar"). Produced by Klaw & Erlanger.
- (1902) Stage Play: The Cavalier. Drama. Written by Paul Kester and George Middleton. From the book by George W. Cable. Directed by William Seymour. Criterion Theatre: 8 Dec 1902- Feb 1903 (closing date unknown/70 performances). Cast: Chester Beecroft, Charles H. Bradshaw, Frederick Burt, Thomas L. Coleman, Morgan Coman, Edgar L. Davenport, Clarence Handyside, Frank Kingdon, Kate Lester, William Lewers (as "Lt. Edgar Perry"), Julia Marlowe (as "Charlotte Durand"), Olive Oliver, Frank Reicher, Gwendolyn Valentine, Nella Webb, Kathryn Wilson [credited as Katherine Wilson], Frank Worthing. Produced by Charles B. Dillingham [earliest Broadway credit].
- (1903) Stage Play: The Little Princess. Drama. Written by Mrs. Frances Hodgson Burnett. Directed by Francis Neilson. Criterion Theatre (moved to The Savoy Theatre from 16 Feb 1903 to close): 14 Jan 1903- Feb 1903 (closing date unknown/34 performances). Cast: Adelaide Alexander, Maise Bancker, Margery Black, Natalie Black, Enidene Booth, Mary Burroughs, Pauline Chase, Lillian Claire, Thomas L. Coleman, Leonie D'Armon, Loraine Frost, Master Donald Gallaher, Louise Galloway, Linnie Ruth Gee, Mabel Gibson, Clarence Handysides, Millie James, Frank Kingdon, Nellie Kirby, Helen Larkin, Mamie McManus, Mildred Morris, Beryl Morse, Frederic Murphy, Phyllis Phillips, Frank Reicher, May Davenport Seymour, Edna Hall Smith, Edith Storey, Mabel Taliaferro, Helen Tracy, Eugenie Woodward. Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1904) Stage Play: Ivan the Terrible. Tragedy. Written by Aleksei Tolstoy. Translated by Mme. S.R. DeMeissner. New Amersterdam Theatre: 1 Mar 1904- Mar 1904 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: A.G. Andrews, Vivian Bernard, Ludwig Brunswick, Hamilton Coleman, Ida Conquest, Laura Eyre, Edward Fitzgerald, Arthur Forrest, A.E. Greenaway, Mona Harrison, H. Hatfield, Alma Hathaway, Leslie Kenyon, Frank Kingdon, Henri Laurent, Richard Mansfield, Francis McGinn, Adelaide Nowak, Olive Oliver, W.T. Patron, Marcel Scrace, William Sorelle, Milano Cary Tilden, Ernest C. Warde, Henry Wenman. Produced by Richard Mansfield.
- (1904) Stage Play: Romeo and Juliet. Tragedy.
- (1907) Stage Play: Peer Gynt. Drama. Written by Henrik Ibsen. Translated by William Archer and Charles Archer. New Amsterdam Theatre: 25 Feb 1907- 23 Mar 1907 (22 performances). Cast: David T. Arrey, Vivian Bernard, James L. Carhart, Sydney Cowell, Ruby Craven, Ory Diamond, Emma Dunn (as "Aase, a Peasant Widow"), Arthur Forrest, Gertrude Gheen, Hugh Hancock, Wallie Howe, Isabel Howell, Frank Kingdon, Adele Klaer, Marguerite Lindsay, Evelyn Loomis, Cecil Magnus, Richard Mansfield (as "Peer Gynt, Her Son"), Marc McDermott, George McDonald, Gordon Mendelssohn, James Newman, Adelaide Nowak (as "Solveig"), Alice Parks Warren, Irene Prahar (as "Anitra"), Frank Reynolds, Arthur Row, S.B. Stoddard, Olive Temple, Louis Thomas, Lawrence C. Toole, Muriel Walling, Ernest C. Warde, Henry Wenman. Produced by Richard Mansfield Repertory.
- (1909) Stage Play: The Revellers. Comedy. Written by Charles Richman. Maxine Elliot's Theatre: 7 Sep 1909- Sep 1909 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Charles Richman, Harriet Anderson, William 'Stage' Boyd, Ida Conquest, Frank De Kum, Vera Finlay, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Frank Kingdon, Thais Lawton, W.C. Masson, Reeva May, May McKenzie, George Nash, Florence Robertson, Jane Rogers, Mabel Rowland, Alma Sedley. Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1910) Stage Play: Alias Jimmy Valentine. Melodrama. Written by Paul Armstrong. Based on "A Retrieved Reformation" by O. Henry. Wallack's Theatre: 21 Jan 1910- Jun 1910 (155 performances). Cast: Edward Bayes (as "Blinky Davis"), Sallie Bergman (as "Mrs. Moore"), Albert Elliott (as "Smith"), Edmund Eton (as "Bill Avery"), Donald Gallaher (as "Robby"), Maude Turner Gordon (as "Mrs. Webster"), Charles E. Graham (as "Dick the Rat"), Harold Hartsell (as "Handler"), Frank Kingdon (as "Robert Fay, Lieut. Gov. of New York"), Louden McCormick (as "Blickendolfenbach"), Frank Monroe (as "Doyle"), Alma Sedley (as "Kitty Lane"), Laurette Taylor (as "Rose Lane"), Joseph Tuohy (as "Red Joclyn"), H.B. Warner (as "Lee Randall"), James E. Wilson (as "William Lane"). Produced by Liebler & Co. Note: Filmed by Peerless Productions (distributed by World Film Corp.) as Alias Jimmy Valentine (1915).
- (1915) Stage Play: Rolling Stones. Written by Edgar Selwyn. Harris Theatre: 17 Aug 1915- Nov 1915 (closing date unknown/115 performances). Cast included: Arthur Aylesworth, Harry Bradley, Harrison Ford, Frank Kingdon, Fred Malcolm, Charles Ruggles.
- (1916) Stage Play: The Basker. Written by Clifford Mills. Empire Theatre: 30 Oct 1916- Dec 1916 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Cynthia Brooke, Alice Gordon, Muriel Martin Harvey, James Kearney, Frank Kingdon, Florence Le Clercq, Marguerite Leslie, Noel Leslie, Edward Lester, Cyril Maude, Madeline Meredith, Maud Milton, Edgar Norton, Hassard Short.
- (1917) Stage Play: The Brat. Written by Maude Fulton. Directed by Franklin Underwood and Oliver Morosco. Harris Theatre: 5 Mar 1917- Jul 1917 (closing date unknown/136 performances). Cast: John Findlay, Maude Fulton, Charlotte Ives, Frank Kingdon, Edmund Lowe, Gertrude Maitland [Broadway debut], Isabel O'Madigan, Lewis Stone, Gertrude Workman. Produced by Oliver Morosco.
- (1918) Stage Play: The Melting of Molly. Musical comedy. Music by Sigmund Romberg. Book by Maria Thompson Davies. Lyrics by Cyrus Wood. Musical adaptation by Edgar Smith. Musical Director: Victor Baravalle. Additional lyrics by Augustus Barratt. Choreographed by Allan K. Foster. Production Supervised by J.J. Shubert. Directed by Oscar Eagle. Broadhurst Theatre: 30 Dec 1918- 15 Mar 1919 (88 performances). Cast: Carolyn Arnold (as "Ensemble"), George Baker (as "Ensemble"), Robert Bentley (as "Alfred Bennett"), Toots Bryce (as "Ensemble"), Betty Carter (as "Miss Proctor"), Dorothy Chappell (as "Ensemble"), Ingeborg Christensen (as "Ensemble"), Dorothy Clifton (as "Ensemble"), Mrs. Charles G. Craig (as "Judy"), Helen Cressman (as "Ensemble"), Farrell Fitzpatrick (as "Ensemble"), Gloria Goodwin (as "Dot Carter"), Maude Turner Gordon (as "Mrs. Carter"), Clarence Hansen (as "Ensemble"), Virginia Huntington (as "Ensemble"), Frank Kingdon (as "Judge Wade"), Regina Lorraine (as "Ensemble"), Ted Lorraine (as "Tom Morgan"), Isabelle Lowe (as "Molly Carter"), Alison McBain (as "Miss Chester"), May McHale (as "Ensemble"), Gladys Miller (as "Miss Pearl"), Cecilia North (as "Ensemble"), Edgar Norton (as "St. Clair McTabb"), Marjorie Dunbar Pringle (as "Ethel Morgan"), Charles Purcell (as "John Moore/Doctor Moore"), Mabel Roberts (as "Ensemble"), Vera Roehm (as "Athletic Instructor"), George Schall (as "Ensemble"), Flo Summerville (as "Ensemble"), Ann Swan (as "Ensemble"), George S. Trimble (as "Guest"), Gladys Walton (as "Miss Pierce"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1920) Stage Play: The Letter of the Law. Drama. Adapted from "La Robe Rouge" by Eugene Brieux. Criterion Theatre: 34 Feb 1920- Jul 1920 (closing date unknown/83 performances). Cast: Lionel Barrymore (as "Mouzon"), Ada Boshell, Charles F. Coghlan, Clarence Derwent (as "La Bouzule"), Charles N. Greene, James Hagen, Leona Hogarth, Lionel Hogarth (as "Attorney General of France"), Maud Hosford (as "Madame Bunerat") [final Broadway role], Wallace Jackson, Frank Kingdon (as "Mondoubleau"), Jacob Kingsberry, Goldwin Patten, Doris Rankin, Zeffie Tilbury, Herbert Vance, Josephine Wehn, Charles White, Russ Whytal (as "Vagret"), Louis Wolheim (as "Bridet"). Produced by John D. Williams.
- (1920) Stage Play: Americans in France. Comedy. As "M. Charvet."
- (1920) Stage Play: The Unwritten Chapter. Drama. Written by Samuel Shipman and Victor Victor. Directed by Robert Milton. Astor Theatre: 11 Oct 1920- Nov 1920 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Robert Barrat (as "Frank Salomon"), Alma Belwin, Clarence Derwent (as "Benjamin Jacobs"), Carl Dietz, Hubert Druce (as "General Howe"), Mattie Ferguson, Leo Frankl (as "Samuel Judah"), Herman Gerold, Arleen Hackett, Louis Hector (as "Capt. Geoffrey Warren"), Paul Irving, Ryder Keane, Frank Kingdon (as "Robert M. Harrington, Sr."), Howard Lang, Louis Mann (as "Haym Salomon"), Mortimer Martini, Harry C. Power, Bernard Reinold, Gerald Rogers, Al Sincoff, Alex Tenenholtz, Lucile Watson. Produced by A.H. Woods.
- (1920) Stage Play: Sally. Musical comedy. Music: Jerome Kern, Victor Herbert. Book by Guy Bolton. Lyrics: Clifford Grey, P.G. Wodehouse. Scenic Design by Joseph Urban. Costume Design by Alice O'Neil. Directed by Edward Royce. New Amsterdam Theatre: 21 Dec 1920- 22 Apr 1922 (561 performances). Cast: Leon Errol (as "Connie/A Waiter at the Alley Inn/ Duke of Czechogovinio"), Marilyn Miller (as "Sally of the Alley/A Foundling/Mme. Nookerova/A Wild Rose/Premiere Star of the Follies"), Baby Dot, Alice Akers, Frank Bages, Jack Barker, Earl Barroy, Minerva Bartz, Wade Boothe, Alma Braham, Walter Catlett (as "Otis Hooper, A Theatrical Agent"), Agatha DeBussy, Barbara Dean, Dolores, Emily Drange, Dorothy Fenron, Irving Fisher, Miss Freeland, Mary Hay, Alfred P. James, Alta King, Frank Kingdon (as "Richard Farquar"), Sylvia Kingsley, Miss Maide, Mary McDonald, Gladys Montgomery, Rita Murphy, Henrietta Orville, Virginia Otis, Jacques Rebiroff, Stanley Ridges (as "Jimmie Spelvin"), Phil Ryley, Sonia Shand, Billie Stanfield, Dolly Tigue, Shirley Vernon, Vivian Vernon, Blossom Vreeland, Betty Williams. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- (1923) Stage Play: Sally. Musical comedy [Return engagement]. Music by Jerome Kern and Victor Herbert. Book by Guy Bolton. Lyrics by Clifford Grey. Lyrics for "Look For the Silver Lining" by Buddy G. DeSylva. Directed by Edward Royce. New Amsterdam Theatre: 17 Sep 1923- 6 Oct 1923 (24 performances). Cast: Leon Errol (as "Connie, A Waiter at the Alley Inn/Duke of Czechogovinio"), Marilynn Miller (as "Sally of the Alley, A Foundling/Mme. Nookerova, A Wild Rose"), Walter Catlett (as "Otis Hooper, A Theatrical Agent"), Mae Daw (as "Miss Vanderbilt, Foundling"), Agatha Debussy (as "Miss New York, A Niece/Agatha"), Bernardine DeGraves (as "Miss Worth, Foundling"), Bobby Deane (as "Miss Rhinelander, Foundling"), Floyd English (as "Jimmie Spelvin"), Felice (as "Mrs. Ten Broek, A Settlement Worker/The Bat"), Paul Frawley (as "Blair Farquar, An Only Son"), Joan Gardner (as "Helen"), Alfred P. James (as "Pops, Proprietor of the Alley Inn, New York"), Ethel Kelly (as "Miss Bryant, Foundling"), Frank Kingdon (as "Richard Farquar"), Kathlene Martyn (as "Rosalind Rafferty, A Manicurist/Mme. Nookerova's Maid"), Mary McDonald (as "Beatrice"), Jacques Rabiroff (as "Sascha, Violinist at the Alley Inn"), Virginia Ray (as "Virginia"), Phil Ryley (as "The Admiral Travers, A Gay One"), Pauline Schaefer (as "Miss Audubon, Foundling"), Billie Stanfield (as "Miss Bowling Green/Foundling"), Vivian Vernon (as "Alta"), Betty Williams (as "Winifred"). Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- (1924) Stage Play: Annie Dear. Musical comedy. Music by Clare Kummer. Material by Clare Kummer. Lyrics by Clare Kummer. Additional music by Sigmund Romberg. Featuring songs by Jean Schwartz. Additional lyrics by Clifford Grey. Musical Director: Gus Salzer. Directed by Edward Royce. Times Square Theatre: 4 Nov 1924- 31 Jan 1925 (103 performances). Cast: Edward Allan, Mary Almonti, Fred Arnold, Abner Barnhart, Kathleen Barrow, Jason Bauer, Spencer Bentley, Marguerite Boatwright, Dorothy Brown, Billie Burke (as "Annie Leigh"), John Byam, Spencer Charters (as "James Ludgate"), Joan Clement, Phyllis Cleveland, Gladys Coburn, Virginia Crane, Lawrence Crowe, Easter and Hazleton, Pearl Eaton, George Ferguson, Gavin Gordon, Florentine Gosnova, Alexander Gray, Marion Green, Evelyn Grieg, Ned Hamlin, Harold Hennessy, Barton Hepburn, Helen Herendeen, Edna Johnson, Frank Kingdon (as "Mr. Gosling"), Norman Knox, Mary Lawler, Nyo Lee, Rona Lee, Catherine Littlefield, William May, Gayle Mays, Gertrude McDonald, Lelia McGuire, Marjorie Peterson, Anastasia Reilly, Katherine Sacker, Charles Schenck, James Shelton, Russell Smith, Peggy Steele, Ernest Truex (as "George Wimbledon"), May Vokes (as "Lottie"), Bobby Watson, Jack Whiting, Alfred Wyart. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- (1926) Stage Play: The Blonde Sinner. Farce/musical. Written by Leon De Costa. Directed by Edwin Vail. Cort Theatre: 14 Jul 1926- Dec 1926 (closing date unknown/173 performance). Cast: Ralph Bunker (as "George Hemmingworth"), Harold De Becker (as "Jack Conelly"), Majorie Gateson (as "Ida"), Matt Hanley (as "Mike Reilly"), Clifford Heckinger (as "Adonis Mulberry"), Frank Kingdon (as "Alexander Homer"), Magy Lane (as "Charleston Maid"), Enid Markey (as "Betty Hemmingworth"), Russell Morrison (as "Alfred Bird"), Howard St. John (as "James Manton") [Broadway debut], Ruth Stevens. Produced by Musicomedies Inc.
- (1926) Stage Play: Yellow. Melodrama. Written by Margaret Vernon. Directed by John Meehan. National Theatre: 21 Sep 1926- Jan 1927 (closing date unknown/135 performances). Cast included: Joseph Guthrie, Frank Kingdon (as "Thomas W. Sayre"), Chester Morris, Jose Rivas, Spencer Tracy, Marjorie Wood.
- (1927) Stage Play: Sidewalks of New York. Musical comedy. Music by Eddie Dowling and James F. Hanley. Book by Eddie Dowling and James F. Hanley. Lyrics by Eddie Dowling and James F. Hanley. Musical Director: Arthur Lange. Featuring songs by C.B. Lawlor. Featuring songs with lyrics by J.W. Blake. Musical Staging by Earl Lindsay. Directed by Edgar J. MacGregor. Knickerbocker Theatre: 3 Oct 1927- 7 Jan 1928 (112 performances). Cast included: Gladys Ahern, Will Ahern, John Alexander, Irving Beaman, Dick Bennett, Pearl Bradley, Sybil Bursk, George Byrne, Alex Calm, Walter Carson, Virginia Clark, Hal Clovis, Ray Dooley, Emil Cote, Charles Dale, Charles Davis, Ray Dooley, Henry Dowling, Jeanne Edwards, Vance Elliott, Barney Fagan, Evelyn Farrell, Adeline Foley, Carl Francis, Charles Gale, Jack Gargin, Dolly Gilbet, Marjorie Gilbet, Melvin Halpern, Winifred Harris, Hal Hennessey, Kathryn Hereford, Lester Hope, Ruby Keeler, Dick Keene, Frank Kingdon, Donald Lee, Helen MacDonald, Edward Marshall, Edward Maurelli, Bob Maxwell, Stanley McClelland, Sam Morton, Elizabeth Murray, George Murray, Carolyn Nolte, Peter Nugent, Fiske O'Hara, Billy O'Rorke, Cecil Owen, Elva Pomfret, George Rand, Anna Rex, Phyllis Reynolds, Josephine Sabel, Edward Shanault, Billy Shepperd, Bobby Shields, Harry Short, Francis X. Sinnott, Joe Smith, Louise Stark, Ward Tallman, T.F. Thomas, Jim Thornton, Peggy Timmons, Lorraine Webb, Virginia Webb, Paul A. Weber, Gene West, Fred Wilson, Joe Wilson, Woodey Lee Wilson, Wanda Woods, Betty Wright, Ross Wright. Produced by Charles B. Dillingham.
- (1929) Stage Play: Follow Thru. Musical comedy. Book by Laurence Schwab and Buddy G. DeSylva. Music by Ray Henderson. Lyrics by Lew Brown and Buddy G. DeSylva. Scenic Design by Donald Oenslager. Costume Design by Kiviette. Musical Numbers Staged by Bobby Connolly. Book Directed by Edgar J. MacGregor. Chanin's 46th Street Theatre: 9 Jan 1929- 21 Dec 1929 (401 performances). Cast: Arthur Aylesworth (as "Mac" Moore, a golf professional"), Margaret Banks (as "Lady"), John Barker (as "Jerry Downs, a young golf champion"), Jane Brown (as "Lady"), Arthur Bryan (as "Country Club Boy"), Hilda Burkhart (as "Lady"), Madeline Cameron (as "Ruth Van Horn, an amateur golf champion"), Edith Campbell (as "Mrs. Bascomb, the president's wife"), Dorothy Christy [credited as Dorothy Christie] (as "Olive") [final Broadway role], Katherine Cornell [Not the actress of the 1930s and 1940s] (as "Lady"), Arthur Craig (as "Gentleman"), W.E. Critzer (as "Country Club Boy"), Dorothy Day (as "Lady"), Zilpha De Witt (as "Lady"), Irene Delroy (as "Lora Moore, Mac's daughter"), Dody Donnelly (as "Lady"), Carrick Douglas (as "Country Club Boy"), Al Downing (as "Mr. Manning"), Dorothea Dunn (as "Lady"), Christine Ecklund (as "Lady"), Oscar Ellinger (as "Country Club Boy"), Joseph Evans (as "Gentleman"), Phil Farley (as "Gentleman"), Yvonne Grey (as "Glenna"), Jack Haley (as "Jack Martin"), Irene Hamlin (as "Lady"), John Hammond (as "Country Club Boy"), Paul Howard (as "Steve"), Claire Joyce (as "Lady"), Marguerite Kennedy (as "Lady"), Ruth Kent (as "Lady"), Philip King (as "Gentleman"), Frank Kingdon (as "Martin Bascomb, President of the Bound Brook Country Club"), Fred Kuhnly (as "Country Club Boy"), Constance Lane (as "Virginia"), Elaine Lank (as "Lady"), Ethel Lawrence (as "Lady"), Jack Lawrence (as "Country Club Boy"), Margaret Lee (as "Babs Bascomb, Martin's fifteen-year-old daughter"), Ann Lomax (as "Lady"), Bodil Lund (as "Lady"), Jocelyn Lyle (as "Lady"), Ned Lynn (as "Gentleman"), Paul Mann (as "Gentleman"), John McCahill (as "Gentleman"), Gordon Merrick (as "Gentleman"), Harry Moore (as "Gentleman"), Fred Murray (as "Gentleman"), Richard Neely (as "Gentleman"), Mortimer O'Brien (as "Gentleman"), Zelma O'Neal (as "Angie Howard, Lora's girl-friend"), Anita Pam (as "Lady"), Sherry Pelham (as "Cynthia/Lady"), Eleanor Powell (as "Molly"), Samuel Quinn (as "Gentleman"), Richard Renaud (as "Gentleman"), Herbert Rothwell (as Gentleman"), William Sahner (as "Gentleman"), John Sheehan (as "J.C. Effingham, a new member"), Maurice Siegel (as "Country Club Boy"), Mildred Stevens (as "Lady"), Drucilla Strain (as "Lady"), Don Tomkins (as Thomas Darcy "Dinty" Moore, Mac's sixteen-year-old son"), Renee Vilon (as "Lady"), Irene Warner (as "Lady"), Mildred Webb (as "Lady") [Broadway debut], Arlyne White (as "Lady"), Jerry White (as "Gentleman"), Minerva Wilson (as "Lady"). Produced by Laurence Schwab and Frank Mandel. Note: This was a major hit of the 1929 theatrical season and was closed early due to the effects of the 1929 stock market crash.
- (1931) Stage Play: Reunion in Vienna. Comedy. Written by Robert E. Sherwood. Directed by Worthington Miner. Martin Beck Theatre: 16 Nov 1931- Jul 1932 (closing date unknown/264 performances). Cast: Lynn Fontanne (as "Elena"), Alfred Lunt (as "Rudolph Maximillian von Hapsburg"), Joseph Allen Sr. (as "Chef"), Joseph Allenton, Hendrik Booraem, Virginia Chauvenet, Eduardo Ciannelli (as "Poffy"), Phyllis Connard, Charles Douglass, Edward Fielding, Mary Gildia (as "Kathie"), Frank Kingdon (as "General Hoetzler"), Bjorn Koefoed, Ben Kranz, George Lewis, Bela Lublov, Owen Meech, Lloyd Nolan (as "Emil"), William R. Randall, Otis Sheridan, Murray Stevens, Noel Taylor, Cynthia Townsend, Henry Travers (as "Herr Krug"), Minor Watson (as "Dr. Anton Krug"), Justina Wayne, Helen Westley (as "Frau Lucher"), Stanley Wood. Produced by The Theatre Guild (Theresa Helburn, Lawrence Langner: Administrative Directors)
- (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, 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).
- (1934) Stage Play: A Sleeping Clergyman. Written by James Bridie. Directed by Philip Moeller. Guild Theatre: 8 Oct 1934- Nov 1934 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: Glenn Anders (as "Charles Cameron, the first/Charles Cameron, the second"), Florence Britton (as "Lady Katherine Helliwell"), Donald Campbell (as "A Constable"), J. Colville Dunn (as "Dr. Cooper"), J. Malcolm Dunn (as "Donovan"), Gertrude Flynn (as "Cousin Minnie"), Phoebe Gilbert, Ruth Gordon (as "Harriet Marshall/Wilhelmina Cameron/Hope Cameron"), Robert Haig (as "A Medical Student"), Frank Henderson, Alice John (as "Aunt Walker"), Harry Joyner (as "Wilkinson"), A.P. Kaye (as "Sir Douglas Todd Walker"), Frank Kingdon (as "A Sleeping Clergyman"), Walter Lawrence (as "A Sergeant"), Harry Mestayer (as "Dr. Coutts"), Theodore Newton (as "John Hannah"), Malcolm Soltan, John Taylor, Ernest Thesiger (as "Dr. William Marshall"), Sheila Trent (as "A Prostitute"), Elizabeth Valentine, Charlotte Walker (as "Lady Todd Walker"), Helen Westley (as "Mrs. Elspeth Hannah"). Produced by The Theatre Guild.
- (1935) Stage Play: Living Dangerously. Drama. Written by Reginald Simpson and Frank Gregory. Directed by Harry Wagstaff Gribble. Morosco Theatre: 12 Jan 1935- Jan 1935 (closing date unknown/9 performances). Cast: Frank Kingdon (as "Dr. Lingard").
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content