- (1914 - 1965) Active on Broadway in the following productions:
- (1914) Stage Play: Cordelia Blossom. Written by George Randolph Chester and Lillian Christy Chester. Gaiety Theatre: 26 Aug 1914- Sep 1914 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: Harry C. Browne, Harry Buchanan, Samuel J. Burton, Martin J. Cody, Charles Dodsworth, Louise Dresser, Jane Grey, Marion Kerby, Lillian Lawrence, Burr McIntosh, Grace Morrissey, William Phelps, Edward Poland, Jean Temple, Howard Truesdell, Raymond Walburn [Broadway debut]. Produced by Klaw & Erlanger.
- (1922) Stage Play: Manhattan. Comedy. Written by Leighton Osmun and Henry Hull. Directed by John Cromwell. Playhouse Theatre: 15 Aug 1922- Oct 1922 (closing date unknown/86 performances). Cast: Mary Blair (as "Paget"), Hubert Druce, Helen Gahagan, Albert Gran, Greta Kemble-Cooper, Marguerite Maxwell, William Sams, Hilda Spong (as "Mrs. Van Norman"), Puritan Townsend, Norman Trevor, Raymond Walburn (as "Skiddy Stillman"). Produced by John Cromwell.
- (1922) Stage Play: The Awful Truth. Comedy. Written by Arthur Richman. Henry Miller's Theatre: 18 Sep 1922- Jan 1923 (closing date unknown/144 performances). Cast: Kyra Alanova, George K. Barraud, Ina Claire (as "Lucy Warriner"), Paul Harvey (as "Daniel Leeson"), Louise MacKintosh, Bruce McRae, Lewis A. Sealy, Raymond Walburn (as "Rufus Kempster"), Cora Witherspoon (as "Josephine Trent"). Produced by Charles Frohman, Inc.
- (1926) Stage Play: If I Was Rich. Written by William Anthony McGuire. Directed by William Anthony McGuire. Mansfield Theatre: 2 Sep 1926- Nov 1926 (closing date unknown/92 performances). Cast: Joseph Baird (as "Richard McDermott"), G.D. Byron, Charles Dow Clark, Ruth Donnelly (as "Elizabeth McCue"), John T. Doyle, Dorothy Fenron, Howard Hull Gibson (as "Burke"), Joseph Kilgour (as "R. Murray Pembrook"), Joe Laurie, Fred Irving Lewis, Mildred Lillard, May McCabe, Lu McGuire, Mildred McLeod, Al Ochs (as "Henry King"), Vola Price, Isabel Randolph, Raymond Walburn (as "William Dunroy"). Produced by William Anthony McGuire.
- (1927) Stage Play: Sinner. Comedy. Written by Thompson Buchanan. Directed by Alan Dinehart. Klaw Theatre: 7 Feb 1927- May 1927 (128 performances). Cast: Vera Allen (as "Estelle Pemberton"), Alan Dinehart (as "Tom Page"), Claiborne Foster (as "Cynthia Pemberton"), Geoffrey Harwood (as "Billy Lawrence"), Hugh Huntley (as "Jimmy La Farge"), Daniel Kelly (as "Ebenezer Standish"), Merle Maddern (as "Mrs. John Pemberton Sr."), William Stone, Richard Temple (as "John Pemberton Sr."), Raymond Walburn (as "John Pemberton Jr."). Produced by Richard Herndon. Produced by arrangement with W. Herbert Adams.
- (1927) Stage Play: The Triumphant Bachelor. Written by Owen Davis. Directed by David Burton. Biltmore Theatre: 15 Sep 1927- Sep 1927 (closing date unknown/12 performances). Cast: Robert Ames (as "Jack Sylvester"), Charles Ashley, Harold Hendee (as "David Emery") [final Broadway role], Mona Kingsley (as "Lydia Farley"), Elsie Lawson, Dorothy Libaire, Mildred MacLeod, Olive May, Anne Morrison, George Roberts, Richard Sterling (as "Ben Brittan"), Dorothy Tree (as "Maid at Mrs. Calvert's"), Raymond Walburn (as "Bob Farley"). Produced by David Burton.
- (1927) Stage Play: Take My Advice. Comedy. Written by Elliott Nugent and J.C. Nugent. Belmont Theatre: 1 Nov 1927- Dec 1927 (closing date unknown/39 performances). Cast: Lawrence Grattan (as "John Weaver"), Gene Raymond (as "As "Bud Weaver") [credited as Raymond Guion], Lucia Moore (as "Mrs. Weaver"), Ralph Morgan (as "Bradley Clement"), Mary Stills, Vivian Tobin (as "Ann Weaver"), Raymond Walburn (as "Jim Thayer"), Barry O'Moore (as "Kerry Van Kind"). Produced by William Caryl.
- (1928) Stage Play: The Great Necker. Comedy. Written by Elmer Harris. Directed by J. Fred Butler. Ambassador Theatre: 6 Mar 1928- Apr 1928 (closing date unknown/39 performances). Cast: Charles A. Baker (as "Workman"), James B. Carson (as "Adolph Cohen"), Kenneth Curtis (as "Sam"), Marjorie Gateson (as "Madame Estelle"), Taylor Holmes (as "Arthur Pomroy"), Frank Milan (as "Workman"), Sidney Paxton (as "James"), Irene Purcell (as "Pansy Hawthorne"), Blanche Ring (as "Mrs. Hawthorne"), Zolya Talma (as "Nina Squibbs"), Hal Thompson (as "Teddy Ferguson"), Raymond Walburn (as "Oscar Squibbs"), Gordon Westcott (as "Hawkins"). Produced by Chamberlain Brown.
- (1928) Stage Play: On Call. Comedy/drama. Written by Roland Oliver. Directed by Frank McCoy. Waldorf Theatre: 9 Nov 1928- Jan 1929 (closing date unknown/67 performances). Cast: Eleanor Audley (as "Mary Randall"), Dorothea Chard (as "Margie"), Ann Chase, Ray Collins (as "John Q. Smith"), Charles Dosch (as "Robert Gray"), Selwyn Goddard (as "Private Detective"), Emily Ross, Raymond Walburn (as "George Pierpoint"). Produced by Jules J. Leventhal.
- (1929) Stage Play: Zeppelin. Drama/mystery. Written by McElbert Moore, Earle Crooker and Lowell Brentano. Directed by Frank Merlin. National Theatre: 14 Jan 1929- Mar 1929 (closing date unknown/72 performances). Cast: Charles S. Abbe (as "Prof. Phillip Keane"), Alden Stephen Chase (as "Roger Bates"), Wallis Clark, John Gruenwald, Paul Guilfoyle, Gordon Hawthorne, Alfred A. Hesse, Rose Hobart (as "Wynne Madison"), John M. James, Priscilla Knowles, Bjorn Koefoed, Milton Krimes, Joan Marion, Julian Noa, Edward Powell, Frederick Rudin, Zolya Talma (as "Lola Bartel"), C.W. Van Voorhis, Raymond Walburn (as "Ed Totten"), Edward Woods. Produced by Jimmie Cooper.
- (1929) Stage Play: Freddy. Comedy. Written by C. Stafford Dickens. Directed by C. Stafford Dickens. Lyceum Theatre: 16 Jul 1929- Sep 1929 (closing date unknown/63 performances). Cast: Lawrence H. Cecil, C. Stafford Dickens, Hubert Druce (as "Andrew Toomley"), Vera Neilson, Cecilia Radclyffe, Beatrice Terry (as "Jane Gommery"), Raymond Walburn (as "Freddy Hall"). Produced by Murray Phillips.
- (1930) Stage Play: Three Little Girls. Musical/romance. Music by Walter Kollo. Book by Hermann Feiner and Bruno Hardt-Warden. Lyrics by Harry B. Smith. Book adapted by Marie Armstrong Hecht and Gertrude Purcell. Musical Director: Louis Kroll. Directed by J.J. Shubert. Shubert Theatre: 14 Apr 1930- 19 Jul 1930 (104 performances). Cast: Margaret Adams (as "Marie"), Ruth Adele (as "Ensemble"), Patricia Allen (as "Ensemble"), Mary Bell (as "Mademoiselle/Ensemble"), Eric Birlenbach (as "Ensemble"), Mary Bowman (as "Ensemble"), Charles Brown (as "Wendolin"), Sam Bunin (as "Ensemble"), Jerry Cummings (as "Ensemble"), George D'Andria (as "Ensemble"), George Dobbs (as "Franz Walden"), Maurice Dobell (as "Ensemble"), Diana Doering (as "Ensemble"), Alice Douglas (as "Ensemble"), John Edwards (as "Hans von Kursten"), Artemis Faque (as "Ensemble"), John Goldsworthy (as "Count von Rambow"), Thelma Goodwin (as "Charlotte/Ensemble"), Rollin Grimes Jr. (as "Fritz von Tormann"), Bettina Hall (as "Marie/Madame Morrosini"), Natalie Hall (as "Beate-Marie/Mme. Beate"), Charles Hedley (as "Hendrick Norgard/Karl Norgard"), Isabel Henderson (as "Ensemble"), Frances Hess (as "Little Marie"), Tom Houston (as "Attendant at the Opera/H.S.R. Prince von Hochberg/Ensemble"), Ralph Jameson (as "Ensemble"), Caven Jones (as "Ensemble"), Simeon Jurist (as "Ensemble"), Harry Kornbluth (as "Ensemble"), Lillian Lane (as "Elsa/Ensemble"), Edward Lester (as "Baron von Rankenau"), Martha Lorber (as "Annette "), Marion Mayon (as "Ensemble"), Charles McClelland (as "Ensemble"), Elaine Melchior (as "Ensemble"), Stephen Mills (as "Kunz"), Raymond O'Brien (as "von Hoffenstein"), Norma Perrin (as "Ensemble"), Buddy Proctor (as "Little Hans Norgard"), Harry Puck (as "Otto Kunz"), Mary Ray (as "Ensemble"), Rosalind Rensing (as "Ensemble"), Francis Riley (as "Escamillo"), Peggy Rose (as "Ensemble"), Frances Stevens (as "Ensemble"), Margaret Stevenson (as "Ensemble"), Lu Talbott (as "Ensemble"), Helen Turner (as "Ensemble"), Raymond Walburn (as "Baron von Biebitz-Biebitz"), Lorraine Weimar (as "Mrs. Munke"), Dorothy Wyndham (as "Ensemble"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert.
- (1931) Stage Play: The House Beautiful. Drama.
- (1932) Stage Play: Bridal Wise. Comedy.
- (1932) Stage Play: The Budget. Comedy. Written by Robert Middlemass. Directed by Hugh Ford. Hudson Theatre: 20 Sep 1932- Sep 1932 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Nicholas Adams, Olive Burgoyne, Virginia Curley, Paul C. Floyd, John M. Kline, Mary Lawlor, Lynne Overman (as "Peter Harper"), Clara Palmer, Olive Reeves-Smith (as "Elsie Knowles"), Raymond Walburn (as "Claude Knowles"). Produced by Harry Askin and Hugh Ford.
- (1932) Stage Play: Tell Her the Truth. Music by Jack Waller and Joseph Tunbridge. Book by R.P. Weston and Bert Lee. Based on "Nothing But the Truth" by Frederic S. Isham. from "Nothing But the Truth" by James Montgomery. Lyrics by R.P. Weston and Bert Lee. Musical Director: Gene Salzer. Directed by Morris Green and Henry Thomas. Cort Theatre: 28 Oct 1932- 5 Nov 1932 (11 performances). Cast: Cast: Hobart Cavanaugh (as "Maclean"), Edith Davis, Bertha Donn, Margaret Dumont, Lillian Emerson, Dorothy Essig, William Frawley, Louise Kirkland, May Muth, Muriel Muth, Lou Parker, John Sheehan, Andrew Tombes, Raymond Walburn, Thelma White. Produced by Tillie Leblang and Morris Green.
- (1932) Stage Play: The Show Off. Comedy/drama (revival). Written by George Kelly. Directed by Raymond Walburn. Hudson Theatre:12 Dec 1932- Mar 1933 (closing date unknown/119 performances). Cast: Jean Adair (as "Mrs. Fisher"), Warren Ashe (as "Joe"), Guy D'Ennery (as "Frank Hyland"), Charles Martin (as "Mr. Fisher), Beatrice Maude (as "Clara"), Frances McHugh (as "Amy"), D. Bagnell (as "Rae Mr. Gill"), Charles Sugah-Turner (as "Mr. Rogers"), Raymond Walburn (as "Aubrey Piper"). Produced by Jules J. Leventhal and O.E. Wee.
- (1933) Stage Play: Man Bites Dog. Farce. Written by Don Lochbiler and Arthur Barton. Directed by Arthur Barton. Lyceum Theatre: 25 Apr 1933- May 1933 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Jay Adler, Don Beddoe (as "Vic Kane, a Reporter"), Leo Donnelly (as "Doc Sanger, Managing Editor"), Gertrude Flynn (as "Helen Lee"), John Griggs, Lillian Herlein, James Kearney, Victor Kilian (as "Peter Schultz, News Editor"), Owen Martin (as "Snake Barlum, a Photographer"), Horace McMahon (as "McIntosh"), Millard Mitchell (as "Joe Barringer, a Reporter"), Dennie Moore (as "Renee Brennan"), Leo Needham, Lawrence O'Brien, W. Francis Robertson, Phil Sheridan (as "Armistead"), Jack Stone, Raymond Walburn (as "Jake Zimmel, City Editor"), Charles Walton. Produced by Theron Bamberger and Bernard Klawans.
- (1933) Stage Play: The Pursuit of Happiness. Comedy. Written by Alan Child and Isabelle Louden. Directed by Miriam Doyle. Avon Theatre: 9 Oct 1933- May 1934 (252 performances). Cast: Seth Arnold (as "Reverend Lyman Banks"), Peggy Conklin (as "Prudence Kirkland"), Hunter Gardner, David Hart, Eleanor Hicks, R.G. Kirchner, Dennie Moore (as "Meg"), Oscar Polk (as "Mose"), Tonio Selwart (as "Max Christman"), Raymond Walburn (as "Thaddeus Jennings"), Charles Waldron (as "Captain Aaron"). Produced by Laurence Rivers Inc.
- (1934) Stage Play: Another Love. Comedy. Written by Jacques Deval. Translated by George Oppenheimer. Book adapted by George Oppenheimer. Directed by Milton Steifel. Vanderbilt Theatre: 19 Mar 1934- Apr 1934 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: France Bendtsen (as "Uncle Emile"), Romaine Callender (as "Cesar Poustiano"), Suzanne Caubaye (as "Stassia Poustiano"), Alfred Corn (as "Etienne du Bois"), William Webb Robertson (as "M. Sasselin"), Mary Servoss (as "Simone du Bois"), Ethel Strickland, Raymond Walburn (as "Fernand du Bois"), Iris Whitney (as "Henriette"). Produced by Milton Stiefel and Frank Lewis.
- (1946) Stage Play: Park Avenue. Musical comedy. Music by Arthur Schwartz. Lyrics by Ira Gershwin. Material by Nunnally Johnson and George S. Kaufman. Musical Direction by Charles Sanford. Choreographed by Helen Tamiris. Directed by George S. Kaufman. Shubert Theatre: 4 Nov 1946- 4 Jan 1947 (72 performances). Cast: Dorothy Bird, Robert Chisholm, Leonora Corbett, Martha Errolle, Virginia Gordon, Joan Mann, Arthur Margetson, Ruth Matteson, Harold Mattox, Ray McDonald, Charles Purcell (as "Reggie Fox"), Byron Russell (as "Carlton"), William Skipper, Wilson Smith, Martha Stewart, Raymond Walburn (as "Richard Nelson"), David Wayne (as "Mr. Meachem"), Mary Wickes (as "Mrs. Betty Nelson"). Produced by Max Gordon.
- (1962) Stage Play: A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. Music by Stephen Sondheim. Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim. Book by Burt Shevelove and Larry Gelbart. Based on the plays of Plautus. Musical and vocal direction by Milton Rosenstock. Music orchestrated by Irwin Kostal and Sid Ramin. Dance arrangements by Hal Schaefer. Choreographed by Jack Cole. Uncredited staging and choreography by Jerome Robbins. Directed by George Abbott. Alvin Theatre (moved to the Mark Hellinger Theatre on 9 Mar 1964 to 9 May 1964 then moved to The Majestic Theatre on 11 May 1964 to close): 1 May 1962- 29 Aug 1964 (964 performances + 8 previews). Cast: Zero Mostel, David Burns, John Carradine (as "Lycus, a buyer and seller of courtesans"), Brian Davies, Jack Gilford (as "Hysterium, slave to Senex and Domina"), Ron Holgate, Ruth Kobart, Preshy Marker, Raymond Walburn (as "Erronius, a citizen of Rome"), Judy Alexander, Lucienne Bridou, David Evans, Lisa James, Roberta Keith, Gloria Kristy, Eddie Phillips, George Reeder, Myrna White. Produced by Harold Prince. Note: Filmed as A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (1966).
- (1965) Stage Play: A Very Rich Woman. Written by Ruth Gordon. Based on the play by Philippe Hériat. Associate Director: David Pardoll. Scenic Design by Oliver Smith. Stage Manager: Dick Van Patten. Directed by Garson Kanin. Belasco Theatre: 30 Sep 1965- 23 Oct 1965 (28 performances + 12 performances). Cast: Ruth Gordon (as "Mrs. Lord"), Ethel Griffies (as "Mae"), Katharine Houghton (as "Pearl"), Madge Kennedy (as "Mrs. Minot"), Diana Muldaur (as "Miss Moran"), Heidi Murray (as "Dalphne Bailey"), Carrie Nye (as "Ursula Bailey"), Larry Oliver (as "Johnny"), Jon Richards (as "Dennis"), Jack Ryland (as "Alex Rovenesco"), Stefan Schnabel (as "The Supervisor"), Ernest Truex (as "Oliver Sears"), Peter Turgeon (as "Linus Bailey III"), Raymond Walburn (as "Patrick") [final Broadway role], Joan Wetmore (as "Edith Shaw"). Standby: Sylvia Field (as "Mrs. Lord"). Understudies: Katharine Houghton, Eileen Letchworth, Larry Oliver, Jon Richards and Dick Van Patten. Produced by Garson Kanin. Associate Producer: Al Goldin.
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